Showing posts with label South. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South. Show all posts

Monday, December 10, 2012

Australia v South Africa: Memories of madness

Comment by Daniel Keane

Updated November 09, 2012 18:12:00

In one of those small coincidences that cricket tragics savour, the second day of the First Test between South Africa and Australia at The Gabba will mark exactly a year since day two of the Cape Town test in which both sides were bundled out for less than 100 in an afternoon of madness.

Australia's test performances since then have allowed the memory of that day to fade quicker than it might otherwise have done. Last summer, Australia demolished a star-studded India so emphatically it was hard to believe that India had held the number one test ranking seven months earlier and that Australia had not occupied top spot for more than two years.

In the 4-0 clean sweep, Michael Clarke became the first Australian batsman since Bradman to score a double and triple century in the same series. (Bradman actually accomplished the feat twice, in England in 1930 and 1934). Ricky Ponting also launched his own resurgence, scoring a century in Sydney and a double century in Adelaide. By that time, day two at Newlands, Cape Town seemed an era away.

Only the most insane of soothsayers would have predicted anything like what happened that afternoon. An astonishing 23 wickets fell as both sides were bundled out in successive sessions. After taking nine South African wickets for 47 runs after lunch, Australia was all out for 47 after tea. The word 'collapse' was barely adequate. Australian cricketers are famously superstitious about the number 87. For a moment it seemed the number 47 might come to be held in similar awe.

The Cape Town test was rightly described as extraordinary. In truth, though, South Africa's collapse would have been staggering on its own. At 3 for 73, they were 12 runs behind the follow on target. A few overs later, they were still behind, but nine wickets down. They were eventually dismissed for just 96.

And then Australia batted. At three for 13, the situation was dire but not yet hopeless. Sides have staged fightbacks from similar positions. At nine for 21, however, it was no longer hopeless but gobsmacking.

The ABC's commentary team was clearly bewildered, caught between the urge to laugh and lament, but remained as insightful as ever. Jim Maxwell called the game a "statistician's banquet" because of all the strange facts it yielded: Australia's third lowest total, its lowest in more than 100 years. One of the few occasions in which a number 11 has top scored, the last pair has made more than the rest of the team combined and parts of all four innings have been played on the same day. The decision review system was used nine times. The third umpire can rarely have been called upon so often in a day's play.

It was as if everyone on the field had been gripped by a temporary but terrible insanity. Perhaps strange forces were at work. Geoff Lawson wondered out loud: "Is it high tide at the moment?" 47 seemed almost respectable when you consider Australia's fall of wickets. To be four for 13, five for 16, six for 18, seven for 21, eight for 21, nine for 21 is, in the modern era, unheard of.

Michael Clarke missed out on the opportunity to enforce the follow on by 12 runs, but if he'd had the chance he should have taken it. While captains have in recent times hesitated from putting their opponents back in (the lingering effect of Eden Gardens, Calcutta, 2001?) making South Africa bat again would not have merely allowed Australia's players to press their advantage and perhaps precipitate a second collapse. It would have protected them from themselves, from their own nihilistic thoughts. Batting again after bundling South Africa out so brilliantly and unexpectedly, Australia was not so much afflicted by a crisis of confidence than a case of losing the plot. After scoring 284 in their first innings, Australia's batsmen suddenly felt a dangerous lack of purpose. They were so far in front they didn't know how to move forward. 188 ahead with three and a half days to play and a kind of numb complacency set in.

Brad Haddin was singled out for criticism because of the reckless shot that cost him his wicket. But is it irresponsible to charge a fast bowler with the score on 5 for 18, just as Haddin did? You could argue both sides. "Grossly irresponsible," you might say, "because he was the team's last hope." Alternatively, you might answer "No, because at 5 for 18, there's probably not a lot to lose." On replay, Haddin's dance down the pitch seemed an attempt to restore sanity by doing something mad. It was as if he was trying to break the spell that had descended on the ground by acting rashly. "If I can hit this for four," he was probably thinking, "I'll show them who's in control. We'll reassert ourselves and be back on top." But he too fell victim.

