South Africa take control against England at Lord"s

England require record run chase to defeat South Africa and preserve No 1 ranking

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UPDATED:

19:08 GMT, 19 August 2012

England fell foul of Vernon Philander, with bat and then ball, as their No 1 Test status hung by a thread against South Africa at Lord's.

Philander consolidated the work of centurion Hashim Amla in the tourists' 351 all out – and then immediately undermined England's hopes of pulling off a record run chase of 346 to share the Investec series, by shifting both openers lbw for only four runs between them.

Captain Andrew Strauss, on his home ground in his 100th Test and 50th in charge, managed just a single before shouldering arms to a delivery that nipped up the slope to follow back Alastair Cook – who at least played a defensive shot but could not cope with Philander's movement off the seam from the pavilion end.

Back to the hutch: Alastair Cook's series comes to an end as he is given out lbw

Back to the hutch: Alastair Cook's series comes to an end as he is given out lbw

Advantage South Africa: Vernon Philander (right) celebrates trapping England's Alastair Cook lbw

Advantage South Africa: Vernon Philander (right) celebrates trapping England's Alastair Cook lbw

After 13 overs of evening batting, England were guided to an ultra-cautious 16 without further loss by Jonathan Trott and Ian Bell – but realistic pretensions to victory, and therefore keeping South Africa off the top of the world, were fading fast.

After Steven Finn (four for 74) did most to bowl the tourists out, England knew already they must rewrite their own history and that of Lord's by achieving their own and the famous venue's highest fourth-innings run chase.

Finn took two big wickets in successive overs on a searingly hot afternoon to help keep English hopes just about alive at that point.

Main man: Hashim Amla scored a century to help South Africa to an imposing total

Main man: Hashim Amla scored a century to help South Africa to an imposing total

Ton-derful: Amla reached three figures earlier in the day

The 6ft 8in seamer twice found telling movement up the slope, on his home ground, to see off centurion Hashim Amla and then AB de Villiers with the second new ball.

England had received scant reward for their efforts before lunch, and did not help their own cause by dropping another crucial catch.

Amla (121), South Africa's first Test triple-centurion in their landslide win at The Oval, was yesterday dropped by Matt Prior on just two.

Fine spell: Steve Finn was outstanding in the afternoon for England

Fine spell: Steve Finn was outstanding in the afternoon for England

Then on Sunday morning De Villiers escaped on eight when James Anderson put down a straightforward low chance at midwicket off Graeme Swann – the eighth catch missed by England in this series.

Finn and Anderson tried to apply the pressure from the outset. But it was not until Strauss made a double change that Stuart Broad made short work of nightwatchman Dale Steyn, trying to fend off the latest in a succession of short balls and offering a simple catch off the shoulder of the bat to short-leg.

De Villiers announced himself with successive boundaries from his first two balls, pulled fine off Broad and then down the wicket to hit Swann over mid-on.

Blunder: James Anderson reacts after dropping AB De Villiers early in his innings

Blunder: James Anderson reacts after dropping AB De Villiers early in his innings

It looked a hammer blow when Anderson then continued his uncharacteristic recent trend of dropped catches after Swann had deceived De Villiers in the air.

That impression was underlined as England began to settle into damage limitation before the second new ball, setting no slips to Anderson and apparently pinning all hope on reverse-swing or an unlikely South African mistake.

After an unexpected lunchtime shower, Amla passed his 182-ball hundred with a skilful cut for his ninth four – and it was only when Finn began to gather momentum from his favoured pavilion end that England had a lifeline.

On the pull: AB De Villiers attacks Stuart Broad to help extend the visitors' advantage

On the pull: AB De Villiers attacks Stuart Broad to help extend the visitors' advantage

Finn had bowled Amla through the gate in the first innings, with one that nipped down the slope; this time he got one to go the other way, beat the defence and hit off-stump to end a stand of 85.

Twelve balls later, he had De Villiers too – edging a little extra bounce to slip where Strauss took his 121st catch, the most by any fielder in English Test history.

Finn was not finished either, and before tea had Jacques Rudolph edging behind to Prior.

All over: Anderson wraps up South Africa's innings with the wicket of Imran Tahir

All over: Anderson wraps up South Africa's innings with the wicket of Imran Tahir

It took another 17.2 overs at the start of the evening session to end the innings, as JP Duminy and Philander – following their twin 61s in the first innings – again held the hosts up in an eighth-wicket stand of 54.

It was an excruciating passage of play, for England supporters, before Philander slapped an Anderson long-hop straight to point.

An alert piece of stumping by Prior off Swann then did for Morne Morkel, and Anderson clean-bowled Imran Tahir to leave the stoic Duminy unbeaten after 93 balls of defiance.

The left-hander had contributed only 26 runs, but nonetheless done much to make England's mission improbable more so – even before Philander got to work again.

Frustration mounting: Stuart Broad kicks the turf in disgust

Frustration mounting: Stuart Broad kicks the turf in disgust