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Ken Borland


Kiwis have some comforts to make them feel better 0

Posted on January 08, 2013 by Ken

Cape Town and Port Elizabeth, the venues for the two Tests against New Zealand this summer, are the two South African cities most like Auckland so the tourists should feel right at home.

And, while the Kiwis have generally had an awkward time in South Africa, losing 14 of the 21 Tests they have played here, two of their three triumphs have come at the two coastal cities.

And, just to make Brendon McCullum’s visitors feel even more at home, they will land in South Africa 50 years after they won Tests in Cape Town and Port Elizabeth – their first ever overseas – to share the 1962 series 2-2.

South Africa’s team is a totally different beast these days, however. They are the number one ranked team in Test cricket and the record-breaking exploits of Graeme Smith, Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis, AB de Villiers, Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel and Vernon Philander are the greatest in the country’s history.

Back in 1962, South Africa were a team in transition. Captain Jackie McGlew, swashbuckling batsman Roy McLean, wicketkeeper Johnnie Waite and fast bowlers Peter Heine and Neil Adcock were all at the end of their careers, while Eddie Barlow, Peter Pollock, Colin Bland and Tiger Lance were all playing in their first series and would go on to form part of the team that dominated world cricket at the end of the decade.

Having beaten their hosts by 72 runs in the second Test in Cape Town and by 40 runs in Port Elizabeth, New Zealand promptly won their first Test back in South Africa after isolation, winning by 137 runs at the Wanderers in 1994, but since then the Proteas have had a perfect record at home against the Black Caps.

In fact, since losing by nine wickets in Auckland in 2004, South Africa have been totally dominant in Tests against New Zealand.

Ken Rutherford, who captained New Zealand to that 1994 triumph at the Wanderers, is now living in Johannesburg and he believes his countryman are definitely the underdogs.

“On paper, New Zealand are clearly up against it. It will be a huge challenge against the world’s number one team. South Africa have half-a-dozen world-class players, while the current New Zealand team maybe just lacks a bit of star quality.

“South Africa have individuals who can take the game away from you. But New Zealand haven’t played good Test cricket for a while because they haven’t yet recognised that in one hour, someone can take the whole match away from you, they’re less able to spot those opportunities,” Rutherford said.

While the visiting batsmen should find the going relatively easy at Sahara Park Newlands – New Zealand scored 593 for eight declared (Stephen Fleming 262) in their last match there – Port Elizabeth, especially if it is cloudy, could be an entirely different prospect.

With a bit of grass on the pitch, Steyn, Morkel, Philander and Kallis will be out to break the Geneva Convention, but the visiting attack will also enjoy those conditions.

While the Black Caps are without second leading wicket-taker Dan Vettori, whose left-arm spin has frequently chained the South African batsmen down, Chris Martin has prospered against the Proteas before and is the leading wicket-taker in Tests between the two countries. Doug Bracewell has had his moments too, while Trent Boult and Tim Southee are two talented youngsters and Neil Wagner is returning to the country of his birth.

New Zealand’s batting will revolve around the ever-dangerous McCullum, while Martin Guptill and Kane Williamson are not to be underestimated. Their best batsman, Ross Taylor, is not touring however and his replacement, Peter Fulton, did not have a happy time in South Africa in 2005/6, scoring just 65 runs in four innings.

 

SA v NZ T20 matches are always intense 0

Posted on January 08, 2013 by Ken

South Africa’s limited-overs contests with New Zealand have often been antagonistic affairs and the abbreviated, all-action nature of T20 cricket means the adrenaline and intensity can only be ramped up a couple of notches.

The history of T20 matches between the two nations goes back to October 2005 when New Zealand played the first T20 international on African soil, beating the Proteas by five wickets at the BidVest Wanderers Stadium.

Since then, however, South Africa have had a clear advantage over the Black Caps, winning six of the last seven encounters.

Those wins have not always been clearcut, however, with South Africa winning off the last ball at the Wanderers in November 2007, by one run at Lord’s in the 2009 ICC World T20, and by just three runs in their last meeting with the Kiwis.

That victory in Auckland in February, bowlers Marchant de Lange, Morne Morkel and Johan Botha strangling the hosts in the last five overs, clinched a hard-fought series win for the Proteas.

New Zealand, led by the chic batting of Martin Guptill, had won the first game and should have won the decider, but were blown away by Richard Levi in the second match.

It seems a long time ago that Levi blasted his astonishing 117 not out off just 51 balls in Hamilton, breaking the world records for fastest T20 century (45 balls) and most sixes (13). The 24-year-old almost inevitably lost form after suddenly finding himself in the international limelight and, by the end of the ICC World T20 in October he had been dropped. But the Nashua Mobile Cape Cobras opener has regained his touch and has been one of the star performers in the Momentum One-Day Cup this year.