At the time, some pundits tried to portray Australia's abysmal collapse as proof of the nation's further descent into cricket's doldrums, coming as it did after the humiliating Ashes defeat earlier that year. Others blamed the corrosive effect of Twenty20 cricket on batting techniques. The most cavalier and careless form of the game is, after all, about throwing your wicket away in the service of slogging. But maybe it's safer to say that the Cape Town test was just so extraordinary that it wasn't indicative of anything at all. Perhaps the most sensible stance is that the twin disintegrations, first South Africa's and then Australia's, are proof not of declining standards but of the old truism that cricket is a 'funny game,' with its strange momentum shifts and psychological subtleties. Odd things can happen when you're in the middle. Batsmen become trapped by self-defeating thoughts.

The Russian orchestral conductor Valery Gergiev once chided musicologists who heard in the symphonies of Soviet composer Dmitri Shostakovich evidence of a politically tortured soul. Shostakovich's life overlapped the era of Stalin, and the former's neurotic music is often thought to reflect the madness of the latter's reign of terror. Gergiev rejects this interpretation. "It is time to find more music in this music," he drily remarked. The reasons for this judgment are worth reflecting on. Despite the overwhelming secularism of our age, a metaphysic abides. Everything has to mean something. Nothing can be 'just so.' Every event, occurrence, utterance is a mine of hidden meaning. Words and situations are sifted obsessively in order to get to concealed truth. But, as with Gergiev and the music of Shostakovich, maybe we shouldn't read too much into the Newlands test. Maybe we should just shrug our shoulders and nonchalantly mutter that "cricket is just... cricket." The anniversary of day two at Cape Town is similarly meaningless - it is certainly no omen of what to expect this summer. But in a game that seems to encourage the statistician's attention to details, it is a date certainly worth marking.

And the Cape Town test has not entirely lost its relevance. It showed that while cricket is a team game, from a batsman's point of view it's still a very lonely one. It's sometimes said that cricket is an 'individual's team game' - a clumsy remark, but one that happens to be true. As Matthew Engel wrote in Wisden:

"The guiding myth of cricket is that it is a team game. The ethos is always that the individual must subordinate himself to the collective: celebrate a victory even if he has contributed nothing and faces the chop, or pretend that his own century is meaningless if it failed to secure the team's objective. That applies on the village green just as it does in a Test match. But this misrepresents cricket's appeal, both to the player and the spectator. It's a game of character and personality - individuals operating within the team framework, like wheels within wheels."

Cricket is a team game, but when you're in the middle it's still you against the bowler. That doesn't mean a collective mindset cannot take hold of a batting line-up. On that afternoon in Cape Town, Australia's players were perhaps surprised to have dismissed South Africa so cheaply and quickly that they lost sight of the bigger picture. "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; mere anarchy is loosed upon the world." Maybe Australia's batsmen laughed nervously to themselves at the absurd prospect of repeating South Africa's collapse. Maybe they thought: "Surely, we can't go the same way," and by thinking it, made it happen.

Tags: cricket

First posted November 08, 2012 19:17:31


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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Australia and South Africa beat the rain

Updated September 23, 2012 07:21:03

Australia qualified for the Super Eights round and South Africa earned bragging points as rain ruined two key matches in the World Twenty20 on Sunday (AEST).

Australia beat the West Indies by 17 runs according to the Duckworth-Lewis method after rain cut short the group B game that appeared headed for a keen finish in Colombo.

South Africa outplayed hosts Sri Lanka by 32 runs in a group C match reduced to seven-overs-a-side in Hambantota due to rain.

The match held only academic interest since both South Africa and Sri Lanka had already qualified for the next round with wins over Zimbabwe, the third team in the group.

Australia, chasing a challenging target of 192, were 1 for 100 in 9.1 overs when heavy rain forced the match to be called off in front of 18,000 fans at the Premadasa stadium.

