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Ken Borland



Weather denies Lions crucial victory 0

Posted on May 02, 2013 by Ken

Despite the best efforts of their bowlers, the Highveld Lions were denied a crucial victory by the weather in their four-day domestic franchise series match against the Titans at the Wanderers on Sunday.

When bad light and then rain stopped play just after 4pm on the final day, the Titans were reeling on 137 for seven in their follow-on innings, still facing a deficit of 46 runs. With rain having also stopped play for two hours earlier in the afternoon, the Lions could obviously feel aggrieved that the weather had cost them victory and a vital extra 10 log points.

The effect of the draw is to leave the Lions still 13 points behind the log-leading Cape Cobras, but with a game in hand.

The weekend victories of the Dolphins over the Cobras (by 15 runs) and the Warriors over the Knights (by 10 wickets) have turned the series into a three-horse race. The Eastern Cape franchise now trails the Cobras by just 0.18 points.

Leg-spinner Imran Tahir quickly wrapped up the Titans first innings on Sunday morning, taking the last two wickets as the visitors were dismissed for just 120, 183 runs behind the Lions’ first innings of 303.

The home side enforced the follow-on and young fast bowlers Chris Morris and Hardus Viljoen shared six wickets as the Titans’ batsmen once again struggled to cope with the movement and bounce on offer under overcast skies.

Morris bowled Pieter Malan for a single in the third over but Jacques Rudolph (25) and Henry Davids (41), the Titans’ two members of the national squad, added 61 for the second wicket.

But Viljoen removed Rudolph, who edged a superb delivery that drew him forward and then nipped away into the gloves of Dominic Hendricks, keeping wicket as Thami Tsolekile rests an ankle strain, in the first over of the afternoon session.

Morris then claimed the important wicket of Davids five overs later, trapped lbw, and with Heino Kuhn (12) and David Wiese (3) also falling cheaply, the Lions were in obvious control when rain interrupted play just after the drinks break with the Titans on 128 for five.

The players returned after two hours, but the respite from the rain only lasted 13 minutes, with the Lions managing to claim the wickets of Roelof van der Merwe (4) and Shaun von Berg (5) in that time.

But the weather would have the final say as Viljoen finished with three for 25 in 13 overs and Morris took three for 54.

Mangaliso Mosehle was denying the Lions attack with 30 not out, but the Titans only had the tail left to bat.

Zander de Bruyn was named the man of the match for his important innings of 65 and his two valuable wickets in the first innings.

SA bowlers the heroes 0

Posted on September 11, 2012 by Ken

South Africa’s bowlers were the heroes as the Proteas cruised to a satisfying seven-wicket victory over England in the first T20 international at the Riverside Ground in Chester-le-Street on Saturday.

 – http://www.supersport.com/cricket/sa-team/news/120908/SA_bowlers_the_heroes

Dale Steyn, Johan Botha and Robin Peterson were all superb as England were restricted to 118 for seven after being sent in to bat.

South Africa were in early trouble in their reply, sinking to 29 for three before Jacques Kallis and JP Duminy killed England’s hopes with a record, unbeaten fourth-wicket stand of 90 off 90 balls.

Kallis played with typical composure, breezing to 48 not out off 44 balls, with seven fours, while Duminy handled the pressure with ease and scored 47 not out off 54 balls, collecting four fours and impressing with some clever improvisations.

Defending such a meagre total, England had to strike with the new ball and they did.

Richard Levi would have sent some chills through the home camp with two flat-batted boundaries in Steven Finn’s first over, but Jade Dernbach removed the powerful opener in his first over, caught at slip as the bowler gave him no width to work with.

The out-of-form Faf du Plessis was caught cold and trapped in front for four by Finn in the third over, but AB de Villiers played a couple of glorious strokes in scoring 10 off six balls.

But he then tried to play an ambitious square-drive off Dernbach, the ball being too full and too straight for the shot, and De Villiers was caught behind.

South Africa were in serious trouble on 29 for three in the fourth over, but they had the ideal batsmen in, with Kallis the ultimate accumulator and Duminy a busy player who can keep the scoreboard ticking over without taking too many risks.

They cashed in when Ravi Bopara was brought on, Kallis collecting successive boundaries in the seventh over, but they were content to see Graeme Swann off, the off-spinner conceding just 16 runs in his four overs.

Duminy collected successive boundaries off left-arm spinner Samit Patel in the 11th over with innovative reverse-paddles and victory was achieved in the 19th over.

Steyn and South Africa’s spin pairing of Botha and Peterson had earlier restricted England to a miserable 118 for seven.

