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Ken Borland



De Villiers comfortable with all that’s asked of him 0

Posted on November 03, 2014 by Ken

As coach Gary Kirsten pointed out, the South African cricket team asks a lot of AB de Villiers: captain, wicketkeeper and number four batsman. But as De Villiers steered South Africa to a series win over Pakistan at Willowmoore Park in Benoni with a tremendous 95 not out off 111 balls on a difficult pitch with variable bounce, much of it steep and disconcerting, it became increasingly clear that he is comfortable with all the responsibility.

De Villiers’ knock on Sunday was his third half-century of the five-match series, to go with his superb century last weekend at the Wanderers, taking his tally for the series to a staggering 367 runs. It made him the obvious choice as man of the series and, having won the same accolade after the Tests, it’s fair to say De Villiers has never batted better, despite the increased burdens.

“I’m enjoying my batting. I’m just trying to keep it simple; I have a straightforward game plan – good intensity and good energy at the crease – and I’m just focusing on keeping still and really watching the ball,” De Villiers said with typical modesty.

While it’s easy to mock South Africa’s past record at ICC events, there is no doubt they will once again be amongst the favourites at the Champions Trophy in England in June.

They will clearly rely hugely, once again, on De Villiers as their greatest ODI match-winner, but they should also be a stronger outfit than the team that was not entirely convincing in edging Pakistan 3-2 on home soil. Graeme Smith, Jacques Kallis, Faf du Plessis, JP Duminy, Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel will all play key, bigger roles than they did against Pakistan.

Kirsten confirmed that he had been leaning on Kallis to make himself available and he is confident the great all-rounder will be having another go at getting his large hands on an ICC trophy.

“Jacques is not going to play ODI cricket for us anymore, but we reserve the right to use him as a wildcard in big tournaments, and the Champions Trophy is the last ICC event before the next World Cup. So I sidled up to Jacques at a good moment and asked him if he’d be interested in playing, and he said he probably was,” Kirsten said.

Kallis is bound to slot straight back into the number three spot in England and will also give the team the sixth bowler, which is imperative at ODI level.

With South Africa’s premier all-rounder returning to action, where does that leave Ryan McLaren?

McLaren will have some wonderful yarns to tell his grandchildren after a renaissance summer for the 30-year-old in which he shone in successive series wins over New Zealand and Pakistan. He took 10 cheap wickets at an economy rate of 4.45 against the sub-continental side, while he played a couple of crucial innings against the Black Caps and took eight wickets in three matches.

“It’s important for us to look for a new guy to step into Jacques’ place and Ryan has now had a bit of a run. He has shown he has the skills to do the job with the ball and I’m confident he can do a job with the bat too. He’s now displaying his skills in a relaxed manner and has had two fantastic series,” Kirsten said.

The coach stressed that the air’s notoriously thinner at international level, so one of the major positives from the summer was the way “fringe” players like McLaren, Farhaan Behardien, David Miller, Colin Ingram and Rory Kleinveldt stepped up and performed.

“There’s a lot less pressure at domestic level but everyone expects players to make a play straight away at international level. If they haven’t produced the goods after two games then they say they’re not good enough.

“But I’m very pleased that guys like Behardien, Miller, McLaren, Ingram and Kleinveldt have all had an impact and have shown they’re capable of playing at international level. We’ve created some depth and it’s important for us to find other players. I’m excited by the development of those fringe players,” Kirsten said.

As much as traditionalists (myself included) dislike the idea of De Villiers being captain, wicketkeeper and the key batsman, there is no doubt it seems to have brought out the best of one of the most extraordinarily talented cricketers in the world.

“AB has made great strides as captain and this has been a very significant series for him. His batting has been outstanding and his wicketkeeping continues to develop. Plus he had a couple of great games as captain, he’s done a fantastic job as skipper. It obviously takes time to develop as an international captain,” Kirsten said.

There have been some suggestions that there has been a lack of focus on limited-overs cricket from the current Proteas management, but Kirsten assured that the eyes of the coaching staff are firmly on the Champions Trophy. Winning that would obviously help lift the monkey on their back when it comes to World Cups.

“We’re trying to bring in a similar culture to the Test team, but there’s a different focus and we don’t even talk about the Tests. We’ve made good strides against a great team in this series and it’s been a good stepping-stone to where we want to go.

