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Ken Borland



Another bitter Kingsmead failure for SA batsmen 0

Posted on December 27, 2011 by Ken

 

South Africa’s batsmen suffered another bitter Kingsmead failure as left-armers Chanaka Welegedara and Rangana Herath ran through them on the second day of the second test against Sri Lanka on Tuesday.

 

    Welegedara claimed career-best figures of five for 52 in 16.4 overs, while spinner Herath took four for 49 as South Africa were bowled out for just 168, giving Sri Lanka a first-innings lead of 170.

 

    Sri Lanka lost the wicket of captain Tillakaratne Dilshan, caught in the slips off Dale Steyn for four, and reached seven for one in their second innings before the umpires stopped play due to bad light.

 

    South Africa, who have lost their last three tests at Kingsmead, collapsed dramatically after tea, losing their last seven wickets for 65 runs.

 

    Several of them were dismissed playing loose strokes, with AB de Villiers (25) steering the fifth ball after tea, from Welegedara, straight to second slip, to give South Africa the worse possible start to the final session.

 

    Hashim Amla (54) edged a flatfooted prod outside off stump at Welegedara to wicketkeeper Dinesh Chandimal, while Ashwell Prince (11) was caught trying to reverse-sweep Herath.

 

    Herath also picked up the wickets of Mark Boucher for three and Morne Morkel for a duck as South Africa crashed to 119 for eight. They only managed to avoid the follow-on because the tailenders managed to hang about.

 

    Imran Tahir scored 11 before one of his few attempts to defend the ball resulted in him being stumped off Herath, while last man Marchant de Lange was caught behind for nine off Welegedara.

 

    Steyn decided that attack was the best form of resistance as he struck two fours and two sixes in his 29 not out.

 

    But South Africa’s ignominous collapse followed totals of 138 against Australia and 133 versus England in Durban in 2009; and 131 all out against India a year ago.

 

    Sri Lanka were forced to come out and bat for 2.1 overs in gloomy light, with the floodlights on, and Dilshan clubbed a four over cover-point before edging Steyn’s next delivery to second slip.

 

    Tharanga Paranivatana, who is yet to score, and Kumar Sangakkara, on three, will be there to build on Sri Lanka’s considerable lead on the third morning.

 

    Amla’s counter-attacking half-century had steered South Africa to 100 for three at tea, after the home team had slumped to 27 for three.

 

Welegedara started the rot with two wickets in four balls, removing Graeme Smith for 15 and Jacques Kallis for a duck.

 

Jacques Rudolph fell for seven when he pulled a short, leg-side delivery from Thisara Perera to fine-le,g where Welegedara lunged forward to take a good catch.

 

Earlier, fast bowler De Lange grabbed seven wickets on his debut, while Thilan Samaraweera compiled his 13th test century as Sri Lanka chalked up 338, their biggest total in South Africa.

 

De Lange took seven for 81 as Sri Lanka were bowled out 35 minutes before lunch. The 21-year-old’s figures are the best by a South African against this opposition – surpassing Shaun Pollock’s six for 30 in Cape Town in 2000-01.

 

Samaraweera, 35, scored 102 to steer Sri Lanka past their previous best total of 323 at Centurion in 2002-03.

 

De Lange’s burst of three wickets in eight balls cut short Sri Lanka’s resistance after they had resumed on 289 for seven.

 

Samaraweera, who resumed on 86, continued to bat in a controlled fashion as he and Herath put on 46 for the eighth wicket.

 

De Lange then cleaned up the tail by removing Herath (30) and Welegedara (2) with nasty, lifting deliveries.

 

Samaraweera was last man out, caught by deep cover Prince off the young paceman.

 

South Africa lead the three-match series 1-0.


Nothing tranquil for Sri Lanka – Steyn 0

Posted on December 13, 2011 by Ken

The Hennops River bordering SuperSport Park is a meandering, tranquil body of water ideal for bank-side picnics and merely passing the time in scenic surroundings.

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But South African fast bowler Dale Steyn has promised life will be anything but peaceful, and certainly no picnic, for the Sri Lankan batsmen come the first test at SuperSport Park in Centurion on Thursday.

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“I’ll still be going in as fast as I can, running in and trying to strike. And then we’ve got Morne Morkel bowling thunderbolts from 10 feet high and Jacques Kallis has been revving it up to 140km/h in domestic matches recently.

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“Plus there’s Vernon Philander, who’s been a fantastic addition. In fact we’re calling him Vernon McGrath now because he’s always just nibbling the ball around.

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“We want to hit areas that are uncomfortable on their bats, generally higher up their bats. We saw against Australia that the pitches have been more bowler-friendly,” Steyn warned on Tuesday.

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Sri Lanka’s batsmen have inflicted plenty of pain on South Africa’s bowlers in the past – Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardena’s partnership of 624 in 2006 is the highest for any wicket in the annals of the game – but almost exclusively back at home on their sub-continental island.

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In seven tests in South Africa, just one Sri Lankan batsman has managed to score a century – Hashan Tillakaratne, who made 104 not out here at SuperSport Park in 2002/3. That took the tourists to a total of 323, their highest in South Africa.

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So they have a history of having their backs to the wall on tour here and vice-captain Angelo Mathews acknowledged that it was the pitches that made the difference.

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“In the sub-continent, the pitches are quite slow, so the bounce and pace here are the main things that trouble us. But if we can adapt to that, then we can perform well,” Mathews said.

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While Steyn did not want to say it was payback time for the miserable tour South Africa endured in Sri Lanka in 2006, he did say he did not want to think about that trip any more.

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“We really don’t need to go back down that road! But it’s going to be a lot harder to score world-record partnerships here in South Africa …

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“Vinnie Barnes was our bowling coach for so long and he never played against Sri Lanka here in South Africa, so he’s been here at the nets really gunning the boys!” Steyn said of the current national selector.

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While the Sangakkara/Jayawardena partnership is a record South Africa are desperately trying to forget, they’re also trying to rip out the page that shows they haven’t won a test series at home in three years.

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South Africa’s drawn series against Australia was actually a disappointing result, and it was unheralded bowlers like Peter Siddle, Shane Watson, Nathan Lyon and even Michael Clarke, never mind rookie Pat Cummins, who did the damage. Hashim Amla was at pains on Tuesday to say the batsmen won’t be underestimating any bowlers this time around.

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“Our pitches assist the seamers more and, even though the Sri Lankan bowlers are a different pace to Australia’s, if they just put it in the right place, something could happen. And if there’s turn, then the spinners could be dangerous as well,” Amla said.

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Sangakkara looks set to play despite splitting the webbing on his right hand over the weekend, Sri Lanka’s second highest all-time run-scorer having throwdowns quite comfortably on Tuesday.

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Sri Lanka’s main selection conundrum will be whether to play two spinners or not. Orthodox left-armer Rangana Herath is the incumbent first-choice spinner at the moment and he bowled well in Benoni to take three for 58 in 24 overs against the SA Invitation XI in their warm-up game.

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But Sri Lanka have brought unorthodox right-armer Ajantha Mendis on tour to provide some mystery. The 26-year-old missed Sri Lanka’s previous test series against Pakistan due to injury and was unimpressive in Benoni, taking two for 142 in 31 overs.

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Mathews asked Sri Lankan supporters to be patient with Mendis.

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“Ajantha is getting back there, we know he can turn a game around in one session. Just give him time, he will do the job for us, we just need to be patient,” Mathews said.

 


 

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    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?

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