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The most wicket-filled opening day in 122 years
A look at all the key numbers from Day 1 of the ongoing second Test between South Africa and India at the Newlands, Cape Town:
23 – A grand total of 23 wickets fell in Cape Town on Wednesday, the second most on the opening day of a Test match in 147 years of the game’s history, only behind the 25 recorded on Day 1 of the second Ashes 1901/02 Test between Australia and England in Melbourne. It also happened to be the joint-highest wicket tally on a single day of a Test match in South Africa, alongside the 2011 fixture featuring the hosts and Australia at the same venue.
Most wickets on a single day in Tests
| Team 1 | Team 2 | Day | Wkts | Runs | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| England | Australia | 2 | 27 | 157 | Lord’s, 1888 |
| Australia | England | 1 | 25 | 221 | Melbourne, 1902 |
| England | Australia | 2 | 24 | 255 | The Oval, 1896 |
| India | Afghanistan | 2 | 24 | 339 | Bengaluru, 2018 |
| South Africa | Australia | 2 | 23 | 294 | Cape Town, 2011 |
| South Africa | India | 1 | 23 | 270 | Cape Town, 2024 |
Most wickets on Day 1 of a Test
| Team 1 | Team 2 | Wkts | Runs | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | England | 25 | 221 | Melbourne, 1902 |
| South Africa | India | 23 | 270 | Cape Town, 2024 |
| England | Australia | 22 | 197 | The Oval, 1890 |
| Australia | West Indies | 22 | 207 | Adelaide, 1951 |
| South Africa | England | 21 | 278 | Gqeberha, 1896 |
55 runs by South Africa in their first innings is the lowest all-out total against India in Tests, seven fewer than what New Zealand had managed in Mumbai in 2021.
Lowest all-out totals against India in Tests
| Score | Team | Inns | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 55 | South Africa | 1 | Cape Town, 2024 |
| 62 | New Zealand | 2 | Mumbai WS, 2021 |
| 79 | South Africa | 2 | Nagpur, 2015 |
| 81 | England | 3 | Ahmedabad, 2021 |
| 82 | Sri Lanka | 2 | Chandigarh, 1990 |
23.2 overs taken by India to bundle out South Africa in the first innings, the least ever they have bowled to dismiss an opponent in a Tests. Their previous record was 25.1 overs, when they skittled out the same team for 84 in Johannesburg in 2006 to set up their first ever Test win in the country.
8 instances of South Africa registering all-out totals of 55 or below in Tests, the most for any team, the next most being five each for Australia, England and New Zealand. Interestingly, of the 36 instances of teams getting bundled out for 55 or lower in Tests, seven have come in Cape Town, the most at a venue followed by six at Lord’s.
Overall, it was South Africa’s eighth lowest total in Tests, and their lowest since World War II.
Lowest all-out totals for South Africa in Tests
| Score | Innings | Opponent | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | 4 | England | Gqeberha, 1896 |
| 30 | 2 | England | Birmingham, 1924 |
| 35 | 4 | England | Cape Town, 1899 |
| 36 | 1 | Australia | Melbourne, 1932 |
| 43 | 3 | England | Cape Town, 1889 |
| 45 | 3 | Australia | Melbourne, 1932 |
| 47 | 2 | England | Cape Town, 1889 |
| 55 | 1 | India | Cape Town, 2024 |
Lowest all-out totals for South Africa since their readmission
| Score | Innings | Opponent | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 55 | 1 | India | Cape Town, 2024 |
| 73 | 4 | Sri Lanka | Galle, 2018 |
| 79 | 2 | India | Nagpur, 2015 |
| 83 | 3 | England | Johannesburg, 2016 |
| 84 | 2 | India | Johannesburg, 2006 |
9 – South Africa’s 55 all-out is the ninth-lowest first innings total in Tests. Three of the last four instances – spanning between September 1948 and January 2024 – have come in Cape Town.