The Aussies, who were ahead of the par score of 83 at that stage, recorded their second successive win following a seven-wicket win over Ireland on Wednesday.

The West Indies and Ireland will clash on Monday, with the winner taking the second Super Eights spot from the group.

The weather ruined a keen finish with Australia edging ahead, needing 92 more from 65 balls with nine wickets in hand.

David Warner hit 28 in an opening stand of 30 with Shane Watson, before Mike Hussey joined Watson to add 70 in 42 balls for the unbroken second wicket.

Watson, who was unbeaten on 41 off 24 balls with three sixes and two boundaries, was declared the man of the match.

Hussey made 28 not out with three fours and a six.

Earlier, the West Indies posted 8 for 191 following attacking half-centuries from Chris Gayle and Marlon Samuels.

Left-handed Gayle smashed 54 off 33 balls and Samuels plundered 50 from 32 balls after the West Indies elected to bat in their first match of the tournament.

Sri Lankan fans were treated to a flurry of strokes as Gayle hit four sixes and five boundaries and Samuels chipped in with four sixes and three fours.

"The weather ruined a very exciting game," said West Indies captain Darren Sammy. "Everybody was looking forward to it.

"The batsmen did what was required of them. We knew Australia would come back hard, but we took too long to respond."

Australian captain George Bailey was relieved at gaining full points from the match.

"There was some good stuff but there was some ordinary stuff as well," he said. "The challenge is to lessen the gap between the good and the ordinary stuff.

"Watson and Warner did the job, Hussey was good too. But we are disappointed with the rain, because an exciting finish was set up."

In Hambantota, South Africa piled up 4 for 78 in seven overs with skipper AB de Villiers smashing two sixes and a four during his 13-ball 30. Hashim Amla (16) and Faf du Plessis (13) were the other main contributors.

Sri Lanka managed only 5 for 46 in reply, having lost the star duo of Tillakaratne Dilshan (0) and skipper Mahela Jayawardene (4) in the first two overs.

Dale Steyn was South Africa's best bowler with 2-10.

Heavy rain had delayed the start by two-and-a-half hours, disappointing a sell-out crowd of 35,000 in the southern port town.

De Villiers said his team was ready for the next round.

"Beating Sri Lanka is nice because they are one of the top teams and now we are ready for the Super Eights," the South African captain said.

"We did not take anything for granted. It was nice to win again."

AFP

Tags: sport, cricket, sri-lanka, australia, jamaica

First posted September 23, 2012 06:13:16


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Saturday, September 8, 2012

Amla leads South Africa to share of England series

Updated September 06, 2012 08:19:14

Hashim Amla piled on the runs once again as he led South Africa to a series-levelling seven-wicket win in the fifth and final one-day international against England at Trent Bridge.

South Africa, chasing a modest 183 for victory, collapsed to 3 for 14 inside five overs under the floodlights in this day/night fixture.

But opener Amla responded with a superb 97 not out and, together with Proteas captain AB de Villiers (75 not out) he shared an unbroken fourth-wicket partnership of 172 that put England's meagre total of 182 in its proper context.

Victory, with more than 15 overs to spare, saw South Africa share the series at 2-2.

Amla, who made a brilliant 150 in South Africa's 80-run win in the second ODI in Southampton, was named man of the series for a total of 335 runs in four innings at an average of more than 111.

That followed on from his corresponding award in the Proteas' 2-0 Test series win over England where he scored a South Africa record 311 not out at The Oval.

Amla's combined tally for both series was a colossal 817 runs at 116.71.

"It's been a good summer for me and I'm glad we got to level the series," said Amla.

"I think the way we bowled set the tone, then me and AB were able to finish it off."

De Villiers added: "We've been a little bit inconsistent, but there's a lot of positives, especially the way we played today. We showed a lot of guts -- 2-2 away from home is a good effort."

One consolation for England was that, despite this defeat, they remained top of the 50-over world rankings having won 12 of their last 14 completed matches.

