Ben Stokes inspires England to dramatic series-levelling victory over South Africa

Ben Stokes (left) and England skipper Joe Root (right) celebrate England's win over South Africa

Cape Town: Ben Stokes (3/35) produced an explosive spell of bowling as England beat South Africa by 189 runs inside the last hour of the fifth day of the second Test at the Newlands here Tuesday. The win leveled the four-match World Test championship series at one apiece.

South Africa were bowled out for 248, with the last wicket falling when only 8.2 overs were left in the match. Stokes took the last three wickets in the space of 14 balls to clinch the victory.

South Africa defied the England bowlers for most of the day. Only three wickets fell before tea as South Africa defended grimly after starting the day on 126 for two after being set an improbable 438 to win.

Opening batsman Pieter Malan, making his debut, made 84 in 369 minutes and 288 balls before he fell to Sam Curran with the second new ball. But he was the only player to be dismissed before lunch and tea.

It meant England needed five wickets in the last session, with a minimum of 31 overs to be bowled.

Quinton de Kock (50, 107b, 7×4) fell to a rare loose shot after he and Rassie van der Dussen (17, 140b, 2×4) had batted together for more than two hours. De Kock had been troubled by Joe Denly’s leg-spinners into rough outside his off stump — but fell to a short ball which he pulled to mid-wicket.

Van der Dussen batted for 194 minutes before falling to a smart tactical move by England. He had been batting solidly against Stuart Broad when James Anderson moved to leg slip and Van Der Dussen promptly glance the next ball straight to Anderson.

Stokes produced an inspired spell of fast, hostile, short-pitched deliveries to have Dwaine Pretorius and Anrich Nortje caught in the slips off successive balls before he took the final wicket when Vernon Philander was caught at gully.

Brief scores: England 269 and 391 for 8 declared beat South Africa 223 and 248 (Peter Malan 84, Quinton de Kock 50, Ben Stokes 3/25, Joe Denly 2/42, James Anderson 2/23) by 189 runs

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