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Ken Borland


Archive for February, 2012


Ontong & Duminy give SA a total to bowl to 0

Posted on February 17, 2012 by Ken

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Contrasting innings by Justin Ontong and JP Duminy gave South Africa 147 for six and a total they could bowl to in the first T20 international against New Zealand at the Westpac Stadium in Wellington on Friday.
Clever bowling, backed by magnificent fielding, had given New Zealand another stranglehold over the South African batsmen after they had been sent in to bat and it needed an extraordinary over of hitting by Ontong to give the tourists a respectable total.
South Africa had been reduced to 52 for four after nine overs and Duminy and Ontong had struggled to find anything else but singles as they added 23 runs in the next five overs.
Ontong, who had seemingly edged a sweep off part-time spinner Rob Nicol to wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum in the previous over, then laid into off-spinner Kane Williamson, ending his second over with four successive sixes, three of them to deep midwicket and the fourth over long-on.
The bristling Tim Southee returned to claim Ontong’s wicket for 32 off 17 balls, taking a magnificent low return catch, and Doug Bracewell, who recently skittled Australia in a shock test win for New Zealand, then bowled a superb penultimate over that cost just three runs, two of them being leg-byes.
Fifteen runs would come from the final over, however, as Johan Botha hit Kyle Mills for a four and a six.
Openers Hashim Amla (19) and Richard Levi (13) had started brightly for South Africa, adding 24 off 20 balls, but the brilliance of Martin Guptill in the field had much to do with the visitors’ top-order woes.
Guptill dashed in from mid-off and slid into the stumps to run out Amla and then snapped up a wonderful low catch at short extra-cover to remove AB de Villiers for eight after the South African captain had slapped a delivery from left-arm spinner Roneel Hira with tremendous power and timing.
A top-class delivery from off-spinner Nathan McCullum had removed Colin Ingram for a two-ball duck, brother Brendon completing a juggled stumping after a foray down the pitch by the left-hander.
Duminy gave himself time to settle and refused to let the pressure get to him as he accumulated an important 41 off 37 balls, although he was fortunate to survive an lbw appeal off Williamson on 21.
Southee (4-0-28-3) and Nathan McCullum (4-0-16-1 with the new ball) did much to unsettle the South African batsmen.

Van Zyl upbeat after long journey 0

Posted on February 17, 2012 by Ken

World Championships 400m hurdles bronze medallist LJ van Zyl’s journey to the London Olympics has not been without it’s disappointments and injury heartaches, but the South African is confident 2012 will be his best year yet.
    Van Zyl posted the four fastest times of 2011 but could only win bronze behind Britain’s Dai Greene and Puerto Rican Javier Culson in the Daegu World Championships, while in 2009 he also had the fastest time of the year but was eliminated in the semi-finals.
    But the 26-year-old has also been hampered by injuries, struggling through most of 2007 after winning the Commonwealth Games gold medal in 2006, and he was battling a hamstring strain in Daegu last year.
    “This has been my best year in terms of base work, I started in November and I’m already doing better this year at the same exercises compared to when I broke the South African record last February [47.66],” Van Zyl told Reuters in Johannesburg on Tuesday.
    “The key thing is that I’m injury-free and I’m timing my peaks better. I’ve learnt how to pace myself and get to my peak for the major events.”
    In a country where athletics is hugely popular but has famously under-performed at the Olympics – South Africa has won just one gold medal (Josiah Thugwane in the 1996 marathon) since 1992 – there is plenty of pressure on Van Zyl to turn his undoubted ability into gold when it really matters.
    “There’s a lot of expectation, but I see it as motivation, not pressure,” the softly-spoken Van Zyl said.
    His impending marriage – on September 29, seven weeks after the Olympic 400m hurdles final – to Irvette van Blerk – a top-class South African road runner – is another reason why Van Zyl believes 2012 will be a great year.
    “Irvette is also hoping to qualify for the Olympics and will be running the London Marathon at the end of April. It’s nice that we share the same vision, she’s also preparing for the Olympics and she knows what it takes, she understands the sacrifices,” Van Zyl said.
    The part-time cattle farmer joked that a payout of R200 000 [19 600 euro] he received for breaking the South African record last year had been spent on buying a herd of cows for the customary lobola [dowry] payment grooms make to their bride’s family.
    Van Zyl, who has a personal best time of 47.66 seconds, said competition would be stiff in the Olympic 400m hurdles.
    “The Americans are always good, they’ll have two or three guys in the final, while there’s also Greene and Culson. Basically, everyone in the final has a good chance of doing well.
    “But there’ll definitely be more pressure on Greene in front of his home crowd. Anyway, I’ll just be focusing on my own race and my 10 hurdles,” Van Zyl said.
    The keen off-road biker has also decided to scale back on his races in the build-up to the Olympics.
    “My season is so long and I’ve had too many races before which has led to tired legs. So I’ll be concentrating on training until April and will then compete in the Yellow Pages Series [the domestic South African circuit]. We have three other fine hurdlers in South Africa, so the competition will be good.
    “Training at 1400m above sea-level in Pretoria will also definitely be an advantage when it comes to running in London, and the weather’s much better too!” Van Zyl said.