The whole ICC World T20 affair is one Proteas coach Gary Kirsten will want to put behind him as quickly as possible as the former India coach completed a miserable record of having lost all nine of the matches he has been involved in in the SuperEights stage of that competition.

The next T20 world cup will be upon us apace in Bangladesh in April 2014, the year before the 50-over World Cup South Africa so desperately want to win, and Kirsten will begin the process of building a new squad when the Proteas face New Zealand in three internationals in Durban, East London and Port Elizabeth over the Christmas period.

Success in twenty20 international cricket has not come as swiftly for Hashim Amla as he would have liked, but Levi has surely done enough to earn a recall, while it is clear Faf du Plessis has what it takes to excel for South Africa in all formats.

Then again, Amla showed during his magnificent 196 off just 221 balls in the Perth Test against Australia that he has the ability to put any attack to the sword, so that trio could make a perfectly acceptable top three.

Jacques Kallis, the most complete cricketer South Africa has ever produced, deserves a rest before the Tests, but AB de Villiers is the perfect batsman to anchor the middle-order.

JP Duminy’s unfortunate injury does leave a hole, however, with Farhaan Behardien and Justin Ontong not enjoying totally convincing form at domestic level.

With Johan Botha, South Africa’s most successful T20 spinner, also out of contention and Morne Morkel and Dale Steyn possibly resting after their heavy workloads in 2012, Kirsten has the chance to clean the slate and introduce some new faces.

Vaughn van Jaarsveld, Ryan McLaren, Hardus Viljoen, Andrew Birch and Aaron Phangiso are all players who have covered themselves in glory in recent months.

New Zealand, meanwhile, are still tearing their hair out over their inconsistency and have injury problems to boot, with Dan Vettori ruled out of the tour with an achilles problem.

We’ll always have Sun City … or will we? 0

Posted on January 08, 2013 by Ken

It may not be on the same grand scale or as classy as Paris, but golfing fans are busy thinking “we’ll always have Sun City” to paraphrase Casablanca.

The Nedbank Golf Challenge (NGC) – or the Million Dollar as it was formerly known – is a local sporting institution, the way Corporate South Africa celebrates the end of the year, and a high-profile event in the golfing world.

But now, after 32 years, it is under threat by a pair of tournaments, one brand new, the other the second oldest national open in the sport.

The Tournament of Hope is the new kid on the block and, with a prize pool of $8.5 million, only the Players’ Championship on the U.S. PGA Tour offers more money. It is sanctioned by the International Federation of PGA Tours, comprising the American, European, Australasian, Japanese, Asian and Sunshine tours, and, like the World Golf Championship events on which it is modelled, it is aimed at the top 72 players in the world.

It will be played for the first time from November 21-24, 2013, and it is still looking for a host course.

The Tournament of Hope is also the first in a series of co-sanctioned events the Sunshine Tour is hosting, to be followed by the South African Open, the Nelson Mandela Championship and the Alfred Dunhill Championship.

With eight co-sanctioned events now featuring on their summer swing, the Sunshine Tour schedule is looking increasingly cluttered, leaving little room for manoeuvre. The 109-year-old SA Open (only the British Open is older) is, at the moment, set down for the week following the Tournament of Hope, which is why the NGC is under threat.

Sun City’s showpiece sporting event is always held on the first weekend of December, but its future is now uncertain.

The original Million Dollar Challenge was formulated by Gary Player and Sun International founder Sol Kerzner in 1981 to beat sporting isolation and bring the world’s top golfers to the homeland of Bophuthatswana – the only chance South Africans would have to see them play live.

With its million dollar prize pool, it was also the most lucrative tournament in the world.

But both South Africa, the value of the rand, and the golfing world have changed dramatically since then and there is a feeling that the NGC may have served its purpose, had its time and is now a relic of the past.

Moving forward, the Sunshine Tour, sponsors and many fans would like to see Sun City take over the Tournament of Hope.

Negotiations are underway for exactly that to happen, but there is still a rocky road ahead.

“We have had discussions with the Sunshine Tour and Sail [the Tournament of Hope promoters] about merging with the Tournament of Hope.

“But it always comes down to money and it’s a very complicated business model. It would be very costly for us, about twice the cost, to host the Tournament of Hope in terms of what Sun International would have to deliver,” NGC tournament director Alastair Roper told The Daily Maverick on Wednesday.

Accommodation is believed to be one of the stumbling blocks in negotiations, with Sun City now having to host 72 golfers rather than just the 20 that participate in the NGC and the Champions Challenge for seniors.

The NGC only became a sanctioned Sunshine Tour event, with world ranking points, in 1999 and it seems the professional tour is now putting the squeeze on Sun International.

