Pitch, Stokes and brass bands, South Africa v England talking points
South Africa and England meet in the third Test, starting at St George's Park from Thursday with the series delicately poised at 1-1.
Port Elizabeth: South Africa and England meet in the third Test, starting at St George's Park from Thursday with the series delicately poised at 1-1. South Africa won the opening Test by 107 runs at Centurion while England claimed the second by 189 runs in Cape Town. AFP Sport looks at five talking points ahead of a pivotal encounter in the four-match World Test Championship series.
The pitch
St George's Park has long been regarded as having one of the slowest, lowest pitches among South Africa's Test venues. In recent times, however, the ground staff
Last season, though, South Africa suffered one of their most embarrassing home defeats when they went down to Sri Lanka, who completed a 2-0 series win. England last played a Test in Port Elizabeth in 2004/05 when
Batting frailties
Both teams have relatively inexperienced, potentially vulnerable batting
It was a blow for England when Rory Burns, who made 84 in the second innings of the first Test, was injured ahead of the second
South Africa's problems have been at three and four, where Zubayr Hamza and
The Stokes factor
Ben Stokes had an immense influence on the second Test at Newlands, with the impact of his batting and bowling exceeding his statistics. South Africa's all-rounders, Vernon Philander and Dwaine Pretorius, are less flamboyant, especially with the bat, although Philander's bowling has the potential to be pivotal if he gets some help from the pitch.
Bowling conundrums
Notwithstanding Rabada's feats in 2017/18, spin bowlers generally expect some help from the St George's Park pitch. But neither side has a likely slow-bowling match-winner. Keshav Maharaj bowled tidily for South Africa in the first innings at Newlands but figures of two for 160 in the second innings revived memories of a poor tour of India towards the end of last year when his six wickets cost 85.66 runs each.
Crowd support
A total of 68,662 spectators created a vibrant atmosphere at Newlands but anecdotal evidence suggests that around 40,000 of them were backing England. With the ground capacity reduced because of building work, local followers found most of the tickets had been snapped up by tour operators, with Cape Town being a particularly attractive destination for England's travelling supporters.
Port Elizabeth has pleasant beaches and is near to game
The St George's Park brass band, with their ability to get local supporters singing and swaying in the old main stand, will provide a uniquely South African flavour to the Test match.