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Ken Borland


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SA halve deficit despite late breakthrough 0

Posted on December 15, 2011 by Ken

 

Graeme Smith scored a half-century as South Africa halved their first-innings deficit with nine wickets in hand at stumps on the first day of the first test against Sri Lanka at Centurion on Thursday.

 

    Seam bowler Vernon Philander had earlier claimed five wickets as South Africa dismissed Sri Lanka for 180 at tea, before replying with 90 for one by the close of play.

 

    Smith and opening partner Jacques Rudolph batted out 32.5 overs, the pair of left-handers putting on 88 in that time.

 

    Smith looked in fine form as he stroked seven fours in his 61 off 105 deliveries, while Rudolph struggled with his timing and reached 27 not out off 98 balls at stumps.

 

    Captain Smith fell just six minutes before the close, playing around a full delivery from Dilhara Fernando to be trapped lbw.

 

    He had gone to his 30th half-century in his 94th test off 80 balls by driving medium-pacer Thisara Perera beautifully through mid-on for four.

 

    Sri Lanka’s bowers were steady, but they struggled to obtain the same assistance the South Africans did, even though the home attack sprayed the ball around disconcertingly at times.
South Africa’s much-vaunted attack were struggling in helpful conditions as Thilan Samaraweera and Angelo Mathews added 65 for the fifth wicket off just 80 balls.
The pair took Sri Lanka to 156 for four before Philander struck three times in four overs to complete his third five-wicket haul in three tests.
Philander’s destructive burst began with two wickets in successive deliveries, both given out on review, as Samaraweera (36) edged an excellent delivery that nipped away off the seam and Kaushal Silva was adjudged to have brushed the ball with his glove as it flew to wicketkeeper Mark Boucher down the leg side.
Perera took a single off the hat-trick ball, but only lasted till the next over when he failed to read an Imran Tahir googly and Jacques Kallis made a stunning reflex catch at slip as the edge bounced off Boucher’s thigh.
Sri Lanka had lost three wickets in five balls to slump to 157 for seven and Philander struck again to have Mathews caught by Kallis for 38.
Philander made full use of the grass on the pitch to claim five for 53 in 13 overs, becoming the first South African to claim three five-wicket hauls in his first three tests.
Dale Steyn produced a couple of top-class away swingers to bowl Chanaka Welegedara (4) and Fernando (0) with successive deliveries, ending the Sri Lankan innings on the stroke of tea.
Steyn had earlier removed Tillakaratne Dilshan and Mahela Jayawardene, who edged a back-foot drive into the slips for 30, the fast bowler finishing with impressive figures of four for 18 in 10.4 overs.
Captain Dilshan’s rash shot gave Sri Lanka a poor start and they battled to 76 for three at lunch after being put into bat.
Dilshan, on six, tried to on-drive a swinging delivery from Steyn on the up and looped a catch to Philander at wide mid-on.
Former captain Kumar Sangakkara lasted just three balls before Philander made a delivery rear up and inducing an edgel to second slip, where Kallis took a well-judged catch.
Sri Lanka were reeling on 12 for two, but Tharanga Paranavitana and the experienced Jayawardene batted with intense concentration in a sensible third-wicket stand of 54.
Steyn’s first wicket was his 250th in tests, the 28-year-old reaching the landmark in his 49th game.
Only Dennis Lillee has taken 250 wickets in fewer tests, the Australian fast bowler reaching the milestone in his 48th match.

