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Ken Borland


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Amla can really appreciate the value of a single run, ask Stiaan 0

Posted on February 27, 2015 by Ken

By the end of his career, there will probably be anthologies written about all the elegant runs Hashim Amla has scored, but from 22 yards away he could really appreciate the value of just a single run.

It was the single that began Stiaan van Zyl’s Test career and the left-hander returned to the changeroom exactly a hundred runs later having joined the select band of batsmen who have scored a century on debut.

The single came as he flicked left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn through short-leg and Amla met Van Zyl in the middle of the pitch and said “I know it’s only just one run, but very well done!”

Van Zyl smiled in relief and went about knocking up an impressive 129-ball century in the first Test against the West Indies at Centurion on Thursday.

It was not without its troubles, however, particularly at the start when he almost edged his first ball to leg-gully off Benn and was dropped in the same position off the giant left-arm spinner on two.

“I was very nervous, before the first ball my gloves were wet. Benn is a bit taller than your normal spinner [Amla pointed out that he releases the ball from about three metres high!] and there was a bit of bounce and turn. It was a rough start but it became a bit easier.

“It’s obviously a big stage, but I told myself that it’s just the same old cricket ball coming at you. I just wanted to get past 10, to feel my way in, and once I got 50 I thought a hundred might be possible. Fortunately they gave me enough bad balls for me to get there,” Van Zyl said.

The left-hander added that the experience gained over the course of his 96 first-class games also helped, as did the foundation laid by playing for the all-conquering Cape Cobras side.

Although he was given the ideal platform by Amla and De Villiers’ record fourth-wicket stand of 308, it did not make his task any easier that he had to wait for over five hours with his pads on.

“We lost three quick wickets and my pads were on, and then every ball could be the one that brings you in. So it was quite mentally draining and I had to walk around and try and focus on other stuff. It’s a different ball game coming in at 365 for four compared to 50 for three, so the platform took the pressure off and I was able to just play freely,” Van Zyl said.

The 27-year-old’s brisk innings was also important as it appertains to the match situation, allowing South Africa to declare on 552 for five half-an-hour before the scheduled tea break. That should have given the hosts 38 overs in which to knock over the West Indian top-order, but a typical summer thunderstorm washed out that possibility, with no more play possible on the second day.

“We were looking to score runs, with rain around, and I wanted to declare earlier rather than later, plus there was always going to be bad light. We wanted to score quickly to give us as much time as possible to bowl at them. Now we have three days to get 20 wickets and hopefully the pitch sweating under the covers a bit might work in our favour,” captain Amla said.

Although the pitch has flattened out a bit, South Africa’s total is surely insuperable for a West Indies batting line-up that has averaged just 262 runs per innings in South Africa.

“The team is in position, we were in trouble but AB and I had a crucial partnership when the pitch still had a bit in it. I’m really happy to get some runs [208!] and the pitch still has a bit in it up front if you bowl in the right area. There are a few divots because it was quite soft on the first day and we have a good score on the board for what I consider the best attack in the world to bowl at,” Amla said.

 http://citizen.co.za/296037/just-wanted-get-past-10-stiaan-van-zyl/

Double ton for Amla, century on debut for Van Zyl 0

Posted on February 26, 2015 by Ken

Stiaan van Zyl completed an express century on debut and Hashim Amla made 208 as South Africa declared on 552 for five on the second day of the first Test against the West Indies at SuperSport Park in Centurion on Thursday.

A thrilling day’s action was then cut short, however, as rain washed out the entire final session.

Van Zyl needed just 129 balls to reach three figures and stroked 15 fours, most of them in elegant fashion through the off side, off both front and back foot, and becomes the fifth batsman to score a hundred on Test debut for South Africa.

The others were Andrew Hudson (Bridgetown, 1992), Jacques Rudolph (Chittagong, 2002), Alviro Petersen (Kolkata, 2010) and Faf du Plessis (Adelaide, 2012), and Van Zyl is the first to achieve the feat on home soil.

