ENGLAND were brutally batted out of the third Test at Newlands today as South African captain Graeme Smith produced his first century of the series in the Cape Town heat.
Backed-up in a record second wicket partnership by Hashim Amla, who  scored a ton in the opening Test at Centurion, South Africa had no trouble  building a lead of nearly 250 as they attempt to level the series at 1-1 with  one to play.
The tourists, struggling to stay in the game for two days, started  this morning 50 runs behind as they attempted to engineer a win that would seal  a series victory.
But hopes of building a first innings lead were soon dashed when  paceman Morne Morkel struck in the first over of the day to remove Graeme Swann  and James Anderson in consecutive balls.
Despite the defiance of Matt Prior, who top-scored for England with  76 off 118 deliveries, the tourists were still 18 runs shy of South Africa’s  total when their first innings ended.
Swann  claimed the early wicket of struggling opener Ashwell Prince (15) but Smith (103  off 170) and Amla (89 off 133) guided South Africa to 224-1 midway through the  final session as England wilted in the sun.
It  might be difficult to appreciate on television in freezing Britain, but the 40  degree heat here is a serious factor. Ryan Sidebottom, the unselected seamer  sweating in the nets (above) behind the main stand, has just told me: “This is  the hottest we have ever known. Durban gets humid, but the heat here is  unbelievable today.”
And  former South African paceman Fanie De Villiers agreed: “It’s dangerous. Ten  minutes in the sun here is like two hours in the British summer sun. I really  worry about the Barmy Army out there with their shirts off. We could see plenty  of them in hospital tonight. That’s how bad it is.”
Swann,  forced to sweat through over after over in England's four-man attack, was second  only to Australia’s Mitchell Johnson in the Test wicket-taking stakes last year  with 54 victims and showed his value again here today.
The Nottinghamshire spinner made it 17 wickets in the series when  he trapped Prince (15) lbw. He tried a desperate referral to third umpire Aleem  Dar claiming he may have got a touch, but he was soon on his way, with England’s  hot and bothered fielders offering some choice advice as he departed with the  score 31 — that’s South Africa’s best opening partnership of the series so far,  by four runs.
Resuming on 241-7 England lost Swann after three balls before Jimmy  Anderson suffered his first ever golden duck, both falling to the superb Morkel,  who ended with five for 75 off 22 overs.
But wicketkeeper Matt Prior, on 52 overnight, refused to buckle and  — with Durham’s Graham ‘Bunny’ Onions at the other end — eventually fell for 76  when he edged Dale Steyn, the world’s top-ranked Test bowler, onto his  stumps.
By then, he and Onions had reduced the lead from 50 to 18, and it  was still anybody’s game.
Meanwhile, England have strongly denied allegations that Kevin  Pietersen threw beer over a fan, who abused him.
England’s media manager Andrew Walpole said: “Neither Kevin  Pietersen nor any of the other England players were involved in any kind of  incident.
“There was no beer thrown from our balcony. There was absolutely no  truth in the story. We are very angry and we are in contact with the ECB lawyers  in London over this story. It is complete rubbish.”
Should England not win the match then it is set up for a series decider with the fourth Test starting in Johannesburg next Thursday.
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