WICKETS AT REGULAR INTERVALS

Only a couple of England batsmen looked threatening as South Africa, having won the toss, produced a superb performance in the field with their impressive bowlers taking wickets at regular intervals.

Openers Alex Hales (11) and Kieswetter (25) gave England a solid enough start of 27 runs in 3.4 overs, but Botha and Peterson ripped through the middle order and Steyn was magnificent, grabbing only one wicket but conceding just 13 runs in his four overs.

The first wicket came via a run out as Hales came charging down the pitch for a quick single, Kieswetter ignored him and Kallis scored a direct hit running in from midwicket.

Botha has not played for South Africa for five months but the off-spinner immediately showed that he will considerably boost their chances of winning the ICC World T20 in Sri Lanka later this month as he claimed two for 19 in four overs.

Botha’s first ball spun sharply to trap Kieswetter lbw for 25 and South Africa captain De Villiers went on to the attack to further pressure England and make a mockery of their decision to bat the out-of-form Bopara at three.

Steyn returned to target Bopara, De Villiers put a slip in and the batsman rewarded their bravery outside the powerplay by edging the ball straight to Botha to be caught for just six.

Botha and Peterson troubled England with their changes of pace as much as anything on a sticky pitch. Bopara’s dismissal left the hosts on 50 for three in the eighth over, but their middle-order just faded away.

Their best batsman, Eoin Morgan, bottom-edged a sweep at a quicker delivery from Botha into his stumps to be bowled for 10, and young Jos Buttler (6) was bowled by Peterson as the canny left-arm spinner held the ball back beautifully and the batsman was through with his drive way too early.

Jonny Bairstow (15) impetuously holed out at long-on off Albie Morkel and when Peterson had Patel caught at long-off for four, the veteran Kallis taking a sprightly catch running in from the boundary, South Africa’s old problem of death bowling didn’t really matter with England 85 for seven.

Stuart Broad and Swann both scored 18 not out as they added 33 for the eighth wicket but the home side were never going to be favourites after that batting display.

Amla lays down the law, bowlers back him up 0

Posted on July 24, 2012 by Ken

Hashim Amla laid down the law and the bowlers then made his effort with the bat count as they reduced England to 102 for four at stumps on the fourth day of the first Test at the Oval in London on Sunday.

It has been many a year since South Africa had such a memorable day on the cricket field, with Amla scoring their first Test triple century and ending on a magnificent 311 not out and Jacques Kallis making 182 not out, to add to skipper Graeme Smith’s hundred in his 100th test.

South Africa’s bowlers then backed up the extraordinary efforts of their top-order as each of them claimed a wicket to leave the visitors in sight of their first victory at the Oval in 105 years of trying.

England’s bowlers, meanwhile, will perhaps be phoning up the same Olympic lawyers who have somehow managed to trademark words like “gold”, “silver” and “London”, to lay a charge of fraud against the Oval pitch. The same 22 yards that had brought them to their knees as they conceded a mammoth total of 637 for just two wickets in 189 overs, had life and vicious turn and bounce for spinner Imran Tahir straight after South Africa’s declaration at tea.

England, needing to erase a deficit of 252 just to make South Africa bat again, were almost immediately on the back foot as Vernon Philander struck with his second ball.

Alastair Cook was drawn on to the front foot to defend a perfect-length delivery that then nipped away beautifully, and wicketkeeper AB de Villiers was on his toes enough to snatch a sharp catch. Cook, who England were relying on for a long innings, was gone for a duck after his first-innings century.

Dale Steyn again did not open the bowling but was brought on in the fifth over and the wicket of Jonathan Trott (10) followed soon afterwards.

Trott pushed away from his body as Steyn swung a fine delivery from close to the stumps away from the right-hander, De Villiers again claiming the edge for his seventh catch of the test.

OWN INTERESTS

It has been said that Kevin Pietersen is only concerned with his own interests rather than those of the England team (in the light of his recent withdrawal from limited-overs cricket), and he did little to disprove the notion as he played a short, shot-filled cameo of 16 off 17 balls but was then comprehensively cleaned up by Morne Morkel.

Pietersen had an aggressive response to the short-pitched barrage he received from Morkel, hooking three fours, although one of them was edged over the wicketkeeper. But as soon as the bouncer was outside off stump, he was in two minds and ended up playing an insipid waft at the ball. The edge went into both Kallis’s hands as he dived away at second slip, but unfortunately the ball didn’t stay in.