SA send Sri Lanka in to bat 0

Posted on December 15, 2011 by Ken

South Africa won the toss and sent Sri Lanka in to bat on the first day of the first test at Centurion on Thursday.
    A pitch sporting a healthy covering of green grass and partly-cloudy overhead conditions should provide plenty of assistance to the pace bowlers.
    Sri Lanka have made three changes to the team that drew their last test against Pakistan five weeks ago and will go into the match with just one frontline spinner in left-armer Rangana Herath.
    Seamers Thisara Perera and Dilhara Fernando come into the team for Dhammika Prasad and Kosala Kulasekara, while spinner Suraj Randiv makes way for an extra batsman in the experienced Thilan Samaraweera.
    South Africa are fielding the same XI that lost by two wickets to Australia to level the series three weeks ago.
    Teams
    South Africa – Graeme Smith, Jacques Rudolph, Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis, AB de Villiers, Ashwell Prince, Mark Boucher, Vernon Philander, Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel, Imran Tahir.
    Sri Lanka – Tharanga Paranavitana, Tillekaratne Dilshan, Kumar Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardena, Thilan Samaraweera, Angelo Mathews, Kaushal Silva, Rangana Herath, Thisara Perera, Chanaka Welegedara, Dilhara Fernando.

CSA embarrassed? Don’t be ridiculous … 0

Posted on December 15, 2011 by Ken

By most accounts, the final week of testimony in the Nicholson Inquiry should have been severely embarrassing to Cricket South Africa. Their board was described as “dysfunctional” and even CEO Gerald Majola was reduced to tears.

So it was widely anticipated that when they held a press conference at the Wanderers late last week – with the venue being moved to suit the media and reporters being promised they could ask anything – there would be an air of contrition in the air.

There was nothing of the sort.

President AK Khan was his usual slippery self, while Majola was defiant, prickly and downright aggressive at times.

Khan began by admitting: “It would be naive to say there has not been damage to South African cricket. Yes, reputations and relationships have been damaged”.

He then went on to criticise “wild allegations and unnecessary speculations” against CSA, before refusing to commit the organisation to the findings of the inquiry, appointed by sports minister Fikile Mbalula.

“I don’t want to pre-empt anything,” he said when asked if CSA would accept Judge Nicholson’s recommendations.

“The board will determine our response as soon as we receive the report. It would be very unfair to expect us to say ‘yes’ to the findings before we’ve seen the report,” Khan said.

So, in other words, CSA want to see what their punishment is and then decide whether to accept it.

This ridiculous state of affairs is like a convicted criminal telling the judge he will only accept his sentence if it is to his liking!

The CSA board have delayed sorting out the whole Majola bonus scandal for 18 months now and they still have the cheek to expect the South African cricket-loving public to wait while they decide whether the eminent Judge Nicholson has made a fair appraisal of the situation?

The issue should have been put to bed months ago, but the CSA board, who are continually bleating about how, despite most of them being successful businessmen, they “don’t know about corporate law and stuff,” clearly also have no moral compass.

Majola received a bonus from the disgraced Lalit Modi’s organising committee for his brilliant staging of the 2009 IPL, concealed it and then received another massive bonus from CSA for the same work. It’s as cut-and-dried as that and so clearly morally wrong that even a kindergarten kid could figure it out. And never mind the conflicts of interest that arose as the CEO kowtowed to the IPL – thereby earning his bonus – at the expense of his South African constituents, most notably the Gauteng Cricket Board.

Majola is the leader of the denialists, hiding behind his board and blaming everyone else for the mess he created and the cover-up he engineered.

“Ali Bacher did the same thing,” he said. Well Bacher did get a bonus for his running of the 2003 World Cup, but that was all minuted and known about and he most certainly didn’t receive a second windfall for the same work!

“All the issues were dealt with by the board and their decisions were unanimous, Nyoka was a part of that. I presented all the facts to the inquiry and Nyoka did not. He called me a liar, but I won’t call him one,” Majola said.

The word “unanimous” and spurious press releases claiming the players are supporting Majola have been used often by CSA in their disinformation campaign, but I have been personally told by board members after meetings that they have voted against the proposals!

“The terms of reference for the inquiry are not about Gerald Majola and it has nothing to do with me, I was just there to assist. The inquiry is based on whether the board applied their mind in making their decisions,” Majola wriggled out.

My favourite part of the press conference was when Majola began praising his work in hosting the 2009 IPL as the most wonderful thing that had ever happened to South African cricket.

