South Africa's Test captain Dean Elgar signalled his return to full fitness from an abductor injury with a hundred in his third red-ball innings this summer as the Titans registered their first win of the season. Elgar, who sustained the niggle during the T20 domestic competition, was one of four centurions for the Titans, who beat Western Province by an innings and 139 runs.

"The most important thing was that he got an opportunity to spend time at the crease and he took it. He has had a difficult few weeks so his goal was to make sure he is batting for a long period of time, knowing that if he does that, the runs will come," Mandla Mashimbyi, Titans coach told ESPNcricinfo.

Elgar and his opening partner Grant Mokoena, who top-scored with 154, shared in an opening stand of 231 before Jiveshan Pillay and Ayabulela Gqamane contributed 113* and 117* respectively to take the Titans to 647 for 7 declared. Despite the towering total, Mashimbyi indicated batting at Newlands was not as straightforward as the scorecard made it seem. "It was not a typical Cape Town wicket. It was a bit slowish so the batter really had to knuckle down," he said. "We found that once guys got in, things became a little easier."

Western Province batters barely managed that. There were only two scores over 40 in their first innings as left-arm spinner Simon Harmer's 7 for 76 forced the follow-on, 452 runs behind. Harmer finished the match with 10 wickets, with Western Province bowled out for 313 in their second dig, where Daniel Smith and Kyle Verreynne made half-centuries.

The win puts the Titans in fourth place on the table and, with one round of fixtures to go before a break, Mashimbyi is hoping for a second victory in the Cape, over Boland this week, to consolidate their position in the top-half. For Elgar, the fixture will be doubly important as he seeks to maximise his competitive batting time ahead of South Africa's three-Test series against India, that begins in mid-December.

"Dean just wants to work on a couple of specifics: things like getting into good positions and watching the ball and it's just about emphasising those points," Mashimbyi said. "He knows his game well and he has been playing a long time, so with some more time in the middle, he will be ready for the Tests."

In other results:

Division One

Division Two

Firdose Moonda is ESPNcricinfo's South Africa correspondent