"It's been a disappointing day - 180 on that wicket was nowhere near enough," said England captain Alastair Cook, who top-scored for his side with 51.

"It's frustrating, we came into this game trying to wrap up the series but you can't do that if we bat like we did.

"However, we've had a really good year in one-day cricket and hopefully we can take that forward to India in the new year."

Cook, recently appointed England Test captain following Andrew Strauss's retirement, will now have a rest as he is is not in the national Twenty20 squad.

"Now I have some time off and I'll turn my attention to the Tests in India," Cook said ahead of a four-match series starting in November.

Amla could only watch as the Proteas slumped at the start of their reply.

Left-hander Graeme Smith fell when he edged Jade Dernbach and James Tredwell held on at the second attempt.

International novices Faf du Plessis and Dean Elgar then both nicked excellent James Anderson deliveries to wicket-keeper Craig Kieswetter.

But de Villiers then pulled two successive short balls from South Africa-born seamer Dernbach for four.

Amla eased paceman Chris Woakes, in for Steven Finn who had a back problem, off the backfoot for a typically stylish four through the covers.

He then completed a 63 ball-fifty, with de Villiers taking just 54 balls to get to the landmark.

Amla drove off-spinner Tredwell over extra-cover for six and ended the match with a wristy flicked boundary off Dernbach.

In all he faced 107 balls with a six and nine fours.

Earlier, left-arm spinner Robin Peterson took 3 for 37 after enterprisingly being given the new ball by de Villiers as England, without the injured Jonathan Trott and the exiled Kevin Pietersen, failed with the bat.

Only Cook, Kieswetter (33) and recalled paceman Chris Woakes, with a career-best 33 not out, got past 30.

Peterson had in-form opener Ian Bell lbw for 10 while Ravi Bopara, promoted up the order in Trott's absence despite a run of low scores, and Eoin Morgan both exited for ducks.

Left-handed opener Cook completed a 69-ball fifty but fell meekly when he chipped a return catch to part-time spinner du Plessis.

AFP

Tags: sport, cricket, onedayseries, south-africa

First posted September 06, 2012 08:19:14


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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Sri Lanka turn tables on South Africa

Updated January 21, 2012 08:58:22

Sri Lanka celebrated a rare success on Friday on their tour of South Africa with a five-wicket victory in the fourth one-day international.

Big knocks from captain Tillakaratne Dilshan (87), man-of-the-match Thisara Perera (69) and Dinesh Chandimal (59) lifted the visitors to 5 for 304 after the home side reached to 7 for 299 with skipper AB de Villiers (96) to the fore.

After keeping close to the six-run-an-over target at the De Beers Diamond Oval for much of the innings, the Sri Lankan batsman hit out against a South African attack sorely missing rested fast bowler Dale Steyn.

Unfortunately, the win came too late for the tourists to effect the five-match series with the Proteas taking a winning 3-0 lead three days ago thanks to a four-run win in Bloemfontein.

"This was a fantastic effort as we were hoping to restrict South Africa to 250 or 260 runs," said Dilshan, "and on a personal note it was nice getting a big score again".

Dilshan averaged a run a ball in a 112-minute stand that included nine fours and two sixes while Perera was even quicker, taking just 44 balls with three fours and five sixes.

Before the ODI matches began Sri Lanka lost a Test series 2-1, prompting the government to order a probe into a "crisis situation" after losses to England, Australia and Pakistan as well.

De Villiers hit eight fours and three sixes off 76 balls before being bowled by Perera with the ball slamming into middle stump after an attempt to steer it down leg side backfired.

Graeme Smith returned to form with 68 runs after managing only six, 28 and two in the first three matches of the series, triggering a media and public outcry that led to De Villiers coming out in support of the Test captain.

He struck seven fours and a six off 69 balls in the northern Cape city before being caught by Dilshan off the bowling of Lasith Malinga.

His dismissal 23.5 overs into the innings was soft with the bat turning in his hand as he attempted a leg-side shot off a delivery that was short of a length.