“People don’t understand the magnitude of the spin-offs that tournament has to South African cricket. The entire public benefited, it brought R2 billion into this country. It was the best ever tournament in South Africa and now it’s all been reduced to being about a million rand! I have better things to do with my time … ” Majola raged.

It reminded me of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s hit musical Evita, about Eva Peron, the powerful wife of Argentine president Colonel Juan Peron.

Colonel Peron is telling a press conference how wonderful Evita is and ends with the line “she’s the one who’s kept us where we are”; to which the reporters reply: “she’s the one who’s kept YOU where YOU are”.

To Gerald Majola, I would say, The IPL has kept you flush with cash, but for the rest of us it has been a sordid scandal that has done massive damage to the game in this country.

 

 

Favourites SA looking for ruthless edge 0

Posted on December 14, 2011 by Ken

South Africa go into Thursday’s first test against Sri Lanka at Centurion as overwhelming favourites, but captain Graeme Smith said on Wednesday that they wanted to discover a ruthless edge to their play.
    Although South Africa have maintained a position in the top three of the International Cricket Council test rankings for the last few years, they have not won a series at home since beating Bangladesh in 2008/9.
    They have drawn series with England, India and Australia since then.
    “I hope we get a lot of confidence out of the way we play. We’ve played some really good cricket at home, but we just haven’t been able to land that killer blow. We’ve dominated, but we haven’t done enough to get over the line,” Smith told a news conference at Centurion on Wednesday.
    “I’m hoping we can string three good sessions together instead of just two out of three … that’s probably why we haven’t been able to beat the good teams. Hopefully we can string a whole day together against Sri Lanka.”
    To make matters worse for the Sri Lankans, they were greeted by a pitch with a lush green covering of grass on Wednesday, conditions exactly the opposite to what they are used to at home.
    “The pitch looks pretty green. I think the groundsman’s having a bit of a panic, he’ll be wanting heaters and I reckon there’ll be a tent up over the pitch this afternoon,” Smith said. “He only started preparing the pitch on Monday and he desperately needs some sunshine. I’m sure he hoped for more sunshine than he got.”
    Sri Lanka captain Tillekaratne Dilshan said they were just going to have to perform on whatever surface they were given.
    “The pitch looks good for fast bowlers, all fast bowlers will enjoy it. We have no control over the groundsman, we just have to play on that wicket. It’s definitely the greenest pitch I’ve seen in South Africa, even more than in 2002/3.”
    Sri Lanka’s pace bowling reserves were decimated before the tour by injuries to Nuwan Kulasekara, Dhammika Prasad, Shaminda Eranga and Suranga Lakmal, while the tourists were still waiting for a replacement for the 25-year-old Nuwan Pradeep, who strained his hamstring in a warm-up game last weekend.
    Sri Lanka have taken some encouragement out of their performance in that warm-up match, against a SA Invitation XI in Benoni. The visitors dismissed the home side for 357 and then made 207 for three in reply in a rain-shortened game.
    “Our last test against Pakistan went very well, we came back strongly after losing the previous game. And the bowling unit did a great job on a really flat pitch and the top-order batsmen got runs in the warm-up,” Dilshan said.
    While South Africa have the expectation of being favourites to live up to, their veteran wicketkeeper Mark Boucher is under enormous pressure to score runs and save his international career after 141 tests.
    The 35-year-old has scored just 195 runs in his last dozen innings at an average of 17.72, but Smith said he backed Boucher to come good.
    “Bouch is coming into the game with calm focus. He’s worked hard on aspects of his batting and I hope all the hard work comes off for him. As a team, we’re collectively behind Bouch, and I’m really excited with the way he’s trained, he’s looked good in the nets. He’s always an asset for a team, with his experience and the way he handles the bowlers,” Smith said.
    Sri Lanka are hoping their luck will turn in South Africa, having lost six and drawn one of their seven tests in the republic.
    The Centurion test is the first Sri Lanka have played in South Africa since 2002/3. The second test is in Durban from December 26 and the third in Cape Town from January 3.

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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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