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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.
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Harmer, Markram and Wolvaardt win top honours at CSA awards
Aiden Markram, Laura Wolvaardt and Simon Harmer were the biggest winners at the Cricket South Africa (CSA) Awards 2026, picking up the highest individual honours after stellar seasons across formats. Fast bowler Lungi Ngidi and wicketkeeper-batter Quinton de Kock also went home with multiple awards.
Harmer, 37, was named Test Player of the Year after spearheading South Africa’s red-ball attack during the awards cycle, between April 2025 and 2026. The offspinner enjoyed a prolific return in this period, where he took 30 wickets in four matches. After taking eight wickets in the Rawalpindi Test against Pakistan to help draw the series, he led South Africa to a famous series sweep against India with match hauls of 8 for 51 and 9 for 101 in Kolkata and Guwahati respectively.
Wolvaardt, meanwhile, continued to set the benchmark in women’s cricket. South Africa’s captain was named the Women’s Player of the Year, SA Women’s Players’ Player of the Year and Women’s ODI Player of the Year, completing the awards sweep. Across the eligibility period, she piled up runs in all conditions and played a key role in South Africa’s run to the ODI World Cup final in 2025, finishing as the top scorer of the tournament with 571 runs at an average of 71.37, including centuries in the semi-final and final. Wolvaardt was South Africa’s leading run-scorer in the ODI series in New Zealand before dominating the home T20I series against India, where she scored 330 runs in five matches and was named Player of the Series.
The biggest winner among the men’s all-format awards was Markram, who claimed both the SA Men’s Player of the Year and SA Men’s Players’ Player of the Year awards, after a season in which he led South Africa to major success across formats, most noticeably in the World Test Championship (WTC) final against Australia last year.
Ngidi, meanwhile, collected the Men’s T20 International Player of the Year award and the SA Fans’ Player of the Year prize. His dismissal of Jos Buttler during South Africa’s second ODI against England was also voted the Best Men’s Delivery of the year.
Matthew Breetzke’s breakthrough campaign earned him the Men’s ODI International Player of the Year award, while Dewald Brevis and Kayla Reyneke were recognised as the International Men’s and Women’s Newcomers of the Year, respectively.
The SA20 awards reflected the competition’s standout performers. De Kock, the tournament’s leading run-scorer, was named both SA20 Batter of the Season and Betway SA20 Player of the Season (MVP). Ottneil Baartman collected the SA20 Bowler of the Season award after finishing as the leading wicket-taker, while Jordan Hermann was named SA20 Rising Star of the Season.
Among the domestic awards, Kyle Simmonds and Mignon du Preez were named the men’s and women’s Most Valuable Players, while Robin Peterson, JP Triegaardt and Sandile Masengemi received the top coaching honours in their respective competitions.
CSA also recognised contributions beyond performances on the field. Arno Jacobs was named CSA Umpires’ Umpire of the Year, Lubabalo Gcuma received the CSA Umpire of the Year award, and Sinalo Jafta was presented with the Makhaya Ntini Power of Cricket Award.
[Cricinfo]
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US launches fresh strikes on Iran as Trump warns Tehran it ‘better behave’
The United States said it had launched fresh strikes against Iran on Wednesday evening as President Donald Trump warned Tehran it “better behave”.
The US military said “Iranian military capabilities used to threaten vessels” moving through the Strait of Hormuz had been targeted, and that it had separately fired on a ship attempting to violate its renewed blockade of Iran’s ports.
It came after Iran claimed it had struck US military targets in the region, including in Bahrain and Kuwait, as a fifth day of renewed hostilities strained their preliminary deal to end the war.
Iran’s top negotiator, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, meanwhile told state media Tehran had “no reason” to abide by the deal if it did benefit from it.
Trump had threatened late on Tuesday to attack bridges and power plants should Iran not return to talks next week.
Asked by reporters late on Wednesday whether he would give a deadline before doing so, he responded: “I don’t like giving deadlines, but they pretty much know, they know the story… they better behave.”
He later told delegates at a defence summit that Iran was “not happy right now”.
“They want to settle so badly. They don’t like what we’re doing,” he said. “We’ll find out whether we want to settle with them or if we just finish it off.”
Ghalibaf however said Iran’s national security depended on Tehran maintaining “Iranian arrangements” in the strait.
He added that negotiation – along with war – was part of Iran’s strategy of resistance as it engaged an “existential” conflict with the US.
The escalation in Trump’s rhetoric came after he said a 20% toll he had threatened to impose in the Strait of Hormuz would be replaced by “massive” trade and investment deals with Gulf states.