AFP

Tags: cricket, sport, sri-lanka, south-africa

First posted January 21, 2012 08:44:38


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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Du Plessis clinches series for South Africa

Updated January 18, 2012 08:37:51

Faf du Plessis made the top score and pulled off a spectacular run out as South Africa clinched a series victory in the third one-day international against World Cup finalists Sri Lanka in Bloemfontein on Wednesday morning.

Mainly due to Du Plessis making 72 off 74 balls, South Africa was four runs ahead of the Duckworth/Lewis par score when rain stopped play.

The home side was on 5 for 179 after 34 overs in reply to Sri Lanka's 9 for 266 and the result gave South Africa a winning 3-0 lead in the five-match series and extended the tourists' poor run to six successive one day defeats.

Run outs played a crucial role in both innings.

Sri Lanka made a competitive total but it might have been considerably higher if its two star batsmen, Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene, had not been run out, both by direct hits.

Upul Tharanga (58) and captain Tillakaratne Dilshan (33) put on 94 for Sri Lanka's first wicket.

Sangakkara, batting at number three, looked set to take full advantage of the good start on an easy-paced pitch as he stroked his way to 38 off 37 balls.

But Sangakkara fell to a superb piece of fielding by du Plessis, who dived far to his left at backward point to stop a cut by Dinesh Chandimal, then hit the stumps at the batsman's end with Sangakkara stranded after the batsmen hesitated.

Jayawardene was run out for 15, four balls into the batting powerplay in the 36th over, when he was sent back by Chandimal, slipped as he turned and could not recover to beat an accurate throw from Colin Ingram at mid-off.

"Mahela's and Sanga's run outs cost us 20 runs," said Dilshan, who added that some sloppy fielding by his team had cost another 20 runs when South Africa batted.

Lasith Malinga made two early strikes in the South African innings, bowling Graeme Smith and Colin Ingram, and South Africa slumped to 3 for 52 when Alviro Petersen missed a reverse sweep and was leg before wicket to Dilshan.

Du Plessis and JP Duminy put on 61 in a fourth wicket stand marked by aggressive running between wickets before Duminy fell to a direct hit by Nuwan Kulasekera from mid-off.

Du Plessis went to a career-best score before he became another run out victim, with Angelo Mathews making a quick pick-up and throw from cover.

Rain started to fall in the 33rd over, at the end of which South Africa was one behind according to the Duckworth/Lewis method.

Dilshan brought Malinga back into the attack but the unorthodox fast bowler conceded eight runs to South African captain AB de Villiers and Albie Morkel before the rain intensified and play was halted.

On a pitch which offered no assistance to the bowlers, Tharanga and du Plessis were the only batsmen to achieve half-centuries.

The left-handed Tharanga dominated the opening stand with Dilshan and reached a stylish 50 when Dilshan, who failed to score in the first two matches, was on 18. Tharanga made his 58 off 65 balls with five fours and two sixes.

Dilshan, who had less of the strike during the partnership, scored 33 off 49 balls with two fours.

Despite senior batsmen Hashim Amla and Jacques Kallis having been released from the South African squad, du Plessis was promoted to number four in the South African order as part of a rotation policy with De Villiers and Duminy.

He responded with some crisp strokeplay in an innings which included seven fours. He was suffering from cramp towards the end of his innings which he admitted contributed to him being run out.

De Villiers said he would have preferred the match to have gone the distance.

"I thought we were in a good position although the game was in the balance," he said.

AFP

Tags: cricket, sport, south-africa, sri-lanka

First posted January 18, 2012 08:37:51


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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Welegedera sends South Africa crashing

Updated December 28, 2011 10:24:01

Left-arm opening bowler Chanaka Welegedera produced a career-best performance to put Sri Lanka in the ascendancy on the second day of the second Test match against South Africa at Kingsmead.

Welegedera took 5 for 52 as South Africa was bowled out for 168 on a good batting pitch, giving Sri Lanka a first innings lead of 170.

