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Ken Borland


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Pakistan’s perfect new-ball blitz bowls them back into the Test 0

Posted on December 28, 2024 by Ken

The Proteas celebrate one of Marco Jansen’s six wickets … but will they be celebrating a victory at the end of the first Test against Pakistan?

Pakistan produced a perfect nine-over blitz with the new ball late on Saturday afternoon to bowl themselves back into the contest at the end of the third day of the first Test against South Africa at SuperSport Park in Centurion.

Having seemingly dominated the contest on the first two days, the Proteas dismissed Pakistan for 237 in their second innings, which with their 90-run first-innings lead meant they needed just 148 for victory and a guaranteed place in the World Test Championship final.

But in a torrid 50 minutes before bad light came to their rescue, South Africa crashed to 27 for three, Pakistan roaring back into the contest thanks to opening bowlers Mohammad Abbas and Khurram Shehzad.

Aiden Markram, so impressive in the first innings when he scored 89, is still there on 22 not out and looking good. His captain, Temba Bavuma, faced just one delivery before stumps. Their’s will be a vital partnership on the fourth morning.

Tony de Zorzi (2), Ryan Rickelton (0) and Tristan Stubbs (1) were all trapped lbw as the Proteas slumped to 19 for three. The modes of dismissal perfectly illustrated how well Abbas and Khurram bowled: they pitched the ball up and targeted the stumps, while showing their skills by getting considerable movement off the seam.

Left-handers De Zorzi and Rickelton were both targeted from around the wicket. De Zorzi tried desperately to get outside off-stump against Abbas, but the 34-year-old master manipulator of the ball jagged a delivery so far back into the batsman, and the delivery kept a touch low, that the opener was doomed.

Rickelton tried an open stance against Khurram’s mode of attack and, stepping into the ball, tried to punch it straight down the ground. But again the movement off the deck was so much as Khurram seamed the ball past his inside edge and struck him on the pads. Umpire Nitin Menon is not known for giving easy lbws, but this was so plumb it was surprising he turned down the appeal. The jubilant Pakistanis reviewed and were rewarded.

Then, just seven deliveries before play was stopped, Stubbs was trapped lbw by Abbas, who angled the ball into the right-hander and then straightened it past the outside edge and struck him on the back pad.

Marco Jansen had earlier shone with the ball as his six for 52 in 14 overs bowled Pakistan out in 59.4 overs. But he still cut a dissatisfied figure after the effort and he admitted that, despite his third five-wicket haul and his second in three Tests, it had been a struggle.

“I’ve struggled the whole game, to be honest. I haven’t been as consistent as I should have been in terms of line and length. But the wickets are what’s important at the end of the day. You just have to try stay in the battle, not give up and not have any negative body language.

“Not everything is going to click every day, and then it’s all about how you can influence the game positively for your team. It’s tricky when that happens because you train every day to hit that off-stump line, but it’s not about how you feel, it’s about how you impact the game positively. You have to find a way to perform.

“In the first hour today, the pitch felt a lot flatter and the ball didn’t move much. Now it nipped quite a bit when we were batting, plus one or two shot up or kept low. We bowled a touch too full or too short, but 148 really should not be too much on this pitch.”

Pakistan’s success late in the day showed up how poorly South Africa had bowled in extended patches earlier in the day, and especially with the new ball when Pakistan began their second innings after tea on the second day.

Resuming on 88 for three on Saturday morning, thanks to Jansen making two strikes in an excellent spell late on Friday, Pakistan cruised into the lead by lashing 64 runs in the first 14 overs of the third day, when play began at 1.40pm due to morning rain.

Babar Azam went to fifty for the first time in 20 innings dating back to December 2022, and with Saud Shakeel also looking set for a big innings, they had South Africa firmly on the back foot. But an ill-judged, loose cut shot by Babar (50), hitting a short and wide delivery from Jansen straight to deep point, was a vital moment in the Test.

It ended a 79-run partnership for the fourth wicket and shifted the momentum.

From 153 for three after the first hour of play, Pakistan had slumped to 212 for eight by the end of the first session.

That they made it to 237 and a lead that has at least kept them in the game, was thanks to Saud. Batting with excellent judgement, ensuring that his positive intent never strayed into the recklessness that typified the dismissals of Babar, Mohammad Rizwan (3), Salman Agha (1), Aamer Jamal (18) and Naseem Shah (0), the 29-year-old scored 84 off 113 balls.