“Now it will be a good time to reflect and work out how we can win the Champions Trophy and I’m very excited about the team we can put together,” Kirsten said.

Kirsten confirmed that the addition of another world-class spinner in Johan Botha was not on the cards, but South Africa’s pace bowlers will obviously enjoy performing in the seam and swing of English conditions.

But that is also when the leadership and mettle of De Villiers will have its first major test. But, as he showed again in conquering the fearsome Pakistan attack on a tricky Willowmoore Park pitch, De Villiers is not one to shy away from a challenge.

– http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-03-25-as-easy-as-abde-v/#.VFdqZ_mUde8

Titans’ progress checked until Richards razes Warriors 0

Posted on October 05, 2014 by Ken

Colin Ingram and Ryan Bailey were able to check the Unlimited Titans’ progress for three-and-a-half hours, but ultimately the Chevrolet Warriors were swept away by a Rowan Richards hat-trick as the home side won their Sunfoil Series match by 170 runs at Willowmoore Park in Benoni on Sunday.

The Warriors had begun the final day on 51 for two chasing an unlikely 414 for victory and survival was on their mind, especially after Jon-Jon Smuts was caught in the gully off JP de Villiers in the second over of the day.

Colin Ackermann batted for two hours in scoring 47 before being dismissed by medium-pacer Farhaan Behardien, leaving the Warriors on a shaky 111 for four with 83 overs still left on the final day.

But Ingram and Bailey dug in so well they might have been called mole-men. They added 113 in 56 overs for the fifth wicket; the left-handed Ingram compact and secure, but able to play some pleasing strokes when the opportunity presented itself, while burly Bailey seldom strayed from the crease as he prodded and deflected, an occasional well-timed punch down the ground being as far as he was willing to go in terms of strokeplay.

They survived together for 14 overs until lunch, taken on 151 for four, and then ploughed on until tea, which the Warriors reached on a far healthier 215 for four.

The Titans were heavily reliant on the second new ball when the final session began with Ingram on 87 and Bailey on 38, and it might not have been resignation on the home team’s faces but it was certainly concern when the experienced duo survived for another six overs after tea.

It was Ethy Mbhalati who made the crucial breakthrough, claiming a return catch from Bailey, whose stroke was a prod that would have been more effective if one was trying to scrape guano off the pitch rather than intercept a cricket ball.

It had nevertheless been an immense effort from Bailey, who faced 171 balls for his 40 runs and showed once again how valuable his experience is in this Warriors batting line-up.

Ingram would fall four overs later as he edged Richards low to Farhaan Behardien in the gully and the rest would go quickly as the left-arm paceman produced a top-class spell of swing bowling – five for two in 5.4 overs with three maidens – a phenomenal burst in which he moved the ball both ways.

Ingram was unfortunate not to achieve his second century of the match, falling for 93 off 226 balls in a little over five hours at the crease, a wonderful effort.

Simon Harmer and Athenkosi Dyili hung around for six overs before Richards produced a snorter which spat up from back of a length and Harmer (7) could only glove the ball to wicketkeeper Mangaliso Mosehle.

There were still a dozen overs left for the Titans to claim the last three wickets when Richards began the 103rd over, bowling from the Harpur Street End. But, having clearly rediscovered his rhythm, the 30-year-old proceeded to end the match in the most spectacular way possible.

The second ball of the over saw the left-handed Dyili (10) prodding at a delivery that swung away from him, edging a catch into the midriff of double-centurion Roelof van der Merwe at third slip.

Sisanda Magala was next up and he was bowled by a beauty that nipped away from the right-hander, squaring the batsman up and knocking over the off-bail.

Basheer Walters was the hat-trick victim, able only to prod at another away-swinger, sending an edge into the safe hands of Van der Merwe at third slip.

“It’s my first hat-trick and it makes it really special that it won the game and gave me a five-for,” hero Richards said after his career-best figures of five for 31 in the Sunfoil Series.

“I knew it would be my last spell of the day, so I just pushed it and made sure I hit good areas. There had been a lot of effort before me by the other seamers, JP and Ethy, that broke the long partnership, and we just said that another wicket would bring more breakthroughs. We never gave up and I found my rhythm at the right time.”

