Second LV= Insurance Test, Emirates Old Trafford (day one of five)
South Africa 151: Rabada 36, Anderson 3-32, Broad 3-37
England 111-3: Bairstow 38*
England are 40 runs behind
Scorecard

South Africa was dismissed for 150 on the first day of the second Test by England.

England saw off some evening pressure to get to 111-3, 40 behind.

South Africa gambled on coming through a murky morning but ended up being hustled out.

James Anderson and Stuart Broad both claimed two in two balls for the home team.

England was in danger of repeating the collapses that doomed them in the first Test at Lord's despite batting in sunshine.

Zak Crawley and Jonny Bairstow added an additional 69. Bairstow is not out on 38, with 17 not out.

South Africa leads the three-test series by an unassailable margin.

  • Reaction & analysis from entertaining first day of second Test

England edge action-packed day

Following South Africa's three-day win in the first Test, this was a curious, action-packed day that suggested a quick conclusion.

At the toss, South Africa chose off-spinner Simon Harmer over all-rounder Marco Jansen, meaning they were compelled to bat first.

When the sunshine arrived later in the day, England had run through the majority of the tourists' line-up.

The hosts came through to have the better of the day and may take confidence from knowing they will be chasing a target. At the beginning of the summer, they won four in a row.

Any pursuit could lead to a battle on a pitch that is already turning and bouncing.

England pounce on South Africa gift

Even if England were given ideal circumstances in which to bowl, they still had to exploit them, which they did with skill and a bit of good fortune.

It was Anderson and Broad who ended with the most success, but more impressive was the return of Ollie Robinson, who only took one strike in his first Test in six months.

The back of the batting was broken after Anderson and Broad had removed the top three. Rassie van der Dussen was on the wrong side of a marginal decision, while Aiden Markram was on the right side.

After bowling from the end that carries his name, Anderson was able to get rid of the two guys in front of him.

Kagiso Rabada made 36 in addition to 35 for the ninthwicket with Anrich Nortje as England used the short-ball tactics they have favored against tailenders all summer.

When Robinson pitched it up with the first ball after tea, his deserved success came in the shape of Nortje being pinned leg before, while Rabada was last out trying to throw the bowler a curve.

Crawley battles in face of South Africa examination

For all of the public support he has received from the England management, Crawley is under scrutiny after a run of 14 Tests without a half century.

It is to his credit that he was able to hold onto his position as the pace of the game slowed. He has only reached double figures once in his Test career, and that was in this most recent one.

Alex Lees edge a wonderful delivery from Lungi Ngidi in the second over and the jittery Ollie Pope edge the extra pace of Nortje on to his own stumps were the two highlights of the opening partnership.

England were rocking when Rabada and Erwee were juggling.

In styles, the rearguard was different. Bairstow was very good against the left-arm spinner.

South Africa was grateful for a close that halted the home momentum as England scored quickly.

'I was amazed how much the ball nipped' - what they said

Vernon Philander is an ex-South Africa bowler. They probably said bowl first this morning when you were in England.

I think they'll be disappointed with a couple of soft pitches that got them into a bad spot before lunch.

Stuart Broad said they wanted to have a bowl. The cloud cover would help the ball move. The toss was lost and I was not disappointed. I was amazed at how little the ball touched.

That is the best 17 not out Zak Crawley has ever scored. The crease is very important to him.