With his two wickets, Kagiso Rabada joined Dale Steyn as the leading wicket-taker in Tests at SuperSport Park with 59 scalps each. Rabada has taken his in just nine Tests, at an average of 17.96. Steyn needed 10 Tests for his 59 victims, with an average of 17.94.

It is just one of numerous statistics that show that Rabada should be treated with as least as much reverence as Dale Steyn, even though he was not at his best in the second innings.

With 121 more runs needed and seven wickets in hand, the Proteas will be mindful of withstanding a huge effort with a still-new ball from Pakistan on the fourth morning. With a deep batting line-up – Corbin Bosch scored 81 not out from number nine in the first innings – they will still be favourites to win if Markram and Bavuma can bat through the first hour.

Pakistan 3 down & still behind, but poor position does not reflect pressure SA were under 0

Posted on December 27, 2024 by Ken

Corbin Bosch’s pugnacious half-century continued his dream debut and gave South Africa a vital lead.
Photo: Phill Magakoe (AFP)

Pakistan ended the second day of the first Test against South Africa three wickets down in their second innings and still two runs behind, a poor position that does not reflect the pressure they put the Proteas under at SuperSport Park on Friday.

Babar Azam (16*) and Saud Shakeel (8*) were at the crease when bad light stopped play at 5pm with Pakistan on 88 for three. The visitors were no doubt quite happy to retire to the safety of their changeroom as it had been a disappointing previous hour for them as they failed to capitalise on an opening stand of 49 between Saim Ayub (27) and Shan Masood (28).

South Africa were most relieved to have gained a first-innings lead of 90, thanks to dream-debutant Corbin Bosch and the help of the tail, because they bowled poorly for the first 10 overs of Pakistan’s second innings.

Kagiso Rabada eventually broke the opening stand with a tremendous delivery: angled in from around the wicket to the left-handed Saim, it then seamed and bounced past his outside edge and hit the top of off-stump.

Marco Jansen was off-colour in the first innings, but he then produced an excellent spell of two for 17 in four overs late in the day. Shan was smartly taken in the slips by Tristan Stubbs, who had a rough time in the cordon on the first day, and Kamran Ghulam fell for four in similar fashion.

But Ghulam, Pakistan’s top-scorer in the first innings with 54, looked the victim of bad luck as Ryan Rickelton did superbly to scoop up an edge diving forward in the gully. TV replays suggested the ball had bounced just before he got his fingers around it, but third umpire Kumar Dharmasena gave him out.

That the Proteas had a lead as significant as 90 runs was thanks to Bosch, who scored a tenacious 81 not out off 93 deliveries, with 15 fours. He came to the crease after some poor batting by South Africa had seen them slide from 178 for four to 191 for seven, with Naseem Shah taking three wickets.

He joined Aiden Markram at the crease, with the opening batsman casting aside some near misses recently as he stroked a brilliant 89 off 144 balls. It was a defiant innings as he stuck around for four-and-a-half hours on a sporty pitch, but it was also filled with some gorgeous strokeplay as he collected 15 fours.

But when Markram finally fell, caught behind gloving a hook at Khurram Shehzad, the Proteas were 213 for eight, leading by just two runs.

But Bosch, playing positively but sensibly, took control as he continued his outstanding first-class form with the bat. He added 41 for the ninth wicket with Kagiso Rabada (13) and a delightful 47 for the last wicket with Dane Paterson (12), taking his first-class average this season to 96!

Bosch is the first player to take four wickets in an innings and score a half-century on his Test debut for South Africa, although Queenstown-born Tony Greig scored 62 and 57 and took four for 53 on debut for England, against Australia at Old Trafford in 1972. Eleven other debutants have achieved the feat in all Test cricket.

“Corbin’s innings made a huge difference. At one stage it looked like we would only have a lead of 15 to 20 runs. But now Pakistan are effectively none for three and we’ve managed to get a bit ahead in the game, even though we didn’t land the ball as we wanted this afternoon,” Markram said after the close of play.

“Corbin is having a special debut, it looks easy this Test cricket thing for him! It was a hugely valuable knock, probably worth more than a hundred. He’s really talented and he’s grafted really hard to get here. He still has a lot more to offer the Proteas.”