They added seven more runs for the loss of captain Tillekeratne Dilshan before bad light stopped play.

Sri Lankan century-maker Thilan Samaraweera attributed the astonishing turnaround in his team's fortunes to hard work after they were thrashed by an innings and 81 runs in the first Test at Centurion.

"In the last five years I have never seen the team practise so hard," said Samaraweera.

He revealed that the touring players put in two days of hard work in Johannesburg after the Centurion Test ended early, then followed up with another three days of effort leading up to the current Test.

Samaraweera said team management and senior players had rallied the squad.

"We talked a lot after that (Centurion) game," he said.

"We talked honestly. We didn't bat well, although it was a very hard wicket to bat on, and we gave 400 runs. We didn't do well, batting or bowling."

This second-day performance gave Sri Lanka hope of gaining its first Test win of the year - and Hashim Amla, who top-scored for South Africa with 54, admitted that a result was virtually certain if the weather held.

"We have to dig deep and draw on our experience of being in this situation before and coming out on top," he said.

Asked to explain the South African batting collapse, Amla said: "They bowled well and there were some soft dismissals."

But he was unable to pinpoint a reason for the South African team's inconsistency with the bat, which was also exposed in a drawn series against Australia last month.

Welegedera, whose previous best Test figures were 5 for 87 against Pakistan in Sharjah last month, bowled an impeccable line, slanting the ball across the right-handed batsmen, with all of his victims caught behind or in the slips.

Left-arm spinner Rangana Herath took 4 for 49 as South Africa crashed to its lowest total against Sri Lanka.

The tourists were earlier bowled out for 338. Samaraweera made a patient 102 and Marchant de Lange took seven wickets on his debut.

De Lange's figures of 7 for 81 were the best recorded by any bowler in Test matches in 2011 and put him at the top of an extraordinary crop of eight bowlers who have taken five or more wickets in an innings in their first Test match this year.

AFP

Tags: cricket, sport, sri-lanka, south-africa

First posted December 28, 2011 08:23:36


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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

India Vs Pakistan - ICC Cricket World Cup South Africa 2003

India Vs Pakistan - ICC Cricket World Cup South Africa 2003Includes 7 Holiday Favorites:

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
Who’s got a nose for Christmas? Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer! Just in time for the holidays, here comes Rudolph in the most beloved special of all time! Packed with a sleigh full of memorable songs and unforgettable characters, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer lights up the hearts of young and old alike.
Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town
Where does Santa’s suit come from? Why does he slide down the chimney? Why does he live at the North Pole? The answers to all these questions and the origins of our favorite holiday traditions are revealed in this delightful classic about Kris Kringle, the world’s most famous gift giver.

Frosty the Snowman
Look at Frosty Go! What’s become a bigger holiday tradition than building a snowman? Watching the original Christmas classic, Frosty the Snowman! Grab your scarf, bundle up, and get ready for the incredible adventure of a magical snowman who’s got enough personality to win over the whole family. You can’t go wrong with Frosty!
 
Frosty Returns

Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol
Bah Humbug, Mr. Magoo! In this first-ever animated holiday TV special, the bumbling and loveable Mr. Magoo is Ebeneezer Scrooge in a hilarious and heartwarming musical retelling of Charles Dickens’ classic, "A Christmas Carol".

The Little Drummer Boy
This story has touched the hearts of families everywhere. In this holiday classic, the true spirit of Christmas is revealed when a lonely orphan stumbles upon the birth of the baby Jesus and affirms what the holidays are really about – giving and love. Featuring a beautiful soundtrack by the Vienna Boys’ Choir, this timeless tale of generosity makes the perfect addition to your holiday collection.

Cricket on the Hearth
A delightful, animated musical version of Charles Dickens’ classic tale, Cricket on the Hearth, tells the story of a poor toymaker and his daughter whom a helpful Cricket named Crocket befriends on Christmas morning. When tragedy strikes the family, it’s Crocket who comes to the rescue and restores peace and happiness.

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