Van Zyl was on 101 not out when Amla declared, and Quinton de Kock had just hit left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn for successives sixes to go to 18 not out.

Meanwhile Amla went methodically to his double century as if it were a daily routine, after six-and-a-half hours and 359 balls at the crease, once again showing he has remarkable stores of concentration and patience.

Amla had already made the highest Test score at Centurion, surpassing Jacques Kallis’s memorable 201 not out against India in 2010/11, when he was dismissed, searching quick runs before the declaration and holing out at long-on off Benn.

Kemar Roach and Benn each took two wickets for the West Indies, but they paid heavy prices for limited success, Roach limping off midway through the last session on the first day with an ankle injury and Benn conceding 148 runs in 46 overs.

The West Indies were at least given a valid excuse for delaying their reply against the fearsome South African pace quartet as rain began to fall and an early tea was taken, but the rain was heavy enough to prevent any further play.

Captain Amla was still at the crease with a superb 178 not out as he took South Africa to a commanding 449 for four at lunch.

Amla, who began the day on 133 off 242 balls, applied himself diligently on the second morning, adding 45 runs off 88 deliveries to ensure South Africa did not waste a rousing first day to the Test in which he and AB de Villiers added an unbroken 283 for the fourth wicket to take them to 340 for three at stumps.

The pair took their partnership to 308, the highest for any wicket at Centurion in 19 Tests, before De Villiers was dismissed in the 100th over, the ninth of the day.

De Villiers was once again in inspired form as he cruised to 152 in five hours and 18 minutes, facing 235 balls and stroking 16 fours and two sixes. But totally against the run of play, he then edged an expansive lofted drive at Benn, who obtained a smidgen of turn, and the ball skewed comfortably into the hands of cover-point.

Debutant Van Zyl then came in and was in trouble early on, almost turning his first ball from Benn into the hands of leg-gully, playing and missing outside off stump against the quicks and even being dropped by Kraigg Braithwaite at leg-gully off Benn when he had just two.

But the left-hander then settled and played some impressive strokes through the off-side, reaching a half-century on debut in good time, off 74 balls with eight fours.

 http://citizen.co.za/295957/sa-v-west-indies-1st-test-2nd-day-stumps/

Amla still at the crease; SA in command 0

Posted on February 25, 2015 by Ken

Captain Hashim Amla was still at the crease with a superb 178 not out as he took South Africa to a commanding 449 for four at lunch on the second day of the first Test against the West Indies at SuperSport Park in Centurion on Thursday.

Amla, who began the day on 133 off 242 balls, applied himself diligently on the second morning, adding 45 runs off 88 deliveries to ensure South Africa did not waste a rousing first day to the Test in which he and AB de Villiers added an unbroken 283 for the fourth wicket to take them to 340 for three at stumps.

The pair took their partnership to 308, the highest for any wicket at Centurion in 19 Tests, before De Villiers was dismissed in the 100th over, the ninth of the day.

De Villiers was once again in inspired form as he cruised to 152 in five hours, 18 minutes, facing 235 balls and stroking 16 fours and two sixes.

But totally against the run of play, he then edged an expansive lofted drive at left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn, who obtained a smidgen of turn, and the ball skewed comfortably into the hands of cover-point.

Debutant Stiaan van Zyl then came in and was in trouble early on, almost turning his first ball from Benn into the hands of leg-gully, playing and missing outside off stump against the quicks and even being dropped by Kraigg Braithwaite at leg-gully off Benn when he had just two.

But the left-hander then settled and played some impressive strokes through the off-side, reaching a half-century on debut in good time, off 74 balls with eight fours.

