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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Khawaja bats through day to put Australia on top

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'Amla's series just gets worse' - Moonda (0:34)

Hashim Amla dropped his third catch of the series as Usman Khawaja made his start count. Firdose Moonda has the latest from Adelaide. (0:34)

Australia 6 for 307 (Khawaja 138*, Smith 59, Handscomb 54, Abbott 3-38) lead South Africa 9 for 259 dec by 48 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

In his first innings as a Test opener, Usman Khawaja scored Australia's first hundred of the series, and their first in day-night Test cricket. In his first innings as a Test batsman, Peter Handscomb scored an impressive half-century. In his first innings as a Test batsman, Nic Maddinson was bowled for a duck. Such was the progression for Australia on the second day in Adelaide, where South Africa used the second new ball to fight back late in the evening.

Most of this day belonged to Khawaja, who batted throughout it and by stumps had occupied the crease for 285 deliveries. But the last session was arguably South Africa's as they claimed three wickets and reached into Australia's tail, although a frustrating seventh-wicket stand between Khawaja and Mitchell Starc prevented them running through it. At stumps Starc had 16 and Khawaja was on 138, ready to take his innings into its third day.

Khawaja was hoping the tail would help him build a big enough lead to worry South Africa - already the advantage was 48. Australia scored 95 runs in the first session, 100 in the second and 98 in the third and if runs did not come exactly briskly - Kyle Abbott was especially frugal and picked up 3 for 38 from 25 overs - a batsman could rotate the strike and pick off the bad balls once settled, as Khawaja did brilliantly.

Khawaja was so patient that his first 80 deliveries brought only 18 runs. Perhaps it was a blessing in disguise for Australia that David Warner was prevented from opening on the first evening because he had spent too long off the field having treatment on his shoulder. The tricky period before stumps on day one required watchfulness, and Khawaja carried that trait into the second day as Abbott especially asked questions of the top order.

The debutant opener Matt Renshaw (10) and then Warner in the unfamiliar position of first drop both edged Abbott to third slip where Dean Elgar held both catches, the first so low to the ground it needed third-umpire confirmation and the second more at a more comfortable height. Australia were 2 for 37 and the innings could have gone either way. As it happened, Khawaja and Smith steadied perfectly by putting on 137 for the third wicket.

Smith was dropped on 46 when he edged JP Duminy and Hashim Amla at slip juggled and dropped the chance, and the partnership only ended via a communication breakdown between Smith and Khawaja. On 59, Smith pushed Tabraiz Shamsi to point and called for a single. Khawaja set off before calling no and Smith seemingly did not hear and kept running. By the time he had stopped and tried to regain his own ground, it was too late.

But if you're going to sell the captain's wicket cheaply you should at least put a high price on your own. Khawaja did that, and brought up his fifth Test century from his 197th delivery with a cut through point for four off Shamsi. He was prolific through the leg side, pulling well when the bowlers dropped short, and once he became used to Shamsi's wrist-spin he used his feet and drove exquisitely through cover.

He followed his century stand with Smith by compiling a 99-run partnership with Handscomb, and it continued Khawaja's fine series - he has featured in seven of the 10 Australian stands of 50 or more in this series. But Handscomb was equally impressive during their time together at the crease. His first ball in Test cricket was a pearler from Vernon Philander that moved away just a fraction and beat the outside edge, but Handscomb survived and thrived.

His method of batting deep inside his crease gave him time to cut effectively and he also used his feet to the spinners. He appeared unawed by the occasion and ensured the strike was rotated, in fact outscoring Khawaja by 14 runs during the stand. Handscomb struck six fours and three in succession off Philander brought up his fifty from his 70th delivery.

In the end it was Abbott who breached Handscomb's defences, seaming the new ball sharply in to bowl him for 54. As one debutant walked off another walked on, but where Handscomb had been calm and in control, Maddinson struggled to get his feet moving and finished with a 12-ball duck when Kagiso Rabada swung one in a searing yorker that rattled the stumps.

In the next over, Philander had Matthew Wade caught behind and at 6 for 283, there was a risk Australia would collapse and their lead would be minimal. But by stumps, Starc had survived for 50 deliveries and frustrated South Africa's hopes of a quick finish to the innings. And, as ever throughout the day, Khawaja was still there.

winning debutants

2

Instances of two debutants remaining unbeaten at the end of a successful chase in Tests; the previous such instance was in 1880

Warner's run-outs

1

Number of times Warner had been run out in 100 Test innings before this series; in this series, he has been run out twice in six innings

Converting starts

4

Number of times, in 10 Test innings, that Stephen Cook has gone past 25. He has converted two of those into hundreds

Hazlewood's bunny

5

Number of times Hazlewood has dismissed Amla in this series; no other bowler has dismissed Amla more than 4 times in a series. Amla averages 5.80 against him

Starc's first-over strikes

20

Wickets that Starc has taken in the first over of an innings in all international cricket since Jan 2015 - no other bowler has taken more than 7 in this period

At home in Australia

67.42

Khawaja's average in home Tests - he has scored 944 runs in 16 inngs, 4 hundreds. In away Tests he averages 30.29 - 515 runs in 18 inngs

Khawaja doubles opening runs

12.37

Khawaja's average while opening in first-class matches in AUS before this innings. He had made just 99 runs from 8 inns before this.

Khawaja's home run

7

Fifty-plus scores for Khawaja in Tests at home. He has made at least one such score in each of the 6 home Tests he has batted in since 2015.

Lyon on the prowl

100+

Overs now Nathan Lyon has gone without a wicket in first-class matches. His last wicket came in the first innings of the Perth Test.