Captain Henry Davids was delighted with the way his team had bounced back from a poor performance and a 190-run hammering at the hands of the Highveld Lions last weekend.

“During our pre-season camp in Knysna, we spoke about winning games after tea on the last day and that’s what makes this the best format, it tests everything in your game. We hung in there, we stayed patient and we knew the new ball would make it tough for the batsmen.

“Things happen quickly on this pitch, wickets fall in clusters and the guys bowled brilliantly, especially that spell from Rowan. Plus there was that unbelievable double-hundred from Roelof that really set the team up in the first innings,” Davids said.

 

Ability of fringe players tested as Titans face Dolphins 0

Posted on March 13, 2014 by Ken

With the Unlimited Titans out of contention in the Sunfoil Series, coach Rob Walter will be testing the ability of young fringe players in four-day cricket in the last three games of the season, starting with the clash against the Dolphins which is scheduled to start at Willowmoore Park in Benoni today.

Batsmen Theunis de Bruyn and Cobus Pienaar and wicketkeeper Tumelo Bodibe have all been called up for this weekend’s match as the Titans desperately try and find batsmen who can bat time.

A reshuffled batting line-up will see captain Henry Davids move up the order to open with Heino Kuhn, while Roelof van der Merwe, who has scored four half-centuries in eight innings to top the Titans’ batting averages, will move up to number five.

Walter has indicated he is going to play both left-arm spinner Van der Merwe and leggie Shaun von Berg, their leading wicket-taker, and will retain pacemen JP de Villiers and Junior Dala, while also including fast man Marchant de Lange for the first time in the campaign. So the final place in the starting XI is going to come down to a choice between De Bruyn and Pienaar.

Francois le Clus, Mangaliso Mosehle and Vincent Moore (who is particularly unfortunate) are the players to make way for the new blood.

Mosehle, after averaging 40 in the Momentum One-Day Cup, has managed to score just 146 runs in 10 innings in the Sunfoil Series, while Le Clus was only marginally better with 179 runs in 11 innings.

“Tumelo has played before for the Titans, a couple of years back, and we just want to see if he can offer more with the bat than Mangi, who has kept wicket outstandingly well, so that’s not what we’re trying to replace,” Walter told The Pretoria News yesterday.

Dala gets another chance after trying too hard to make an impact with his brand new team against the Cape Cobras in Paarl – he arrived on loan from the Highveld Lions just two days before the match – but he does have pace and bowled progressively better last weekend.

More importantly, his selection allows the Titans to field two Black Africans and their eyes are also clearly on Cricket South Africa’s incentives for transformation.

Walter can also defend the selection on the basis that the pacemen will be rotated, along with other young prospects like Easterns opening batsman Ernest Kemm, in the last three games.

The good news for the Titans is that they won’t be coming up against the best fast bowler in the competition, Kyle Abbott, or hard-hitting batsman David Miller, who are in the South African squad for the T20s against Australia.

But the Dolphins are a team on the rise and Walter is aware that his side face another major challenge.

“The Dolphins played particularly well in their last game, against the Warriors, and they’ve had a very similar looking team the whole season. Which shows they’re stable and they have a good set-up,” Walter said.

The news from Willowmoore Park yesterday was that the ground still looks as if it had suffered numerous airstrikes from water bombers and a wet outfield is something that has ruined matches before in Benoni.

Play starting on time today is unlikely plus there is the threat of further rain, but, as much as people like to rail against the facilities at Willowmoore Park, this time there is very good reason for their difficulties.

The Titans have played one other four-day game in Benoni this season and that was against the Cobras at the end of November, and bad weather cost an entire day’s play and led to that match being a dull draw.

The Titans did at least bat well though and scored 491 for seven declared, and Von Bergh lashed the fastest century in Sunfoil Series history, off just 73 balls, with 11 fours and five sixes.

And Walter is hoping for a similar batting display this time round.

Titans squad: Heino Kuhn, Henry Davids, Graeme van Buuren, Qaasim Adams, Roelof van der Merwe, Cobus Pienaar, Theunis de Bruyn, Tumelo Bodibe, Shaun von Berg, JP de Villiers, Marchant de Lange, Junior Dala.

