Postpublished at 11:12 British Summer Time 11 September 2022
Jonathan Agnew
BBC cricket correspondent on Test Match Special

I don't think England have played this very well. They have squandered their advantage.
Bad light stops play with England 97-0, needing 33 more for a 2-1 series win
Crawley unbeaten on 57, Lees on 32 not out
South Africa slip from 83-1 to 169 all out - Stokes 3-39, Broad 3-45
England earlier lose three wickets for four runs to be dismissed for 158
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Today at the Test highlights on BBC Two at 19:00 BST
Tom Rostance, Tom Mallows and Ffion Wynne
Jonathan Agnew
BBC cricket correspondent on Test Match Special
I don't think England have played this very well. They have squandered their advantage.
Leach b Rabada 0 (Eng 159-8)
Oh dear. England are in trouble now as Rabada has his fourth wicket.
It's an innocuous dismissal really, as Jack Leach tries to play a straightforward defensive shot but gets an inside edge onto his stumps.
Ben Foakes has 14, but he just needs somebody to stick with him. England's lead is only 40.
Lead by 38
Marco Jansen, who has 4-35, bowls another tidy over and Ben Foakes takes just a couple of singles from it.
Ben Foakes plays a nice drive out to the fielder on the cover boundary but turns down the single. Jack Leach is the new batter, so the game plan is pretty clear.
Vic Marks
Former England spinner on BBC Test Match Special
Robinson timed it quite nicely, but it was a tame push that went sweetly off the middle of the bat straight to mid-off.
Robinson c Elgar b Rabada 3 (Eng 155-8)
It takes South Africa just two balls to get the first wicket of the day.
A soft dismissal for Ollie Robinson, who spoke this morning about sticking around with Ben Foakes. He chips one straight to Dean Elgar at cover without adding to the overnight score.
Ben Foakes and Ollie Robinson make their way out to the middle and there are two balls left in Kagiso Rabada's over after they went off for bad light yesterday evening.
England have spoke about wanting to move the game on quickly and get bowling again, so we could be in for some entertaining batting this morning.
BBC Weather's Nick Miller: "The weather is not going to get in the way of the remainder of this match, the chance of a shower is very, very slight. If we get one today it will be in the next 2-3 hours and perhaps late on Monday, if we get that far.
"Otherwise it is getting warmer with sunny spells, with 23 degrees the top temperature today. Tomorrow up to 25 degrees and more in the way of sunshine.
"There will be more cloud than sun for a large part of today, though there will be increasing sunshine towards the end of play so no concerns with bad light like we had on Saturday.
"So all in all we are in very good shape."
Robinson bowled beautifully yesterday.
England bowler Ollie Robinson speaking to Sky Sports: "My consistency is something I've worked really hard on, any time I train accuracy is my key focus, just hitting the top of off stump and getting the ball to move around either way.
"It's something I pride myself on, and making the batters play as much as possible is key.
"Yesterday, we noticed it wasn't swinging that much early on so we went to the wobble seam deliveries pretty quickly and that worked well on that pitch."
On his time out of the Test side: "It was a tricky period obviously, losing Down Under was hard on all of us, especially myself. When I got back form Australia and re-evaluated where I was, I felt like I was still a county cricketer.
"I spoke to Jimmy, Broad and Stokes about how they go about it and how they got to where they are. I had to have some honest conversations, but I've worked harder than I ever have in the last six months and I'm really proud it's paying off.
"It's nice to see my speeds up and that I'm maintaining them, but I'm not the end result yet. Hopefully I can push on and get up to 83/84mph and be one of the best bowlers in the world.
On his role with the bat this morning: "My job at the moment is to support Ben Foakes, he got a century last week so he's in great form so I'll support him and get him on strike as much as I can. Hopefully he can get 50/60, and we'll extend our lead and get bowling again."
If you missed any of yesterday's action, when 17 wickets fell in the day, you can catch up on the highlights here.
Ollie Robinson took five wickets and Stuart Broad four as South Africa were bowled out for just 118, while Ollie Pope has the highest individual score in the game so far with his 67.
Good morning and welcome to day four of the deciding Test.
It's only the second day of actual play, however, after the first day was washed out and the second was cancelled after the death of Queen Elizabeth II.
But despite it now only being a three-day Test, the game has moved at some pace. England have a lead of 36 over South Africa with three first-innings wickets remaining. They will be looking to build their lead quickly in this morning session.