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Ken Borland


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De Lange praised for seizing his opportunity 0

Posted on December 26, 2011 by Ken

Veteran South Africa all-rounder Jacques Kallis on Monday praised debutant fast bowler Marchant de Lange for seizing his opportunity on the first day of the second test against Sri Lanka at Kingsmead.
    De Lange claimed four for 60 to reduce Sri Lanka to 289 for seven at stumps, having earned his first cap due to a knee injury that ruled out Vernon Philander, who took 24 wickets in his first three tests against Australia and Sri Lanka.
    “Marchant did well, he was on the button from ball one. The injury to Vernon was unfortunate, but that opens the door for someone else. The opportunity was there for Marchant and he took it. It’s nice to have another 145km/h bowler around,” Kallis told a news conference after the end of play.
    The 21-year-old De Lange hails from the quiet sub-tropical town of Tzaneen in the far north of South Africa and has played just 14 other first-class matches.
    Sri Lanka coach Geoff Marsh was pleased with a more solid batting display by his team, who were dismissed for just 180 and 150 in the first test at Centurion.
    “We kept being all out for less than 200 in our first innings, it happened against Australia, Pakistan and here. It was something we had to address, the batsmen had to work on their technique, how they approached their innings and their thinking out in the middle. They all have very good records, so we should be getting 300+,” Marsh said.
    “But the batsmen have been working really hard and focusing on all aspects of batting. One guy went on to get a big score today and we’re around 300, which is where we have to be to be competitive. It was a bit of a breakthrough today.”
    Thilan Samaraweera scored 86 not out as he and debutant Dinesh Chandimal (58) put on 111 for the sixth wicket.
    “I’m really pleased with Thilan, he’s played well on this tour and it’s great to have a quality player like him on board.
    “And Dinesh has done very well for us in one-day cricket, he’s worked really hard and he can come in and give us some oomph at number seven. He has all the shots and he’s not afraid of playing them. I hope it’s the start of a good career,” Marsh said.

Samaraweera & Chandimal bat SL out of danger 0

Posted on December 26, 2011 by Ken

Thilan Samaraweera and Dinesh Chandimal batted Sri Lanka out of danger as they steered the visitors to 289 for seven at stumps on the first day of the second test against South Africa at Kingsmead on Monday.

    Sri Lanka had elected to bat first under clear blue skies on a brown-coloured pitch, but their top-order batsmen lost concentration at key moments as they slipped to 162 for five..

    But Samaraweera and debutant Chandimal put together an outstanding record sixth-wicket partnership of 111 to take Sri Lanka to 273 for six before Chandimal was out eight overs before the close.

    The 22-year-old Chandimal scored 58 off 86 balls, with seven fours, before he reached out to try and cut a wide delivery from Morne Morkel, but edged the ball to wicketkeeper Mark Boucher.

    The partnership bettered the previous sixth-wicket record for Sri Lanka against South Africa of 105 between Chamana Kapugedera and Prasanna Jayawardene in Colombo in 2006.

    Samaraweera, who played with the straightest of bats and great application, reached the close on 86 not out, losing Thisara Perera with what turned out to be the last ball of the day’s play.

    Perera scored 12 before he fended at a lifter from debutant fast bowler Marchant de Lange, giving an easy catch to Hashim Amla at backward short-leg. 

    De Lange, who caused obvious discomfort with his sharp pace and steep bounce off a short run-up, was the best of the South African bowlers with four for 60 in 16.3 overs.

    Imran Tahir was the unluckiest of the bowlers, finishing with one for 87 in 28 overs, but the Pakistan-born leg-spinner had Chandimal dropped on 25 by the leaping De Lange, the replacement for the injured Vernon Philander, and should have claimed the wicket of Samaraweera on 50 when the veteran popped back a return catch, but the umpire called a no-ball which television replays subsequently showed to be a legitimate delivery.

    De Lange had taken three wickets by tea to reduce Sri Lanka to 197 for five, Mahela Jayawardene having earlier joined an exclusive club, becoming the ninth batsman to reach 10,000 test runs.

Jayawardene, Sri Lanka’s leading test-run scorer, reached the landmark with a single off the ninth delivery he faced, pushing fast bowler Dale Steyn square on the off-side.

The former captain reached 31 in his 127th test before falling in the second over after lunch as he played all around a delivery from Morkel, the ball nipping back and coming through the gate to bowl Jayawardene.

The 21-year-old De Lange had been brought on after just six overs and he made an almost instant impact with figures of two for five from his first four overs.

