<p>Australia were set a target of 448 to win when South Africa declared their second innings on the fourth morning of the second Test at St George's Park today.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Australia were 31 for no wicket at lunch.<br /><br />Hashim Amla completed his 21st Test century - and his fifth against Australia - and finished on 127 not out when captain Graeme Smith declared at 270 for five.<br /><br />South Africa added 78 runs in 17 overs on Sunday. Quinton de Kock (34) was the only batsman dismissed.<br /><br />Australia were left to see out 71 overs on the fourth day and another potential 90 on Monday - but rain is forecast for the final day.<br /><br />Chris Rogers and David Warner made a confident start to Australia's second innings, with Rogers striking three boundaries as he reached 21 not out at lunch, the first time he has reached double figures in the series.<br /><br />South Africa took the field without left-arm bowler Wayne Parnell, who suffered a groin injury in the first innings, and were left with three specialist fast bowlers as they sought to level the three-match series.<br /><br />Australia won the first Test in Centurion by 281 runs.<br /><br />Amla, who was 93 not out overnight, hit 16 boundaries in a 176-ball innings.<br /><br />His tally of five hundreds against Australia equalled a South African record shared by Eddie Barlow, Graeme Pollock, Jacques Kallis and AB de Villiers.</p>
<p>Australia were set a target of 448 to win when South Africa declared their second innings on the fourth morning of the second Test at St George's Park today.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Australia were 31 for no wicket at lunch.<br /><br />Hashim Amla completed his 21st Test century - and his fifth against Australia - and finished on 127 not out when captain Graeme Smith declared at 270 for five.<br /><br />South Africa added 78 runs in 17 overs on Sunday. Quinton de Kock (34) was the only batsman dismissed.<br /><br />Australia were left to see out 71 overs on the fourth day and another potential 90 on Monday - but rain is forecast for the final day.<br /><br />Chris Rogers and David Warner made a confident start to Australia's second innings, with Rogers striking three boundaries as he reached 21 not out at lunch, the first time he has reached double figures in the series.<br /><br />South Africa took the field without left-arm bowler Wayne Parnell, who suffered a groin injury in the first innings, and were left with three specialist fast bowlers as they sought to level the three-match series.<br /><br />Australia won the first Test in Centurion by 281 runs.<br /><br />Amla, who was 93 not out overnight, hit 16 boundaries in a 176-ball innings.<br /><br />His tally of five hundreds against Australia equalled a South African record shared by Eddie Barlow, Graeme Pollock, Jacques Kallis and AB de Villiers.</p>