Roper confirmed that there was the threat of world ranking points being withdrawn from the tournament, but he said they could then just operate as “an unsanctioned invitational event like we did before 1999”.

Title sponsors Nedbank, meanwhile, are not opposed to change but, with three years remaining on their contract, will support whatever decision is made.

“We will do what is best for South African golf at large. We’ve supported golf at a very high level for many years and we still want to do that.

“We really hope that the talks come to a logical conclusion and what is best for the game. We do believe Sun City is an appropriate venue though for an event of the magnitude of the Tournament of Hope,” Andy Scott, Nedbank’s head of sponsorship, said.

While change is understandably anathema to many at Sun International – the NGC is a much-loved, highly successful product that has given them fantastic international exposure for a long time – the average golf fan would think it an easy decision to take over the Tournament of Hope.

But one of the problems with the new event is that there is no guarantee that most of the world’s top 20 golfers will attend, whatever the prizemoney.

At the end of November, when the major golf tours have finished their season, it is not easy to get the big names to fly long-distance to Africa, whatever the financial reward.

“Look at the field for the HSBC Champions in Shanghai, which has the same prizemoney but is a WGC event counting for the money-lists. Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy were in China the week before, but they didn’t play.

“They had a better field than the previous year with about eight of the top 20, but we have to be realistic – just because you have $8.5 million prizemoney, that does not guarantee Tiger or Rory will play,” Roper said.

Nowadays, of course, television is a major player in any sporting discussion and a lack of TV coverage would put a serious, if not terminal, dampener on any event.

SuperSport have been the NGC broadcasters since 1999 but their position is unclear. It costs them R7 million to cover the Sun City event, but viewership figures are mediocre in comparison to sports like football and rugby, which cost a fraction of the cost to produce.

Roper admitted that getting Sun City out on to the TV screens of the world was vital.

“Our primary objective is not so much making money directly off the tournament, but showcasing Sun City as a top destination hosting an event that sets us apart from any other golfing and wildlife venue in Africa.

“Ultimately it’s a marketing exercise for us and we need TV viewership for that. We’ve obviously posed the question to SuperSport, but if they see things differently to us then we can always go back to the SABC, who are launching four new sports channels next year, or even eTV.”

This year’s NGC had a rainy finale’, which is perhaps fitting considering the tournament’s cloudy future.

It may be called the Tournament of Hope, but for Sun International it currently just looks like rain clouds, however sunny it may appear to the rest of us.

http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2012-12-06-golf-everything-under-the-sun-city

Kaymer aiming to be a star like Langer 0

Posted on January 08, 2013 by Ken

Martin Kaymer may have reached the moon in winning the Nedbank Golf Challenge at the Gary Player Country Club, but there is no doubt the German is still aiming for the stars.

His two-shot victory at Sun City was his first since the HSBC Champions in Shanghai in November 2011 and, having been ranked the world’s number one golfer early that year, Kaymer is trying to reignite a career that has seen him sink to 32nd in the rankings.

Kaymer’s winning score of eight-under-par 280 was the highest in the NGC since Jim Furyk’s 282 in 2005 and while the 27-year-old may not have set the Gary Player Country Club alight, there was much to admire in his calm efficiency and composure under pressure as he mastered daunting conditions better than anyone else in the star-studded field.

Kaymer followed Bernhard Langer as only the second German to be ranked number one in the world and the Ryder Cup hero admitted that his countryman has been an inspiration. Langer claimed the first half of a German double at Sun City when he won the Champions Challenge for the senior golfers on Saturday.

“Bernhard has always been a very big help, even at the Ryder Cup, he gave me advice which I could use for regular tournaments like this too. Everyone was talking about a German double, so there was a bit more pressure on me. But I’m very proud to have my name on that path at the ninth green and to be part of the special circle of winners,” Kaymer said.

Part of Kaymer’s bad run has been down to swing changes he has made and he said he would consider 2012 to be a success because of the progress he has made in that department.

“I’ve won once in 2012 and it was a very good year for me because I made progress with my swing. I am hitting the ball well and I’m very happy with the way that I’m playing.

“In golf you need a lot of patience and it’s just a matter of sticking to your plan. I have another 20 years ahead of me, maybe even 30 if you look at Bernhard,” Kaymer said.

Kaymer will now return to Mettmann in Germany for his end-of-year holiday and bask in his successful end to 2012.

He can reflect on the confidence he has gained from his key role in Europe’s extraordinary Ryder Cup triumph and returning to the winner’s circle on an individual basis at Sun City, while he has bedded down the changes to his swing.

Kaymer will return to action in Abu Dhabi on January 17 and warm to the challenge of steadily climbing back up those world rankings.

 

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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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