Fast bowler Kemar Roach is expected to make an appearance in the second session, but having spent the best part of a session-and-a-half off the field having an ankle ligament niggle treated, he won’t be allowed to bowl before South Africa, in firm control, have surely declared.

 http://citizen.co.za/295798/sa-v-west-indies-1st-test-2nd-day-lunch/

Amla & De Villiers power to record partnership 0

Posted on February 24, 2015 by Ken

The Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers record partnership was like an express train gaining momentum as they powered South Africa to a commanding 340 for three at stumps on the first day of the first Test against the West Indies at SuperSport Park in Centurion on Wednesday.

The pair looked unstoppable as they added an unbroken 283 for the fourth wicket, a record for South Africa against all teams, beating the 249 Jacques Kallis and Gary Kirsten put on against the West Indies in Durban in 2003/04.

They were brought together when South Africa had been rocked by three quick wickets, pacemen Kemar Roach and Sheldon Cottrell striking three times in three overs as the hosts slumped from 57 without loss to 57 for three.

But with superb shot-selection, a positive mindset and magnificent skill, Amla and De Villiers completely turned the momentum around.

Amla finished the day on 133 not out, his 23rd Test century and first against the West Indies, batting for 290 minutes, facing 242 balls and stroking 17 fours.

De Villiers came to the crease five minutes later than his captain and reached stumps on 141 not out, his 20th Test century and fifth against the West Indies, having faced 211 deliveries, hitting 15 fours and two sixes.

“The pitch flattened out a little bit in the afternoon and we made it work for us. It was a pretty decent day although it felt a bit weird in the beginning because we haven’t played Test cricket in such a long time. I told Hash that the first minutes we spent out there felt like a full day already, it really felt very long, and I just tried to take it one ball at a time,” De Villiers said after the close of play.

“We were in trouble at 57 for three, they bowled well up front. We tried to just hang in there as much as possible and leave well because there was some juice in the pitch and the ball was shaping quite a bit. The second and third session the wicket flattened out a bit and we managed to capitalise. I hope we can go on, 340 is a good total on the first day and if we can get close to 500 it would be ideal,” Amla said.

Amla was being kind because the West Indies horribly wasted a good toss to win and the new ball in overcast, bowler-friendly conditions. Their lack of control meant openers Alviro Petersen and Dean Elgar weren’t just happy for their daily bread but rather a boundary ball practically every over as they raced to 50 in the 10th over.

But neither opener had the considerable stores of patience and concentration that mark Amla and De Villiers out as greats of the game and they both departed within seven balls of each other.

Petersen had moved briskly to 27 with six fours before getting out when well set, as he has done so often in the recent past, edging a back-foot push at an innocuous delivery from Roach to first slip.

Elgar’s decision to flash loosely at a short, wide delivery from left-armer Cottrell in the next over was not a smart one and he was caught in the gully for 28.

The West Indies’ decision to bowl first then looked fully justified as Faf du Plessis followed a Roach delivery that shaped away from him, edging behind to captain Denesh Ramdin for a duck and South Africa were vulnerable to a knockout punch on 57 for three.

“At 57 for three, it didn’t look as if there was any gulf between the sides and bowling first looked a good option with the pitch under covers for all day yesterday. We were starting to abuse Hashim for losing the toss!” Proteas coach Russell Domingo joked.

By lunch, Amla and De Villiers had taken South Africa to 102 for three – the West Indies still ahead on points – but by tea it was the tourists who had been knocked to the canvas as the home side had cruised to 225 for three.

Amla had two moments of good fortune, Roach hitting the stumps in the first over after lunch when he had 25 but extraordinarily failing to dislodge the bails, and left-arm spinner Sulieman Benn also coming very close to bowling him with an arm-ball when he had 33.

By stumps the battering was complete, the West Indies having lost Roach, their best bowler, to injury, and the first day’s action certainly points to the fragile West Indian batsmen having a massive total to match.

 http://citizen.co.za/295503/amla-de-villiers-partnership-like-express-train/

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    Galatians 5:22-23 – “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.”

    The fruit of the Spirit are elements of the character of Christ and we should have the constant desire to become more and more like Christ in thought and deed. But what seems impossible for you becomes possible through Jesus. In him, we are filled with love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.



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