Markram’s impressive innings comes as a relief to himself and his many fans; since his century against India on an even more treacherous pitch at Newlands in January, he had made just one half-century in 10 innings midway through the second Test against Sri Lanka at St George’s Park at the start of this month. But through all that period, he had looked so good at the crease, almost imperious.

He made 55 in the second innings in Gqeberha and backed it up with even more on Friday.

“It was really frustrating because I felt I was moving well and seeing the ball well, but I was finding interesting ways to get out. It would have been different if I was scratching around and felt out of touch. But it still plays on you because you want to contribute to the team winning. Hopefully this can turn things around now,” Markram said after his 13th Test half-century.

“Today there was an ebb and flow to my innings. At times I got into a rhythm when I was moving well, but at other times it feels like you’re fighting with yourself. I was just trying to leave well but also balance that with the desire to score. There were certain lengths that if the bowler hit them then you’re just trying to get through it somehow. But then you need to have the intensity to score around those lengths.

“You don’t want to make it too complicated, but you get good value for your shots on the Highveld, so I like to be positive up here. If the bowlers don’t land the ball in the right areas then the pitch is nice to bat on, but if they zone in on the right spots then it becomes tough to bat. You need to spend time out there, get a feel for it, but the ball keeps nibbling around,” Markram said.

Paterson & Co are not going to let anything get them down 0

Posted on December 26, 2024 by Ken

THUMBS UP: Dane Paterson took his second successive five-wicket haul.
Photo: AFP

The day after Christmas can be a bit of a downer considering the joy of the previous day, but there were many at SuperSport Park on Thursday who were adamant that they were not going to let anything get them down on the opening day of the first Test between South Africa and Pakistan.

For the festive crowd of more than 16 000 – the sold out signs went up in the afternoon – it helped ameliorate any hangovers, both literal and figurative, that they bought more than a million rand of beer on Thursday. According to Northerns Cricket Union CEO Jacques Faul, this is the first time that has ever happened at Centurion.

But for the Proteas players it took good old-fashioned determination and pride to ensure they kept coming back.

For the spearhead of the attack, Kagiso Rabada, there was the frustration of any number of plays-and-misses by the Pakistan batsmen as he whizzed delivery after delivery past the edges of the bat. But he did not let it get him down, never once dropping his head. His tenacity was not rewarded, but Mother Cricket will surely smile on the great paceman in the second innings.

Having won the toss and sent Pakistan in to bat, the Proteas had to endure a wicket-less first hour. Captain Temba Bavuma said in the huddle at the drinks break that the wickets will come, they must just stay patient.

Debutant Corbin Bosch, who has had to overcome more challenges than most in getting to the international stage, then struck with his first delivery in Test cricket, the first ball after drinks. Pakistan captain Shan Masood (17), having put on 36 with fellow opener Saim Ayub, drove at a full delivery angled across him and edged to gully.

While Bosch finished a memorable first day in Proteas whites, taking four for 63 in 15 overs, it was Dane Paterson who did most of the damage as Pakistan were bowled out for 211 three balls after tea.

Paterson followed up Bosch’s memorable moment – he is just the 25th bowler to take a wicket with his first ball in Test cricket and the fifth South African – by then snaring wickets in successive overs.

Saim (14) was caught behind after edging an excellent delivery that was typical of Paterson’s effort on Boxing Day: In a great channel just outside off stump and the perfect, slightly fuller length.

Pakistan’s kingpin, Babar Azam, was caught in the slips for just 4 edging a limp, indecisive fiddle outside off-stump, and Bosch then claimed a second wicket as Saud Shakeel (14) gloved an attempted hook to wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne.

Kamran Ghulam and Mohammad Rizwan took Pakistan to 88 for four at lunch, and went on to add 81 for the fifth wicket. But it was Paterson who returned to break the partnership, frustrating Ghulam (54) with his accuracy and drawing a reckless charge down the pitch and wild swipe that was caught at fine leg.

Rizwan (27) had also charged and flailed unsuccessfully at Paterson a couple of times, and a hard-handed drive saw him caught in the slips in the Western Province paceman’s next over.

Salman Agha (18) was also caught trying to slog Paterson, who removed five of the top seven batsmen for career-best figures of 16-4-61-5, his second successive five-wicket haul.

