Go back to the second morning.It is not about pace alone. It is about the right areas and also keeping at it consistently. Pakistan conceded lots of runs in the first innings. This surely wasn't a 430 pitch. SA should have been kept under 350 in the first dig. Pakistan did not score enough in the first innings but again the bowling wasn't flash either. If not for Amir running through the tail, Pakistan might have conceded more runs which would have resulted in an innings defeat.
Pakistan having been dismissed for 177 bowled badly on the first evening and South Africa finished at 123-2.
The next morning they bowled really, really well.
Mohammad Amir started with overnight figures of 8-2-25-1 and Mohammad Abbas with 9-0-45-0 with a ball already 30 overs old.
Amir then bowled a brilliant (and quicker than usual) spell of 4-2-5-0 until he was replaced by Shaheen Shah Afridi (who had previously bowled 9-1-34-0).
Abbas bowled a 7 over spell of 7-3-10-1.
And then Amir - having had only THREE OVERS OFF - had to come in at the other end to replace Mohammad Abbas and bowl another 5 over spell.
It was ridiculous.
It was not surprising that the South Africans then got away, or that the bowlers ran out of steam.
Abbas was not even fit and he had to bowl a 7 over spell.
Amir bowled 4 overs, got 3 overs off, then bowled another 5 over spell.
That's what happens when you play only 3 quicks in South Africa.
You overuse the quicks you have, and they get slower and slower and slower.
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