Lowest innings totals in the first innings of a Test match
| Score | Team | Opponent | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 36 | South Africa | Australia | Melbourne, 1932 |
| 42 | New Zealand | Australia | Wellington, 1946 |
| 43 | Bangladesh | West Indies | North Sound, 2018 |
| 45 | England | Australia | Sydney, 1887 |
| 45 | New Zealand | South Africa | Cape Town, 2013 |
| 52 | England | Australia | The Oval, 1948 |
| 53 | Australia | England | Lord’s, 1896 |
| 54 | Zimbabwe | South Africa | Cape Town, 2005 |
| 55 | South Africa | India | Cape Town, 2024 |
6-15 – Mohammed Siraj’s bowling returns are the third best for an India bowler in Tests in South Africa, only behind Shardul Thakur’s 7-61 in Johannesburg in 2022 and Harbhajan Singh’s 7-120 in the 2011 New Year’s Test in Cape Town.
15 runs conceded by Mohammed Siraj is the second-fewest by an India bowler while bagging six wickets in an innings in Tests, and the fourth-lowest for a five-wicket haul.
Least expensive Test five-fors for India (by runs conceded)
| Returns | Overs Bowled | Bowler | Opponent | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/7 | 8 | Jasprit Bumrah | West Indies | North Sound, 2019 |
| 6/12 | 17.5 | Venkatapathy Raju | Sri Lanka | Chandigarh, 1990 |
| 5/13 | 4.3 | Harbhajans Singh | West Indies | Kingston, 2006 |
| 6/15 | 9 | Mohammed Siraj | South Africa | Cape Town, 2024 |
| 5/18 | 6 | Subhash Gupte | Pakistan | Dhaka, 1955 |
9 overs bowled by Mohammed Siraj, the least delivered by an India bowler to bag a six-wicket haul in Tests. The previous record belonged to Venkatesh Prasad, who bagged 6/33 in 10.2 overs against Pakistan in Chennai in 1999.
6 wickets fell on the score of 153 in the Indian innings, making for the most remarkable of batting collapses in Test history. Never before has a team lost more wickets on a particular score in a Test innings.
Most wickets falling at a particular score in a Test innings
| Wickets | Score | For | Against | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 153/4 to 153/10 | India | South Africa | Cape Town, 2024 |
| 5 | 37/2 to 37/7 | New Zealand | Australia | Wellington, 1946 |
| 5 | 59/4 to 59/9 | New Zealand | Pakistan | Rawalpindi CC, 1965 |
| 5 | 133/2 to 133/7 | New Zealand | South Africa | Hamilton, 2012 |
| 5 | 134/5 to 134/10 | Bangladesh | Zimbabwe | Harare, 2013 |
partnership runs added by India’s last five pairs in their innings, the first such instance for any team in the history of Test cricket. Before today, the lowest partnership aggregate for the last five pairs in an all-out Test innings was 3 by England against Australia in Melbourne in 1990, followed by 4 by New Zealand against Pakistan in Auckland in 2001.
6 ducks recorded by India in their first innings is a joint record in Tests. They had previously registered as many against England in Manchester in 2014.
Most ducks recorded in a Test innings
| Ducks | For | Against | Venue, Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | Pakistan | West Indies | Karachi, 1980 |
| 6 | South Africa | India | Ahmedabad, 1996 |
| 6 | Bangladesh | West Indies | Dhaka, 2002 |
| 6 | India | England | Manchester, 2014 |
| 6 | New Zealand | Pakistan | Dubai (DSC), 2018 |
| 6 | Bangladesh | Sri Lanka | Mirpur, 2022 |
| 6 | Bangladesh | West Indies | North Sound, 2022 |
| 6 | India | South Africa | Cape Town, 2024 |
4 – Dean Elgar, who compiled a game defining hundred in the first Test in Centurion, didn’t quite make an impact with the bat in his farewell Test, registering scores of 4 and 12. However, he did cross 1,000 runs against India in the format while at it, becoming the fourth South Africa batter to register 1,000-plus Test runs against the opponent, after Jacques Kallis (1734), Hashim Amla (1528) and AB de Villiers (1334).
