[caption id="attachment_98114" align="alignleft" width="262"] South Africa's Vernon Philander celebrates taking the wicket of Australia's Adam Voges for no score during their cricket Test match in Hobart Saturday. — AP[/caption]HOBART — Mitchell Starc offered Australia a lifeline with an inspired spell after a record low home total against South Africa on an opening day of carnage in the second Test in Hobart Saturday. The left-arm pace spearhead put the brakes on the Proteas with three wickets in 10 balls post-tea after the Australians were skittled for 85 off 32.5 overs. The tourists reached stumps at 171 for five and pushed out their lead to 86. Temba Bavuma was unbeaten on 38 with Quinton de Kock on 28. Up until Starc's intervention South Africa had seized control of the first day with a total of 15 wickets tumbling for a combined 256 runs under cloudy skies. Vernon Philander powered the Proteas with five for 21 as Australia folded to its lowest total at home against South Africa to revive memories of recent catastrophic batting collapses. The capitulation revisited the nightmares of its miserable 47 in Cape Town in 2011 and England's demolition of it for 60 at Trent Bridge last year. "It was a magnificent all-round performance from everyone, catches needed to be taken, there was a run out and all those things add up to a collective team effort to bowl a team out," Philander said. Skipper Steve Smith provided backbone with his unbeaten knock of 48 as the Australians failed to back up their talk of rebounding from their comprehensive 177-run thrashing by the Proteas in the Perth series opener. "It was a bit of a reminder of Trent Bridge the way the ball was going around. At the end of the day 85 is not good enough from an Australian cricket team," coach Darren Lehmann lamented. Just as South Africa looked well on the way to emulating the intimidating West Indies teams of the 1980s-1990s with three straight series wins in Australia, Starc struck. He toe-capped Dean Elgar with a lethal yorker in front of the stumps with his first ball after tea then removed Stephen Cook with his penultimate delivery of the over. Starc then had Perth centurion JP Duminy snapped up by Smith at second slip reducing the Proteas to 46 for three. Skipper Faf du Plessis followed lbw to Hazlewood for seven and Hashim Amla was caught behind off the same bowler for 47. The Hobart rout followed Australia's first innings collapse of 10 for 86 in Perth when they squandered a 158-run opening stand to surrender meekly to the Proteas. Cricket statisticians went into overdrive as Australia plumbed new lows in Hobart — it was also its lowest home total since its 76 against the West Indies in 1984. David Warner was the barometer of an approaching Australian maelstrom when he recklessly whooshed at a wide ball in Philander's opening over and was caught behind. The hosts reached 43 for six at lunch after Usman Khawaja edged Philander to Amla at slip for four and threatened Adam Voges was out next ball, caught behind by Quinton de Kock. Callum Ferguson, who fought off a hat-trick in his first ball faced in Tests, was brilliantly run out for three by a direct throw by fielding substitute Dane Vilas while going for a second run. Wicketkeeper Peter Nevill perished after a DRS review of an lbw appeal off Kagiso Rabada. Philander was forced to leave the field for shoulder treatment after a mid-pitch collision with Smith during an lbw appeal, but returned after lunch. He bowled newcomer Joe Mennie for 10 and Duminy took a screamer in the gully to remove Starc, flinging himself to his right off Abbott. Josh Hazlewood cracked two fours before he fell to a slips catch by Amla off Abbott. De Kock took a blinding one-handed catch across the slips cordon to remove Nathan Lyon and end Australia's misery.