Never mind. In Morkel’s next over he sent the ball crashing into middle stump as he bowled full and straight and Pietersen, stuck in the crease, played all around the delivery.

Tahir looked extremely dangerous when he pitched the ball in the rough and he pulled off a tremendous coup for South Africa when he dismissed the dogged England captain, Andrew Strauss.

Tahir had really worked Strauss over with some wonderful bowling in the 27th over – exploding the ball out of the rough, turning it both ways – and eventually the left-hander cracked, trying to sweep and only succeeding in top-edging a dolly to backward square-leg. Strauss scored a gutsy 27 off 80 balls.

South Africa were now rampant, but Ian Bell (14* off 70 balls) and Ravi Bopara (15*) showed good character to survive and are at the crease overnight.

HISTORIC TRIPLE CENTURY

Amla’s historic triple century was already in the bag as South Africa declared their first innings on 637 for two at tea.

Amla was on 311 not out, having notched South Africa’s first test 300 five overs earlier, and was instrumental in bringing the world’s number one ranked team to their knees.

The lead was 252 and Kallis was on 182 not out, going about his elegant business almost un-noticed in the glare of Amla’s brilliance. But it was another masterful display by South Africa’s leading run-scorer.

England’s bowlers were powerless to disturb the concentration of South Africa’s two most focused batsmen as Amla and Kallis took their unbeaten stand to 377, the highest third wicket partnership by any country against England.

Amla had been at the crease for over 13 hours and had faced 529 balls, stroking 35 fours, when the declaration came. It had been an innings of immense concentration, just about every ball he faced being played right under his eyes, and he offered just two half-chances, on 40 and on 305, both off Bopara’s medium-pace.

Amla and Kallis had milked runs with impunity as South Africa powered to 514 for two at lunch and it was batting of the highest class throughout, rich skill and elegance being in abundant display.

There were obviously statistical highlights aplenty, the fact that England conceded successive double-century partnerships for the first time in their history of 924 tests counting as the most startling of them all. Kallis and Amla had built on the 259-run second-wicket stand between Smith (131) and Amla.

England’s bowlers were as effective as a one-legged man with gout and that’s not to detract from the brilliance of South Africa’s trio of centurions.

Resuming on 403 for two, Amla and Kallis were watchful at the start, ensuring that they did not waste the superb work of the third day and laying a platform for chasing quick runs as England lost hope.

Amla went to his second test double century in the 10th over of the day when he drove Stuart Broad through the covers for three runs.

There was much unhappiness amongst England fans over when Graeme Swann was finally introduced – 18 overs into the day – but the spinner who has had so much faith invested in him by the home side was once again flat.

Once Kallis had reached his 43rd test century – only Sachin Tendulkar has more – but his first in England for 14 years, the batsmen were eager to crack on the pace and put South Africa in a commanding position.

Amla had been at the crease for over 13 hours and had faced 529 balls, stroking 35 fours, when the declaration came. It had been an innings of immense concentration, just about every ball he faced being played right under his eyes, and he offered just two half-chances, on 40 and on 305, both off Bopara’s medium-pace.

http://www.supersport.com/cricket/sa-team/news/120722/Amla_bowlers_lay_down_the_law

Amla & consistent bowlers make it a day to remember 0

Posted on March 01, 2012 by Ken

Hashim Amla and the consistent efforts of the bowlers led South Africa to a six-wicket victory, and the series win, with 70 balls to spare in the second ODI against New Zealand in Napier on Wednesday.

http://www.supersport.com/cricket/sa-team/news/120229/Amla_consistent_bowlers_seal_series

South Africa’s bowlers – especially Lonwabo Tsotsobe and Morne Morkel – revelled in a McLean Park pitch that provided them with good pace and bounce and blasted New Zealand out for just 230.

Amla, after a poor tour thus far, then returned to his daily grind of making run-scoring look easy, breezing to 92 off 107 balls to make it a routine run-chase.

Amla telegraphed his intentions of doing the job as quickly and smoothly as possible by lashing six fours in his first 20 balls, while Faf du Plessis raced to 34 off 25 balls to ensure that South Africa were not affected either by the early loss of Jacques Kallis, who was superbly caught by wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum, diving forward, off Kyle Mills for four, or the fact that regular opener Graeme Smith was not playing due to a badly-bruised forearm.

Du Plessis and Amla laid down the law with a series of crunching strokes through the off side, adding 69 for the second wicket in just 8.4 overs, before a wonderful piece of cricket by Martin Guptill removed Du Plessis.