The Impi will not be walkovers 0

Posted on February 17, 2012 by Ken

The seventh team in the T20 Challenge – unveiled on Monday as the The New Age Impi – will not be the walkovers many have predicted following the confirmation that they will have a home base in Benoni and the announcement that English star Paul Collingwood will be their captain.

The New Age Impi are a “best-of-the-rest” composite side drawn from those players not being used by the six franchises, but callow youth and lack of big-game experience are not adjectives you’d use to describe them.

Collingwood, who led England to the World T20 title in 2010, and Dutch star Ryan ten Doeschate are the headline players in a 13-man squad that includes players like Adrian McLaren, Richard Cameron, Charl Pietersen, Craig Alexander, Pumelela Matshikwe and Ryan Canning, who have all seen plenty of franchise action.

Despite the high stakes on offer in the T20 Challenge – first and foremost two spots in the Champions League – Impi coach Vincent Barnes said there had been no adverse reaction from the franchises and they had an agreement that players would return to the franchises or be offered to the Impi as circumstances demanded.

“The franchises have first call on the players, but we can also get more guys from them. We’ve got some experience, which does help, and it’s a fantastic opportunity for the guys, even though they’re going to be thrown into a hostile environment – next week some of them will be opening the batting against Dirk Nannes or bowling to Loots Bosman and Chris Gayle, after their last match was an amateur game in Paarl!

“But if they can make the step up, who knows where it could lead? Maybe the IPL will come knocking and we’re also eligible for the Champions League. There’s no doubt there’s a need for this sort of side that enables more players to get exposure,” Barnes said.

Collingwood, famous for being one of England’s grittiest batsmen in an international career that has spanned 68 tests, 197 ODIs and 35 T20s, promised that no quarter would be given by his composite side.

“As an international cricketer, you always like to be challenged, it gets the juices flowing, and I’m really excited about captaining a new team with a lot of youngsters. The hardest thing will be to gel together in a short space of time and to play three games in a week-and-a-half is a huge challenge. But sometimes when players are thrown in the deep end, they do quite well,” Collingwood said.

The 35-year-old all-rounder confirmed that making the final – and earning a Champions League spot – would be the Impi’s goal.

“We’re here to win, I’ll be drilling that into the boys, we’re not just going to turn up. If we can qualify for the Champions League and develop some youngsters at the same time, it will be a real bonus. I don’t believe T20 is a lottery – if you get the right strategies and the right players for the conditions, then you can get some momentum going,” Collingwood, who led England to a record eight successive T20 wins between May 2010 and January 2011, said.

And there is no doubting Collingwood’s own determination to produce the goods on the field because the loss of his place in England’s limited-overs team is clearly something he wants to rectify.

“Even though I’m 35, I still have ambitions to play for England and if I can produce six to eight months of good cricket then I might get back in the team. Playing here in South Africa is a big stage for me and I still have a three-year contract with Durham and my ambitions are still with England,” Collingwood said.

MiWay chief executive Ren? Otto said his company’s decision to sponsor this year’s T20 Challenge had been an “opportunistic” one.

“We discussed it with Sail during the Nedbank Golf Challenge in December and they followed up two weeks ago to tell us the sponsorship was available. The final decision was made on Friday, so it was an opportunistic one, it’s the way we run our business – when a good opportunity comes, we move on it. We are a short-term insurance company after all!

“But we’re very excited, it’s an awesome opportunity to expose our brand because we turn four this year and we’re the new kid on the block. But the typical T20 audience is young at heart, like MiWay, a bit provacative and a bit alternative,” Otto said.

The self-described “traditional” cricket-lover said critics of Cricket South Africa [CSA] should allow the Nicholson Inquiry to take its course before questioning the sense of sponsors getting involved in the sport.

“We don’t see why supporters of the game must suffer if things are going on in CSA, our commitment is to the public and we mustn’t punish cricket-lovers. They’re our potential clients.

“We feel that people should let the process take its course and people are innocent until proven guilty. Of course we would never condone anything untoward and if things are being run so badly that the game falls apart, then obviously we would have to relook at our involvement. But I’m a lawyer by trade and nobody has been hung out to dry yet. In any case, it’s about individual accountability and the sport itself should not suffer,” Otto said.