De Lange struck with the final ball of his second over when Tharanga Paranavitana chased a delivery outside off stump and edged a catch to Boucher to fall for 12.

Kumar Sangakkara, the leading batsman on the International Cricket Council’s official test rankings, was then caught behind for a duck off the second ball of De Lange’s following over.

The left-hander was forced to play at an excellent delivery that pitched back-of-a-length and held its line just outside off stump, inducing a thin edge and another catch for Boucher as the tourists slipped to 47 for two.

The tall Easterns Titans bowler struck again after lunch when he took a good reflex catch off his own bowling to remove Angelo Mathews for 30 and end a promising fifth-wicket stand of 45 with Samaraweera.

 

Samaraweera, who batted for four-and-a-half hours and faced 218 balls, showed the most application and technical skill of the Sri Lankans. The 35-year-old collected 10 fours, seven of them in the “V”.

Captain and opening batsman Tillakaratne Dilshan survived several rash shots at the start of his innings but made it to 47 off 69 balls before swinging a low full toss from Tahir straight to Morkel at long-leg.


More Protea heartbreak in 2011 0

Posted on December 21, 2011 by Ken

 

Much as the visitors to that Bethlehem stable 2 000 years ago looked to the baby lying in a manger for miraculous deeds, it is new coach Gary Kirsten who South African cricket fans are expecting to transform their team from nearly-men into ruthless dominators.

2011 brought yet another year of World Cup heartbreak and it is Kirsten, and AB de Villiers, who was named as the new limited-overs captain after the tournament, who will be picking up the cudgels and trying to give 2012’s story a very different, happy ending.

South Africa’s recent test record bears comparison to their ODI shortcomings because they have also just failed to nail down the ultimate prize – the number one ranking – despite fielding some of the greatest players in the game and periodically producing performances of sheer class.

An inability to ruthlessly dispatch opposition who are on the back foot stands in South Africa’s way in both formats.

MENTAL FRAGILITY

 

In the World Cup, the bowlers – thought to be the weak link before the tournament – could not be accused of not fulfilling their side of the deal as they bowled out all their opposition in the six group matches and then restricted New Zealand to 221 for eight in the quarterfinal.

But the mental fragility of the batsmen was once again to the fore as they unravelled in the face of unsavoury Kiwi aggression, the same old numb feeling of devastation returning to their Dhaka changeroom, as it had before in Sydney, Karachi, Edgbaston, Kingsmead and Beausejour.

That World Cup failure is South African cricket’s biggest wound is obvious and a whole new generation of the infected was launched in Dhaka in March. It is equally as obvious that as soon as Kirsten had steered India to the title – chasing down an imposing 275 in the final against Sri Lanka – that Cricket South Africa would be desperate for their former opening batsman to take over the reins of the Proteas.

The short visit of Australia at the start of the 2011/12 season only served to ram home the point, however, that South Africa’s batsmen often falter at the most critical times.

After the incredible victory at Newlands, where Australia were bowled out for a scarcely-believable 47, the visitors, a pale shadow of their former selves, arrived at the Wanderers ripe for the killing. South Africa won an important toss and batted first in perfect conditions, with Australia then falling a bowler short when Shane Watson limped off injured.

But instead of bludgeoning the weakened Australian attack, South Africa were bowled out in a day for 266. And they did something similar in the second innings too, slipping from 237 for three to 339 all out.

The beleagured Brad Haddin and Mitchell Johnson engineered a series-levelling two-wicket victory and South Africa had still not won a series at home in four attempts, dating back to 2008/9.

Sri Lanka followed Australia to these shores and were blown away by an innings on a grassy Centurion pitch, and the nation now waits with bated breath for the Proteas to finish the job in Durban over the last few days of the year and finally get rid of that unwanted home series statistic.

TALL TREES

South Africa still boast some of the tallest trees in world cricket’s forest though.

Jacques Kallis was the number one ranked batsman in the world after his twin centuries against India at Newlands at the start of the year and has a firm hold on test cricket’s number one all-rounder ranking.

Hashim Amla was the fastest ever to 2 000 ODI runs early in the year, while Dale Steyn was unwavering in living up to his status as the best bowler in the world.

Graeme Smith was unfairly demonised after the World Cup – a public lynching in South Africa was not going to change anything – and 2011 was not his greatest year. But, having relinquished the limited-overs captaincy, the left-hander made another of his characteristic fourth-innings centuries to win the first test against Australia at Newlands.

Mark Boucher was another who did not go quietly, making a career-saving half-century against Sri Lanka at Centurion, where he also kept wicket superbly. AB de Villiers is not letting his new responsibilities affect his batting, and his 99 against Sri Lanka at Centurion was one of the best innings of his career.