 

Davids & Van der Merwe do the damage 0

Posted on February 27, 2012 by Ken

 

Henry Davids and Roelof van der Merwe were the men who did most of the damage as the Nashua Titans hammered the New Age Impi by nine wickets with 26 balls to spare in their MiWay T20 Challenge match at Willowmoore Park in Benoni on Sunday.

 http://www.supersport.com/cricket/domestic-t20/news/120226/Davids_vd_Merwe_destroy_the_Impi

Van der Merwe destroyed the New Age Impi middle-order as the Titans bowled them out for just 131, before Davids hit a whirlwind 55 off 35 balls to rush the “visitors” to victory.

The New Age Impi experiment has battled to get off the ground with the composite side crashing to their fifth straight defeat and only a meagre crowd coming to watch in Benoni, where the Titans of course play often.

Apart from Davids, Jacques Rudolph and Van der Merwe also enjoyed themselves with the bat, retiring to the changeroom with 47 not out and 30 not out respectively after the bonus-point victory was completed.

Left-handed Rudolph anchored the innings as he scored his runs off 39 balls, with three fours and two sixes, while Van der Merwe lashed three fours and a six from 20 deliveries.

But it was Davids who stole the show with a top-class innings, a delightful display of footwork and superb timing as he stroked seven fours and two sixes.

It was like the old pro against the interns as he moved around his crease and found the gaps at will, notching a 26-ball half-century before chipping offspinner Khaya Zondo to midwicket, where Paul Collingwood took a fine catch diving forward.

That left the Titans on 78 for one in the 10th over and in complete control, Rudolph and Van der Merwe completing the formalities as they added 59 in 39 balls.

The New Age Impi seamers were unimpressive and captain Collingwood needed to turn to the slower bowlers, with left-arm spinner Siyabulela Simetu continuing the good impression he has made in the competition as he took the new ball and conceded just 23 runs in his four overs.

The Impi had won the toss and elected to bat first for the first time in the campaign, and Zondo and Collingwood had given the innings a solid foundation as they put on 51 for the third wicket off 41 balls.

The Impi’s problems, as is so often the case, began with a run out, and Van der Merwe was the architect, defeating the batsmen’s efforts for a second run as he rushed in from the midwicket boundary and scored a direct hit at the bowler’s end to remove Collingwood for a bright 28 off 18 balls.

Zondo was still there, though, having come in first-wicket down and watched as another Englishman, Luke Wright, also scored 28 off 18 balls to give the Impi a quick start.

But 92 for three quickly became 99 for six as Ryan ten Doeschate chopped on off David Wiese for just a single, and Van der Merwe removed Zondo and Richard Cameron off successive deliveries.

Zondo, who scored 33 off 31 balls, backed away to try and cut the left-arm spinner, but was off-balance and only succeeded in edging a catch to sharp wicketkeeper Heino Kuhn, who had earlier stumped opener Adrian McLaren for four in Van der Merwe’s first over.

Cameron then chipped his first ball straight to extra cover and, although Ryan Canning ensured that there would be no hat-trick for Van der Merwe, he could not find the boundary as he was the last man out for 17 off 21 balls.

Van der Merwe finished his quota of overs with excellent figures of three for 28 and his fantastic fielding netted him another run-out, dismissing Simetu for five in the penultimate over.

The 27-year-old has not played for South Africa in over 18 months, but continues to send good messages to the national selectors, having now taken five for 91 in 14 overs in this season’s T20 Challenge.

Off-spinner Eden Links also had a profitable afternoon with two for 21 in his four overs, while seamer Wiese came on in the 12th over and was not easy to get away as he took one for 13 in three overs.

The Titans will be unhappy that their fielding at the start of the innings was not up to scratch, a couple of catches going down, but, led by the indomitable Van der Merwe, they eventually got the job done in some style.

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    John 14:20 – “On that day you will realise that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you.”

    All the effort and striving in the world, all the good works and great sacrifices, will not help you to become like Christ unless the presence of the living Christ is to be found in your heart and mind.

    Jesus needs to be the source, and not our own strength, that enables us to grow spiritually in strength, beauty and truth.

    Unless the presence of Christ is a living reality in your heart, you will not be able to reflect his personality in your life.

    You need an intensely personal, more intimate relationship with Christ, in which you allow him to reveal himself through your life.

     

     



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