A previous threat by Trump to bomb Iran’s civilian infrastructure, which was made in April, drew condemnation at the time from UN human rights chief Volker Türk, who said: “Under international law, deliberately attacking civilians and civilian infrastructure is a war crime.”
The latest US strikes marked the second wave its military said it had carried out during daylight hours on Wednesday. It said it had “further degraded Iran’s ability to attack commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz” earlier in the day.
A 90-minute wave was used to target Iran’s coastal defences and cruise missile storage and launch sites on Greater Tunb Island, US Central Command (Centcom) added.
Centcom also said it had redirected two commercial vessels since reimposing its blockade on Iranian ports on Tuesday evening, which stops vessels from transiting to and from Iranian ports and coastal areas.
The blockade had previously been lifted as part of a deal that was struck by the two countries last month – known as a memorandum of understanding – that aimed to end the months-long conflict.
However, a dispute over the strait has become a key point of contention.
In response to the renewal of the US blockade, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) warned the US that it should “expect the closure of other oil and gas export routes that serve the interests of the United States and its allies”. It did not elaborate on which routes could be affected.
Ongoing US-Iran hostilities have underscored the strategic importance of the Strait to the global economy, with a sharp rise in oil prices triggered by tanker traffic virtually stalling through the key shipping lane.
[BBC]
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Argentina stun England in 2-1 comeback win to reach 2026 World Cup final
Lautaro Martinez scored a 92nd-minute winner as Lionel Messi inspired World Cup holders Argentina to a stunning comeback to beat England 2-1 and set up a final with European football champions Spain.
England had been on course to reach their first FIFA World Cup final since 1966 after Anthony Gordon fired them into the lead 10 minutes into the second half of the semifinal in front of 68,239 fans in Atlanta on Wednesday.
The great rivalry between these nations has produced several memorable contests on the World Cup stage through the years, and this will be remembered as the stuff of legends in Argentina as the South Americans denied England with two late sucker punches.
Messi set up Enzo Fernandez to fire in an 85th-minute equaliser, and then, with extra time looming, crossed for substitute Lautaro Martinez to head in the winner in the second minute of stoppage time.
It was maybe not quite up there with Diego Maradona’s legendary display in putting England to the sword in 1986, but the goals this time brought Argentina back from the dead and kept alive their hopes of winning back-to-back World Cups.
No team has retained the trophy since Brazil in 1962, and now, Messi will become just the second player after Brazilian great Cafu to appear in three World Cup finals. Italy are the only other side to defend a World Cup crown.
The 2026 final will take place at New York New Jersey Stadium in New Jersey on Sunday, as the first 48-team World Cup boils down to a confrontation between the reigning champions of Europe and South America.
Messi had waited until the age of 39 to get the chance to play against England, and he will now face Spain for the first time in a competitive game.
His career appeared to be complete when he dragged Argentina to glory in 2022 in Qatar, but he is clearly not done yet.

England, though, will have huge regrets as they head to Miami to play France in Saturday’s third-place playoff, a game neither team will want to contest.
The prospect of a first World Cup final appearance since their sole triumph 60 years ago was a momentous one, and they were so close, but will live to regret sitting back after Gordon’s opener.
Given the deep-rooted rivalry between these nations, this was always likely to be a game with an edge, and there was a palpable sense of tension at Atlanta Stadium.
Argentina’s players were clearly fired up, partly by a determination to hold onto their World Cup crown but also by a sense of what this fixture means.
That translated into a niggly contest, pockmarked by fouls in the first half, including Elliot Anderson being booked for scything down Messi.
There were no real chances to speak of in the first half, but England struck in the 55th minute.
Kane was involved in the buildup as the ball eventually came to Morgan Rogers on the right, and he whipped in a low cross towards the back post where Gordon stole in front of Nahuel Molina to score.
But this was the stadium where Argentina produced a stunning comeback from 2-0 down to beat Egypt in the last 16, and they were not done.
They threw everything at their opponents, as Jordan Pickford made a great save from a Nico Gonzalez header, and Alexis Mac Allister was then denied by the post in the 76th minute.
Fernandez was denied from range by Pickford, but moments later, he equalised, controlling a Messi pass on the edge of the area and letting fly past the goalkeeper.
Argentina smelled blood, and Mac Allister again hit the post before England failed to clear, and Martinez headed in the winner from an exquisite Messi cross to spark chaotic scenes of celebration and leave England completely deflated.
[Aljazeera]
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