for quality writing

Ken Borland



Free State show they might be the team to chase in the Currie Cup 0

Posted on February 28, 2022 by Ken

The Free State Cheetahs showed that they might well be the team to chase in the Currie Cup as they downed the previously-unbeaten, two-time defending champions, the Bulls, 38-25 in an all-action display at Loftus Versfeld on Wednesday night.

It was clear from the outset, when the Cheetahs kept the ball alive with offloads and passing through multiple phases, that the visitors were after tries and they scored six of them. Two of them were via hooker Louis van der Westhuizen at the maul, but the rest were slickly worked and the reward for ball-in-hand rugby.

Flank Andisa Ntsila’s grubber through for wing Rosko Specman to score was an early highlight.

A helter skelter first 20 minutes saw the Bulls match the Free Staters on the scoreboard, even if they only scored two tries to the three of the Cheetahs. Nineteen-year-old debutant loose forward Cameron Hanekom was rewarded for following up a botched restart by the visitors for the opening try, and a good long pass out wide by flyhalf Chris Smith led to the second try by wing Stravino Jacobs.

Fullback Clayton Blommetjies cutting through for a try after a lovely angled run by flyhalf Siya Masuku was not enough to prevent Free State actually trailing by one point (19-20) at halftime.

But the Bulls were left chasing the game in the second half as very little went right for them.

They had practically zero lineout platform and a physical, streetwise Cheetahs pack meant the Bulls’ rolling maul had no traction.

Referee Paul Mente was also ruthless in targeting their ill-discipline and both lock Reinhardt Ludwig and prop Lizo Gqoboka were yellow-carded in the final quarter.

The problems started in the 47th minute when wing Siyabonga Novuka was a fraction-of-a-second early in tackling Specman in the air. The Cheetahs set the maul, went wide right and then, when they came back left, there were no defenders left and lock Aidon Davis strolled over for the try.

The visitors built on their lead 12 minutes later when Van der Westhuizen rumbled over for his second try and Masuku then put in a lovely crosskick for Ntsila to score to put Free State 38-20 up and out of sight.

Scorers

Bulls: Tries – Cameron Hanekom, Stravino Jacobs, Siyabonga Novuka. Conversions – Chris Smith (2). Penalty – Smith. Drop goal – Smith.

Free State Cheetahs: Tries – Rosko Specman, Louis van der Westhuizen (2), Clayton Blommetjies, Aidon Davis, Andisa Ntsila. Conversions – Ruan Pienaar (4).

SA v NZ T20 matches are always intense 0

Posted on January 08, 2013 by Ken

South Africa’s limited-overs contests with New Zealand have often been antagonistic affairs and the abbreviated, all-action nature of T20 cricket means the adrenaline and intensity can only be ramped up a couple of notches.

The history of T20 matches between the two nations goes back to October 2005 when New Zealand played the first T20 international on African soil, beating the Proteas by five wickets at the BidVest Wanderers Stadium.

Since then, however, South Africa have had a clear advantage over the Black Caps, winning six of the last seven encounters.

Those wins have not always been clearcut, however, with South Africa winning off the last ball at the Wanderers in November 2007, by one run at Lord’s in the 2009 ICC World T20, and by just three runs in their last meeting with the Kiwis.

That victory in Auckland in February, bowlers Marchant de Lange, Morne Morkel and Johan Botha strangling the hosts in the last five overs, clinched a hard-fought series win for the Proteas.

New Zealand, led by the chic batting of Martin Guptill, had won the first game and should have won the decider, but were blown away by Richard Levi in the second match.

It seems a long time ago that Levi blasted his astonishing 117 not out off just 51 balls in Hamilton, breaking the world records for fastest T20 century (45 balls) and most sixes (13). The 24-year-old almost inevitably lost form after suddenly finding himself in the international limelight and, by the end of the ICC World T20 in October he had been dropped. But the Nashua Mobile Cape Cobras opener has regained his touch and has been one of the star performers in the Momentum One-Day Cup this year.

The whole ICC World T20 affair is one Proteas coach Gary Kirsten will want to put behind him as quickly as possible as the former India coach completed a miserable record of having lost all nine of the matches he has been involved in in the SuperEights stage of that competition.

The next T20 world cup will be upon us apace in Bangladesh in April 2014, the year before the 50-over World Cup South Africa so desperately want to win, and Kirsten will begin the process of building a new squad when the Proteas face New Zealand in three internationals in Durban, East London and Port Elizabeth over the Christmas period.

Success in twenty20 international cricket has not come as swiftly for Hashim Amla as he would have liked, but Levi has surely done enough to earn a recall, while it is clear Faf du Plessis has what it takes to excel for South Africa in all formats.

Then again, Amla showed during his magnificent 196 off just 221 balls in the Perth Test against Australia that he has the ability to put any attack to the sword, so that trio could make a perfectly acceptable top three.

Jacques Kallis, the most complete cricketer South Africa has ever produced, deserves a rest before the Tests, but AB de Villiers is the perfect batsman to anchor the middle-order.

JP Duminy’s unfortunate injury does leave a hole, however, with Farhaan Behardien and Justin Ontong not enjoying totally convincing form at domestic level.

With Johan Botha, South Africa’s most successful T20 spinner, also out of contention and Morne Morkel and Dale Steyn possibly resting after their heavy workloads in 2012, Kirsten has the chance to clean the slate and introduce some new faces.

Vaughn van Jaarsveld, Ryan McLaren, Hardus Viljoen, Andrew Birch and Aaron Phangiso are all players who have covered themselves in glory in recent months.

New Zealand, meanwhile, are still tearing their hair out over their inconsistency and have injury problems to boot, with Dan Vettori ruled out of the tour with an achilles problem.

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Thought of the Day

    Even if I’m just a signpost on the road, it would be a source of great joy to know that my service for Christ is effective. It may just be something you say; a kind deed; support in times of need; a sympathetic ear.

    Because you bear his holy name, God expects you to be his witnesses, to proclaim the gospel, and to win souls for God. But Christ inspires you through his Holy Spirit to do this.

    Persevere in your service as Christ did – through obstacles, disappointment and adversity, and never give up hope.

    “Seek the Lord in prayer and open your heart to the Holy Spirit so that Christ can become an essential part of your life. As he leads you along his path, you will experience unparalleled fulfillment that can only be found in serving Jesus Christ.” – A Shelter From The Storm, Solly Ozrovech



↑ Top