The in-form Nashua Titans batsman hooked Andy Ellis to deep square-leg, where Guptill took the catch but then quickly got rid of the ball as he tiptoed towards and then over the boundary rope. Having regained his balance, he then stepped back into the field of play and regathered the ball he had lobbed up, in a superb example of composure, calm and presence of mind.

This brought the Kiwis some respite from the flood of boundaries as JP Duminy came in, but the batsmen could afford to be selective as they needed only 151 runs from 231 balls.

Duminy was in even better touch than in the second ODI, and cruised to 43 off 39 balls before he was deceived by leg-spinner Tarun Nethula and offered a simple return catch.

Nethula was actually unfortunate to not finish with better figures than two for 60 off his 10 overs as he also gave Amla a tough time and could have had had three catches taken off his bowling.

Amla had reached his 17th ODI half-century off just 51 balls, but fell just short of his 10th century when Nethula finally claimed his scalp. It was a perfectly-pitched leg-break that Amla was tentative in playing off the front foot, edging the turning ball to wicketkeeper McCullum.

But that was the last wicket New Zealand took as skipper AB de Villiers (31*) and Justin Ontong (17*) applied the final touches to an impressive victory.

The bowlers had earlier done South Africa proud as they dismissed New Zealand for just 230, as a perfect batting pitch, short square boundaries and not even a second-wicket stand of 107 off 113 balls between Guptill and McCullum could faze the visitors as they claimed the last eight wickets for just 67 runs.

DIRECT AND UNYIELDING APPROACH

South Africa’s approach was direct and unyielding – the McLean Park pitch offered one consolation for the bowlers in the form of excellent bounce and the pacemen bombarded the New Zealand batsmen. The quality of the short-pitched bowling was such that the batsmen could not take consistent advantage of the short square boundaries.

Given that, it was unsurprising that South Africa’s two tallest bowlers were their most successful.

Morne Morkel was twice on a hat-trick as he claimed a superb, career-best five for 38 in 9.3 overs, while Tsotsobe continued his assault on the number one spot in the ICC rankings with outstanding figures of three for 43 in his 10 overs.

Captain De Villiers figured it would be a difficult ground on which to defend a total, so he sent New Zealand in and, after Tsotsobe had trapped Rob Nicol leg-before for 11, Guptill and McCullum put the home side on top.

Both batsmen devoured anything that offered width or was down leg, and those South Africans watching at home were facing an uncomfortable breakfast as New Zealand reached the halfway mark just one wicket down.

Smothering the run-rate was always going to be a difficult ask, so South Africa focused their attention on taking wickets.

The man who made the breakthrough was their very own version of the Bionic Man – Kallis.

The 36-year-old came rumbling in at good pace, Guptill had no business trying to cut a back-of-a-length delivery that leapt off the pitch, and wicketkeeper De Villiers had no problems taking the catch. The in-form opener had cruised to 58 off 73 balls without any problems, and his dismissal was nothing less than a waste.

McCullum was initially nowhere near as fluent as Guptill and little went for the South African bowlers early in his knock. The New Zealand captain had nevertheless regained his touch enough for him to take the batting powerplay in the 33rd over.

It turned out to be a disaster for the home side as they lost three wickets and scored just 20 runs in the five powerplay overs.

WELL-OILED ACTION

It was Tsotsobe who began the crash. The left-armer has such a well-oiled action these days and his accuracy quickly forced a false shot from Kane Williamson (13), who tried to drive the ball over the top. Kallis scooted backwards from mid-on and did superbly well to take the catch behind his head.

Tsotsobe’s next over brought the major scalp of McCullum, whose whip off his pads found a happy home in Ontong’s hands on the deep square-leg boundary. McCullum’s 85 off 96 balls, with 11 fours and two sixes, was a fine innings, but he missed the chance to really turn the knife.

The innings was done and dusted little more than an hour later, as fast bowlers Steyn and Morkel got down to business.

Jesse Ryder was caught behind off Steyn for a duck and Morkel used steep bounce to remove James Franklin (6) and Mills (0) with successive deliveries in the 38th over.

And Morkel did the same in the 46th over, removing Tim Southee, who had lashed a pair of fours and sixes in his 28, and Nethula (0) with successive balls.

Morkel then terminated the innings with 15 balls remaining when he bowled Ellis for 19.

New Zealand would have been in an even worse state if Tsotsobe had not given McCullum a life on 18 when he put down a relatively simple return catch. But it ended up not being a disaster, South Africa’s wonderful bowling attack being ample insurance against that.

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  • Thought of the Day

    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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