Recent Match
South Africa tour of West Indies, 2024, 1st Test, Port of Spain, Trinidad, Aug 7th, 2024

South Africa

(117.4 ov) 357/10 (28.6 ov) 173/3

West Indies

(91.5 ov) 233/10 (32.6 ov) 121/3

Complete Match drawn

0.6
Roach to Markram, no run, good length delivery shaping into middle, Markram bunts it to mid-on
0.5
Roach to Markram, no run
0.4
Roach to Markram, no run, full and sliding down leg, no shape there and it goes past him
0.3
Roach to Markram, no run, good length delivery in the channel outside off, left alone
0.2
Roach to Markram, no run, full and shaping into off-stump, Markram prods forward and knocks it into the covers
0.1
Roach to Markram, no run, length delivery that starts outside off, exaggerated inward movment, more off the seam and it beats the inside edge to hit his thigh pad
Markram and de Zorzi are at the crease. Markram is on strike. Roach will open the attack
Four slips to begin
The national anthems are done and the players take the field. Looks quite bright and sunny at the moment.
Pitch report: "If you're a batsman, you want to get your pads on and get first use of this wicket. Bit of grass and there might be bit of bounce. They use the Duke's ball so overhead conditions matter. It's a little bit overcast" says Vernon Philander.
Teams:
West Indies (Playing XI): Kraigg Brathwaite(c), Mikyle Louis, Keacy Carty, Alick Athanaze, Kavem Hodge, Jason Holder, Joshua Da Silva(w), Kemar Roach, Jayden Seales, Gudakesh Motie, Jomel Warrican
South Africa (Playing XI): Aiden Markram, Tony de Zorzi, Tristan Stubbs, Temba Bavuma(c), David Bedingham, Ryan Rickelton, Kyle Verreynne(w), Wiaan Mulder, Keshav Maharaj, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi
South Africa have won the toss and have opted to bat
Even still, South Africa were offered an invaluable opportunity to get some vital training and a grip on conditions through the tour match that was scheduled - rarity these days. All of Markram, Bedingham, Bavuma, Rickelton and Verryne struck fifties while Rabada, Maharaj, Piedt and Ngidi were amongst the wickets.
9:00 Local Time, 13:00 GMT, 18:30 IST:
Preview by Telford Vice

Queen's Park Oval, where the men's Test series between West Indies and South Africa starts on Wednesday (August 7), has been good to the visitors. Daryll Cullinan scored 103 there in a 69-run win in March 2001. The visitors won by eight wickets in April 2005, when Makhaya Ntini took 6/95 and 7/37 and Graeme Smith scored 148 to blunt Brian Lara's 196. Nobody made a century in June 2010, not least because Dale Steyn claimed 5/29 and 3/65. South Africa won by 163 runs.

But it's not just Trinidad. South Africa have lost only two of the 15 Tests - and won eight - they have played in the Caribbean from the first, at Kensington Oval in Bridgetown, Barbados in April 1992. That doesn't make Temba Bavuma's team special. And it's not just South Africa. From that 1992 match, the Windies have won only 46 of their 138 home Tests - a success rate of exactly a third.

Speaking about things happening in threes, the West Indians will limp into the series still smarting from the 3-0 drubbing they have suffered in England the past 28 days. That said, they beat England 1-0 at home in March 2022 and followed that by winning both Tests against Bangladesh, also in the Caribbean, in July that year. In West Indies' most recent home series, in July last year, India prevailed 1-0.

South Africa's chief challenge will be to reacquaint themselves with a format they last played almost six months ago. Indeed, most of their preferred XI haven't been involved in a Test for more than seven months.

South Africa fielded a weakened squad in their most recent series, in New Zealand in February, because their ranks had been ravaged by the concurrent SA20 - which had first dibs, contractually, on the players. Of the squad of 14 who went to New Zealand, only David Bedingham, Dane Paterson and Dane Piedt are among the 16 in the Caribbean.

The return to going nowhere slowly is likely to jolt South Africans watching from home, who have seen their team roar through a dozen T20Is - including the World Cup final in Barbados in June - since they last play a Test.

That contrast will likely prompt questions and conversations about the future of the format, a discussion Andre Russell weighs into below. The debate would be more interesting should someone do something worthy of snaring a headline. Both teams have players eminently able to do so. It's up to them to do it.

When: August 7 to 11, 2024; 10am Local Time (4pm SAST, 7.30pm IST)

Where: Queen's Park Oval, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago

What to expect: Interruptions. Significant rain has been forecast for all five days. And a turning pitch.

Team news:

West Indies

The experienced Kemar Roach looks set to replace the rested Alzarri Joseph. Given that Gudakesh Motie is a left-arm orthodox spinner, and that the pitch looks likely to help the slow bowlers, off-spinner Bryan Charles could make his debut.

Possible XI: Kraigg Brathwaite (C), Mikyle Louis, Kirk McKenzie, Alick Athanaze, Kavem Hodge, Jason Holder, Joshua da Silva, Gudakesh Motie, Bryan Charles, Kemar Roach, Shamar Joseph

South Africa

Lungi Ngidi, who has played in only one of South Africa's last seven Tests, should crack the nod as the third seamer behind Kagiso Rabada and Nandre Burger. The expected conditions might make Dane Piedt a better bet than Wiaan Mulder.

Possible XI: Aiden Markram, Tony de Zorzi, Tristan Stubbs, Temba Bavuma (C), David Bedingham, Kyle Verreynne, Dane Piedt, Keshav Maharaj, Lungi Ngidi, Kagiso Rabada, Nandre Burger

What they said:

"It's going to be attritional. The conditions don't lend themselves to fast scoring and bouncy, seaming pitches. So it's about us staying in the fight and dragging it out. When those tough periods come we need to be at our best." - Shukri Conrad on how the conditions might shape the match

"I don't think money is the issue. Based on the amount of T20 and leagues around the world, I think a lot of players are just not interested in playing Tests." - Andre Russell, who is playing in The Hundred and isn't in the Windies squad, tells the UK's PA Media what he really thinks about the ancient format
Squads:
South Africa Squad: Aiden Markram, Tony de Zorzi, Tristan Stubbs, Temba Bavuma(c), David Bedingham, Ryan Rickelton, Kyle Verreynne(w), Wiaan Mulder, Keshav Maharaj, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Matthew Breetzke, Nandre Burger, Dane Paterson, Migael Pretorius, Dane Piedt
West Indies Squad: Kraigg Brathwaite(c), Mikyle Louis, Alick Athanaze, Kavem Hodge, Jason Holder, Joshua Da Silva(w), Gudakesh Motie, Shamar Joseph, Jayden Seales, Kemar Roach, Jomel Warrican, Keacy Carty, Tevin Imlach, Bryan Charles, Justin Greaves