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Cook, Philander shine on tense first day

England's ex-captain anchors innings as home side make steady progress on dreary day one at The Oval

Vernon Philander again proved to be a thorn in England's side as Alastair Cook eyed a hundred against South Africa on day one of the third Test.

England were 4-171 at stumps having won the toss, with 31 of the scheduled 90 overs lost to bad weather on the opening day of the 100th Test at The Oval.

Pace bowling allrounder Philander had superb figures of 2-17 runs in 12 overs, including five maidens, despite a stomach bug.

Image Id: 325D08E9A6C749E0BA25AFFE46F3A298 Image Caption: Dark skies hover over south London on Thursday // Getty

That followed his man-of-the-match display with both bat and ball in South Africa's crushing 340-run victory in the second Test at Trent Bridge last week, a result that left the four-match series level at 1-1.

"I thought he bowled so well," returning South Africa fast bowler Kagiso Rabada said.

"Going off the field, I asked him for a few pointers. He is a really skillful bowler, especially in these conditions. He makes it look really simple."

Former England captain Cook was 82 not out at Thursday's close. Already England's leading Test run-scorer, the left-handed opener spent more than four-and-a-half hours at the crease to be in sight of his 31st century at this level.

Ben Stokes was 21 not out, having so far put on 51 for the fifth wicket with Cook.

Earlier, Tom Westley marked his Test debut with a promising 25 in England's troublesome No.3 position and put on 52 with Cook, his Essex teammate and mentor.

Image Id: 5DFFB654330E4F0B975C07F0107F1621 Image Caption: Dawid Malan was undone by a beauty from Kagiso Rabada on debut // Getty

"It’s something you dream about as a boy, wanting to play Test cricket for England," Westley told Sky Sports.

"It was familiar territory for me, batting with Cooky, having done so at Essex for so many years, and was quite calming.

"Cooky batted superbly today in tough conditions."

England had been heavily criticised by several former captains for a lack of resolve at Trent Bridge, where they were twice bowled out cheaply and folded for 133 in their second innings.

Although the overcast conditions and green-tinged pitch promised to assist quick bowlers, England captain Joe Root opted to bat first after winning the toss, just as South Africa skipper Faf du Plessis had done in a similar situation in Nottingham.

But not before long, England lost their first wicket.

Keaton Jennings, battling to retain his place, was repeatedly beaten outside off stump by Philander and the South Africa-born opener eventually edged the seamer low to Dean Elgar at third slip for a nine-ball duck.

Image Id: 9B0D87C28D734534A18EC90B0B598EFB Image Caption: Keaton Jennings trudges off without scoring // Getty

Westley, one of three England debutants, walked out at 1-12 and got off the mark with a neat legside four off fast bowler Morne Morkel.

Westley, who earlier this season scored a hundred against South Africa for the second-string England Lions, also drove spinner Keshav Maharaj for two boundaries in an over as he and Cook made it safely to lunch.

However, he added just one run to his score after lunch when, four balls after the break, his 89-minute innings ended when he nicked a curving Chris Morris delivery to du Plessis at second slip.

Star batsman Root then made 29 before he edged an excellent Philander ball that cut off the seam and was brilliantly caught one-handed by diving wicketkeeper Quinton de Kock.

De Kock flies to snare Root in spectacular fashion

Rabada, banned from the second Test for swearing at Stokes in the series opener at Lord's, then got in on the act.

The 22-year-old rising star produced a superb inswinging yorker that knocked Dawid Malan, another of England's debutants, off his feet before crashing into middle stump. Middlesex left-hander Malan, born in London but brought up in South Africa, was out for one.

Rabada's joy was obvious but he insisted he'd learnt his lesson.

"It's really simple: don't swear, but just be yourself," he said.

"I don’t have any bad intentions. We talk off the field, myself and Stokes and the other players.

"I don’t think I'll stop the way I'm playing, I'll just follow the rules."