8 batters have registered 1,000-plus runs as an opener in Tests against India, Elgar being the latest to do so, finishing with 1012. The other seven batters to have achieved this feat are Alastair Cook (2431), Matthew Hayden (1888), Gordon Greenidge (1678), Graham Gooch (1518), Mudassar Nazar (1210), David Warner (1195) and Geoffrey Boycott (1084).
5121 runs by Dean Elgar is the fourth most aggregate for South Africa as an opener in Tests, after Graeme Smith’s 9018, Gary Kirsten’s 5726 and Herschelle Gibbs’ 5242.
Latest News
Payment of compensation for crop damage caused to Paddy Cultivation in the area due to the construction of a Salinity Barrier across the Nilwala River in Matara
Approval had been granted at the Cabinet meeting held 2025-07-07 to allocate provisions through the Budget and pay compensation for the crop damage caused to paddy cultivation in the Matara District during seven consecutive cultivation seasons (from the 2019 Yala season up to the 2022 Yala season), due to flood conditions caused by the obstruction of the Nilwala River during the period of the construction of the salinity barrier across the river, following a proper assessment of the relevant damages.
Accordingly, compensation amounts have been calculated in accordance with the compensation payment methodologies of the Agricultural and Agrarian Insurance Board, taking into consideration costs and paddy prices, and an allocation of Rs. 1,200 million has been made through the 2026 Budget for the
payment of the relevant compensation.
Accordingly, the Cabinet of Ministers has approved the resolution furnished by the Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, and Land and Irrigation to pay compensation to the farmers who are eligible for compensation as follows.
Season Proposed amount of compensation per one acre (Rupees)

Latest News
No change in Water Tariffs for the first half of 2026
In accordance with the water tariff formula approved at the Cabinet meeting held on 2024-07-15, the unit cost of water sales is required to be reviewed on a half-yearly basis, taking into consideration changes in major cost factors.
Based on the analysis carried out on the financial statements of the National Water Supply and Drainage Board for the year 2025, it has been confirmed that the prevailing water tariffs are
sufficient to cover the full operating costs.
Therefore, the Board of Directors of the National Water Supply
and Drainage Board has decided to maintain the unit cost of water sales for the first six (06) months of 2026 without any increase.
Accordingly, the consent of the Cabinet of Ministers has been given for the resolution furnished by the Minister of Housing, Construction, and Water Supply to maintain the prevailing water tariff without any revision during the first 6 months of the year 2026.
Foreign News
Jackson Pollock painting sells for record $181m at auction
A Jackson Pollock artwork, described as one of history’s “first truly abstract paintings”, has sold at auction for $181m (£135m) in New York.
Number 7A, 1948, which went under the hammer at the renowned Christie’s auction house on Monday, smashed the previous record for the most a work by the late American artist has taken at auction.
The painting, which came from the private collection of media magnate SI Newhouse, is also now the fourth most expensive artwork ever sold at auction, according to ARTnews.
Also in the collection was a bronze sculpture by Romanian artist Constantin Brancusi, which sold for $107.6m – the second highest amount a sculpture has ever gone for at auction.

Pollock, who died in 1956, was a major figure in the abstract expressionist art movement. His drip painting technique is one the art world’s most recognisable and often imitated.
The previous auction record for one of Pollock’s artworks was $61.2m for his Number 17, 1951 painting, which was sold in 2021. Other pieces have sold for higher prices in private sales.
Christie’s called Number 7A, 1948, which depicts black drips of paint with touches of red on a huge canvas spanning more than three metres, a key piece of art history.
“It is with this work that Pollock finally frees himself from the shackles of conventional easel painting and produces one of the first truly abstract paintings in the history of art,” it wrote in its description of the piece online.
Other artworks sold at the Christie’s auction included pieces by Mark Rothko and Joan Miro, which also both broke previous records for works by the artists at auction.
[BBC]
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