The New Age Impi squad: Paul Collingwood (Durham), Ryan ten Doeschate (Essex), Adrian McLaren (Griquas), Dominic Hendricks (Gauteng), Richard Cameron (Gauteng), Cobus Pienaar (Easterns), Charl Pietersen (Griquas), Khaya Zondo (KZN), Siyabulela Simetu (WP), Beuran Hendricks (WP), Craig Alexander (NW), Pumelela Matshikwe (Gauteng), Ryan Canning (WP).

Now we know Boucher’s successor 0

Posted on February 17, 2012 by Ken

After a couple of years of fraught speculation, we finally know who Mark Boucher’s designated successor is – Thami Tsolekile.

Tsolekile’s inclusion in the list of 22 nationally-contracted players announced on Monday is not only a reward for how well the bizhub Highveld Lions wicketkeeper/batsman has done domestically, but also a clear indication that the national selectors have earmarked him as the successor to Boucher when the world record-holder hangs up his gloves after the tour to England ends in September.

“Yes, Thami wouldn’t be getting a national contract if we didn’t think he was the successor,” convenor of selectors Andrew Hudson told SuperSport.com on Monday. “There’s obviously still a selection process that has to happen before any series, so you can’t take anything for granted, but it’s a decision based on his SuperSport Series performances over the last two or three years and also on the fact he’s never let the SA A team down.”

Finding Boucher’s successor has been a complicated business, with Dane Vilas, Heino Kuhn and Daryn Smit all making strong challenges as well, but Tsolekile has seemingly won the race thanks to his no-frills glovework and tenacious batting.

“Thami’s been a serious contender for a while, he’s 100% as a gloveman plus he’s been scoring runs. He made 58 against Australia in November on a difficult pitch and that showed he has some serious ability,” Hudson said.

Tsolekile’s long-term future as the South African wicketkeeper will, to a great extent, depend on how his report card looks after the England tour, where he is likely to understudy Boucher and play in at least one of the three county games before the first test.

“It’s definitely possible that Thami will go to England, it makes sense for him to go as an understudy,” Hudson said.

Tsolekile will have the advantage of having played at the highest level before, having appeared in three tests (including two in India) in 2004 and Boucher has already promised his aid to whoever his successor will be.

The 31-year-old Tsolekile is one of three newly-contracted players, the other new contracts going to Nashua Titans batsmen Faf du Plessis and Jacques Rudolph.

Despite being picked for the tour to New Zealand, Titans fast bowler Marchant de Lange has not been offered a national contract, but Hudson said the 21-year-old could well break into the group during the year.

“The fact that he’s not getting a contract at the moment does not detract from the fact that he’s a good player and he’s definitely in our plans going forward. As it is at the moment, he’ll only play in our test side if there’s an injury, but we have room to contract him during the year,” Hudson explained.

The presence of Ashwell Prince in the national contract list may appear to be an anachronism after his unceremonious dropping from the test side, but Hudson said the selectors were still looking at the number six position and the Chevrolet Warriors left-hander remained in contention.

“Ashwell’s presence is just because the number six position hasn’t been resolved yet, nobody has really laid claim to it. If Ashwell’s on-song, then he’s good enough and if he’s performing, then he’ll definitely be in the picture,” Hudson said.

The players who have lost national contracts are the injury-prone Nashua Dolphins batsman Loots Bosman and Chevrolet Knights all-rounder Ryan McLaren, despite the fact he was the leading all-rounder in the SuperSport Series with 576 runs and 26 wickets.

Nationally contracted squad: Graeme Smith, AB de Villiers, Hashim Amla, Johan Botha, Mark Boucher, JP Duminy, Faf du Plessis, Imran Tahir, Colin Ingram, Jacques Kallis, Albie Morkel, Morne Morkel, Wayne Parnell, Alviro Petersen, Robin Peterson, Vernon Philander, Ashwell Prince, Jacques Rudolph, Dale Steyn, Juan Theron, Thami Tsolekile, Lonwabo Tsotsobe.

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  • Thought of the Day

    Galatians 5:25 – “Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep walking in step with the Spirit.”

    There is only one Christ and all things that are preached in his name must conform to his character. We can only know Christ’s character through an intimate and personal relationship with him.

    How would Christ respond in situations in which you find yourself? Would he be underhanded? Would he be unforgiving and cause broken relationships?

    “The value of your faith and the depth of your spiritual experience can only be measured by their practical application in your daily life. You can spend hours at mass crusades; have the ability to pray in public; quote endlessly from the Word; but if you have not had a personal encounter with the living Christ your outward acts count for nothing.” – Solly Ozrovech, A Shelter From The Storm

     

     



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