Sports


SA break 27-year curse, crown themselves World Test Champions

SA break 27-year curse, crown themselves World Test Champions

London, June 14 (UNI) South Africa's Class of 2025 carved out a storybook ending at the Home of Cricket on Saturday, lifting the ICC World Test Championship mace with a stirring five-wicket victory over Australia, a win that not only sealed their first senior men’s ICC title in 27 years but also exorcised decades of heartbreak for an entire cricketing nation.
Under a pristine Lord's sky, the sun finally shone on the Proteas. It was poetic. For a country that has lived through a string of agonising ICC collapses, from the Allan Donald run-out in 1999 to last year's T20 World Cup heartbreak against India, this wasn't just another final. It was a reckoning. And on the grandest stage, they delivered.
The last time South Africa held an ICC trophy was in 1998. Since then, hope has risen and fallen in cruel cycles. No other cricketing side has had to carry the emotional toll of so many near-misses. But this time, it was different. This time, a team led by the quietly stoic Temba Bavuma refused to blink.
They chased down the modest 69-run target on the fourth morning with nerves intact and a message unmistakably clear — this South African side wasn’t here to repeat history, but to rewrite it.
Resuming at 213/2, the day began with a scare as Bavuma departed for a well-compiled 66, and Tristan Stubbs followed soon after. Yet, there was no panic. At the crease stood Aiden Markram, the day-three centurion, calm as ever. He had already authored one of the great innings in South African Test history — a defiant, fluent 136 when wickets were tumbling around him — and on Saturday, he ensured the Proteas crossed the line, even if he fell just before it.
His dismissal, six runs short of victory, only allowed the Lord’s spectators a moment to rise and salute a man whose bat had scripted a nation's deliverance. Kyle Verreynne struck the final blow, and the roar that followed felt like an entire country exhaling at once.
Markram’s knock was the cornerstone, but this win was built on collective muscle. Bavuma's grit. Kagiso Rabada's fire. Maharaj's control. Stubbs’ presence. And a dressing room that never once gave in to the ghosts of past failures.
Rabada, another alumnus of the 2014 Under-19 World Cup-winning squad alongside Markram, proved just why he’s the soul of this bowling unit — with nine wickets in the match and the kind of spells that turned pressure into panic for the Australians.
South Africa didn’t just win a Test. They conquered history. They stitched together eight consecutive victories through the WTC cycle, across continents and conditions, and walked into Lord’s as a side in form. But it’s the weight of history they carried — and finally shed — that makes this triumph monumental.
This win, above all, belongs to the people back home — who stood by their team through silence, sorrow, and the sound of shattering hopes. For a nation that has seen its share of transformation and trauma, this victory brings unity, pride, and poetic justice. Cricket in South Africa, once a symbol of segregation, is now a story of redemption.
And what better venue than Lord’s, with its ivy walls and timeless aura, to stage a victory 27 years in the making?
South Africa’s warriors will return home as champions of the most traditional format, with medals around their necks and history in their hands. Their story is not just about lifting a trophy — it’s about lifting a nation’s spirit.
This was more than a victory. It was closure. It was catharsis. It was cricket’s full circle. UNI BDN GNK

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