Paine and his bowlers could not stop South Africa from taking their second innings total to 373. Embattled opening batsmen Bancroft and Warner weathered a challenging 70 minutes before tea at the start of their second innings before the run-out of Bancroft sparked a collapse in which all ten wickets fell for just 50 runs in 19.3 overs and 99 minutes. South Africa’s crushing win gave them a 2-1 lead in the four-match series, with Australia facing an internal inquiry into the ball tampering scandal and having only four days to regroup before the final Test starts in Johannesburg on Friday. South African captain Faf du Plessis said he did not believe the scandal detracted from his team’s win. “For me there’s no buts. I look at the amazing achievement over four days, the way we applied pressure to the Australian team in all facets of the game," said Du Plessis.It's been a horrible 24 hours to be perfectly honest. I'd like to take this opportunity to apologize to all the people back home and the Australian fans who have come out here to support us, they did not deserve this from us. - Tim Paine pic.twitter.com/1FAhqZyJKa
— Cricket South Africa (@OfficialCSA) March 25, 2018
He admitted, though, that South Africa had used the controversy to their advantage. “What we tried to do today was to make them aware there is a lot of pressure on them,” he said. “A lot of noise that’s probably going on inside their heads. Trying to get to that space where it’s not just about just watching the ball and hitting the ball, it’s about a lot of other things, trying to get to a place where you think their brains will go even more over the top thinking about things away from the game.” Paine admitted: “It was extremely difficult but it’s no excuse for what happened. "We’re still the Australian cricket team and we’re expected to put up a better effort than we did today. Certainly it was in some horrible circumstances and probably some circumstances we brought on ourselves.” Du Plessis said South Africa had been highly motivated before the series but had become “super pumped” after losing a fractious first Test in Durban. He said that senior players such as himself, AB de Villiers and Morkel knew this was likely to be their last series against Australia and they were determined “to keep our foot on the gas” in Johannesburg. The collapse started when Bancroft fell to a direct hit from midwicket by Du Plessis after being called for a risky single by Warner. Three overs later Warner edged Kagiso Rabada to De Villiers at third slip.Acting Australia Test captain Tim Paine fronted the media after the 322-run loss in Cape Town and spoke about his "strange" ascension to interim skipper #SAvAUS pic.twitter.com/ffF4Qc2tSx
— cricket.com.au (@CricketAus) March 25, 2018
Congratulations to the man of the match @mornemorkel65! "What an afternoon of cricket. I was sort of hoping I could deliver something special especially at this amazing venue" - Morne Morkel pic.twitter.com/FC9tvaH16t
— Cricket South Africa (@OfficialCSA) March 25, 2018
Both Bancroft and Warner were booed as they left the wicket but the near-capacity crowd’s jeers grew in volume when Smith walked out – and there were more boos after he was caught at gully off Morkel for seven. It was Smith’s last appearance in the series after being banned for one match for his role in the ball tampering scandal, which means he will miss the fourth Test. During Smith’s short stay at the wicket, two wickets fell off successive balls from left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj, with Usman Khawaja caught at slip off a ball that went straight on and Shaun Marsh prodding one which turned and bounced out of the rough to short leg."Bizarre, crazy, ridiculous."
— cricket.com.au (@CricketAus) March 25, 2018
Faf du Plessis reflects on everything that has happened in this series #SAvAUS pic.twitter.com/LT26EvWcV2
BRIEF SCORES:South Africa 311 (Elgar 141*, de Villiers 64, Cummins 4-78) and 373 (Markram 84, De Kock 65, De Villiers 63, Philander 52*, Cummins 3-67, Hazlewood 3-69, Lyon 3-102) beat Australia 255 (Bancroft 77, Morkel 4-87, Rabada 4-91) and 107 (Morkel 5-23) by 322 runsFaf du Plessis wants his "class act" pace attack to pile the pressure on Australia in the final Test in Johannesburg #SAvAUShttps://t.co/FgJPl0L5wN pic.twitter.com/wI7VE8T7Ak
— ICC (@ICC) March 25, 2018