England rocked by three late wickets

CAPETOWN,  (Reuters) – South Africa moved into a  strong position to win the third test and level the series after  England, chasing an unlikely 466 to win, reached 132 for three  at the close on the fourth day at Newlands yesterday.

England openers Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook put on a  century opening stand before Friedel de Wet, left-arm spinner  Paul Harris and Dale Steyn claimed a wicket apiece in the final  session.

Cook looked in fine form as he scored a fluent 55, but De  Wet removed the left-hander with the third ball of his second  spell. Cook lashed out at a delivery outside off stump, his  attempted pull shot merely skying the ball and allowing  wicketkeeper Mark Boucher to take an easy catch.

Three overs later, Strauss was out for 45, caught at  short-leg off Harris, and South Africa were on the charge.

Kevin Pietersen came in and showed aggressive intent, but  had only added six runs to the scorecard when Steyn, using  reverse-swing, trapped him leg-before with a fullish delivery  which the batsman tried to drive on the leg side.

Jonathan Trott, on 24, and nightwatchman Jimmy Anderson, yet  to score, took England to stumps with South Africa the only  likely winners.

England will need to score 334 runs on the final day in 90  overs or, more reasonably, hold on to their remaining seven  wickets, to prevent South Africa levelling the four-match  series.

England made it through to tea without any hiccups, on 38  without loss in their second innings, after South Africa  declared their second innings on 447 for seven.

South Africa batted for 40 minutes after lunch and declared  when JP Duminy was caught behind for 36.

Earlier, South Africa captain Graeme Smith added 21 to his  overnight total before being dismissed for 183 after top-edging  a Graham Onions bouncer to Paul Collingwood at fine leg.

James Anderson and Graeme Swann both took three wickets for  England.