The 35-year-old Paterson has had several critics moaning about his selection for the Test side, but he has not let it get him down.

“I’m drifting nicely into the sunset and I’m happy just to be putting the team in good positions. I will be 36 next year, but I don’t really want to mention my age,” Paterson laughed in the press conference after the close of play.

“If people have something to say about me then they should take it in return too, that’s freedom of speech. The critics provide me with fuel to prove people wrong. But my focus is on putting the team in good positions, it’s not about me.

“I’m probably not a fan favourite because I’m 35 and I bowl at 124km/h. But hopefully after these last two Tests I will get some likes!” Paterson said.

The skilful seamer gave his fellow pacemen Bosch and Rabada likes as well.

“Corbin was in his home conditions and obviously has knowledge of what works here, but to have a debut like that and push for five wickets is a dream come true, it was really quite special.

“KG is special; even against Sri Lanka he had a lot of plays-and-misses. But he keeps on coming, which is good to see, and he doesn’t let it get him down, although that sort of bad luck can be frustrating. But he is a quality bowler,” Paterson said.

Proteas Test coach Shukri Conrad often selects on gut feel and Paterson’s inclusion has been controversial but undoubtedly a success. In his five Tests under Conrad this year, he has taken 20 wickets at a brilliant average of just 21.75.

“I’ve known Shukri for a long time, I played a lot of amateur cricket when he was coaching at Western Province. We had a chat in January and I knew that I would be going to New Zealand. I thought that would probably be two Tests and I was done, but we had a chat and he said he had a plan for me. I knew what I had to do after that, I had to get in better shape and put in the performances at domestic level.

“Hopefully Shukri is now chuffed with his selection,” Paterson said.

In reply, a very good 47 not out by Aiden Markram, stroking nine handsome boundaries off 67 deliveries, took South Africa to 82 for three at stumps.

The pitch may have been unusually slow by SuperSport Park standards, but there was movement off the deck right until the close of play. Tony de Zorzi (2), Ryan Rickelton (8) and Tristan Stubbs (9) all fell to fine deliveries from Khurram Shehzad (twice) and Mohammad Abbas, trapping Stubbs lbw, that seamed a long way.

No baby steps for Ngidi as he bounds from Hilton to international stage 0

Posted on December 19, 2024 by Ken

Ability and Humility 

Lungi Ngidi (2014, Newnham) 

There were no baby steps for the richly talented Lungi Ngidi as he bounded from the playing fields of Hilton College to the international stage. 

The tall, imposing Ngidi quickly became one of the world’s premier fast bowlers, making his T20 debut as a 20-year-old and then his Test debut a year later. 

And, at the tender age of 24, he went where most would hesitate to venture, quietly and courageously backing the Black Lives Matter movement and helping the Proteas down the path of racial harmony.  

Ngidi’s endeavours have been remarkable considering that, in his own words, he has “a very humble background”.  

His parents worked at Kloof Primary School, Bongi as a domestic worker and Jerome in maintenance, but it was their son’s sporting talent which secured his future and won him scholarships first to Highbury and then Hilton College.   

Signed by the Titans on leaving Hilton, Ngidi was man-of-the-match on his T20 debut against Sri Lanka in 2017. A year later, on Test debut, he picked up the award again, taking six for 39 in India’s second innings as the Proteas won the series.

The cricket world sat up and Ngidi has continued to be a regular mainstay of the Proteas team, representing them well over 100 times across the three formats.

Ngidi’s career has been crammed with awards and accolades, and, all the while, those closest to him have admired both his ability and humility.

His first national captain, Faf du Plessis, said “it is obvious that Lungi is a very special, humble human being”. Ngidi himself pays tribute to Hilton College for forming and shaping the exceptional cricketer and person he has become.

“I would never have been able to do what I’ve done were it not for the amazing opportunities I received at school. It’s a great honour for me to have attended Hilton College and I’m very grateful that they saw value in me. Thanks to them, I was able to meet lots of people from different walks of life, which has meant a lot to me.

“In terms of my cricket, the school gave me lots of opportunities and I was fortunate to have someone like Shane Gaffney, who really helped me to believe in my ability, and amazing coaches like Neil Johnson, who helped kickstart my career because he knew what it took to play international cricket,” Ngidi says.

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    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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