NEW STARS

New stars were also born.

Faf du Plessis impressed at the World Cup, while left-arm seamer Lonwabo Tsotsobe bowled with penetration and accuracy in limited-overs matches.

Leg-spinner Imran Tahir burst on to the scene at the World Cup as South Africa defied convention and went into several games with three spinners. Slow left-armer Robin Peterson and off-spinner Johan Botha were the others and they also proved their worth as all-round cricketers.

Jacques Rudolph forced his way back into the test team as Smith’s opening partner, but battled to make several good starts really count.

But the newcomer of the year was undoubtedly Vernon Philander.

Trying him out at Newlands in the first test against Australia, after years of domestic excellence, might just prove to a watershed for South African cricket.

Philander claimed 14 wickets in the two tests against Australia – including five for 15 in the 47 all out innings – to win the man of the series award and then 10 to skittle Sri Lanka at Centurion and win the man of the match award.

Philander’s adherence to the basics of line-and-length and hitting the seam are his greatest strengths; perhaps South Africa will fulfil their considerable potential when they discover a way to do the simple things well as a team, day in, day out.

http://www.supersport.com/cricket/sa-team/news/111220/More_Protea_heartbreak_in_2011

AD is the big brother for SA bowlers 0

Posted on December 19, 2011 by Ken

Allan Donald © Gallo Images

Allan Donald is like the big, elder brother for the South African bowlers, whether he’s on Vernon Philander’s shoulder or stepping into Morne Morkel’s sizeable shoes.

South Africa’s bowlers might have got stuck into Sri Lanka, sweeping them away en route to an innings victory, but for bowling coach Donald, there is always progress to be made.

As one of the greatest fast bowlers the game has seen – he took 330 wickets in 72 tests at 22.25 – there is no doubting Donald’s standing and his views are highly respected in the team. But it is his method as much as his reputation that achieves this.

“I’m not here to teach them how to bowl. It’s all about the attitude towards the skill, I’m not doing anything technical. It all starts at training and the culture we’re building as an attack,” Donald said.

Philander, going through a purple patch, and Morkel, in the midst of a slump, have been the two major beneficiaries of Donald’s friendly advice in recent days.

Donald said Philander’s incredible success – he is just the second bowler in over a century to take four five-wicket hauls in his first three tests [Australia’s Rodney Hogg being the last to do it in 1978/79] – did not surprise him because the 26-year-old worked extremely hard on his game in the three years he was outside the national squad.

“I’m not surprised, he went away and really learnt his game. He understands his role and Vernon’s a wonderful, classy bowler. Conditions have played their part, but he still had to execute those skills,” Donald said.

The bowling coach said his most important work with Philander going forward will be outside the field of play.

“I’m constantly on Vern’s shoulder. He’s going through a golden spell and the danger is him not caring about why it’s happening. He needs to understand why things are going so well, why the ball is swinging. So when Mr Bad Form arrives, he doesn’t have to come and ask me what’s going on.

“Vernon needs to feel why things are going well. You don’t ever take it for granted when you’re in good form. He will be tested on flatter pitches,” Donald said.

Morkel’s performance at Centurion was probably the most disappointing aspect of the innings win, but Donald said the lanky fast bowler just needed more game time.

“I put myself in Morne’s shoes and I was also a rhythm and confidence bowler, I needed to bowl a lot. Morne’s the same, he just needs to get some confidence and then he’ll be back all the way.

“I think he’s just one spell away. The last day at Centurion was really good, we wanted him to have a long spell after lunch after we tinkered on a few things after the first innings,” Donald said.

The South African attack, as a whole, was much improved in the Sri Lankan second innings, after a first-innings display in which they only really hit their straps in the last hour.

“The bowling performance in the first innings was probably a 6/10,” Donald said. “We need to get off the blocks in a really good way, and we did that on the last day.

“We tend to start sessions not so well and then play catch-up and pull it back. Sometimes we get too loose, maybe too arrogant, but even if we’re not bowling well, we manage to pull it back. The second innings was what we wanted.”

The danger on such well-grassed pitches as the Centurion one is that the bowlers can become over-excited and forget the basics.

“That typifies the 6/10 effort. On a responsive pitch, instead of just bowling into your area, you feel as a unit that you need to get into the hot zone more often. It can be difficult on pitches like that because of the expectation, but it’s no excuse,” Donald said.

http://www.supersport.com/cricket/sa-team/news/111219/AD_is_the_big_brother_for_SA_bowlers

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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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