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Ken Borland



AB says 3TCricket worth continuing after his winning plunder 0

Posted on July 21, 2020 by Ken

AB de Villiers plundered 61 off 24 balls to lead his Eagles team to a commanding total of 160-4 in their 12 overs, something neither the Kites nor the Kingfishers were able to chase down in their 3TCricket match in Centurion at the weekend, and afterwards said he enjoyed the format and it definitely was something worth continuing.

The new format sees three teams of eight playing at the same time, with each side batting for six overs against each of their opponents. With Aiden Markram firing alongside him in a dazzling innings of 70 off 33 deliveries, captain De Villiers was the first to lift the Solidarity Cup, with Kites posting 138-3 and the Kingfishers finishing on 113-5.

“It was great fun and lovely to just be out there, I’ve been pretty frustrated not playing any cricket. It was great to have a hit-around and the format is pretty good. It definitely has scope for the future, I liked the flow of the game that you spend time in the dugout and the teams rotate. I was also incredibly impressed by a lot of the bowling. I thought they’d be rusty but they were nailing their yorkers and clearly there’s a lot of talent around.

“I also really like that the leading team at halfway bats first in the second innings because chasing is definitely an advantage in limited-overs cricket. This was just one of those rare occasions when we were able to take our score out of reach. My only suggestion would be to have teams start from zero again in terms of wickets lost when you bat again, because otherwise they try to consolidate and think of the next innings. With that bit of insurance, teams can have a really attacking mindset,” De Villiers told The Citizen after the match.

With De Villiers in scintillating form, his starring role has again raised questions about his possible return to the Proteas, at least in T20 cricket, in which a World Cup is scheduled for October in Australia but is probably going to be postponed to next year. The 36-year-old said the Covid-19 pandemic has left everything in limbo, but he still has an interest in playing for South Africa again.

“I have no idea when I’ll be playing cricket again, there’ve been lots of talks about all sorts of leagues. So I will just stay fit and keep hitting balls. It’s difficult to commit myself a year ahead of time, but I have a good relationship with Graeme Smith [director of cricket] and Mark Boucher [Proteas head coach] and I would love to play again. But once we know what the calendar will be like then we can sit down and I will make a decision because I have to be either in or out,” De Villiers said.

After a fractious week in South African cricket, the launch of 3TCricket has provided some balm, with an air of unity and reconciliation at SuperSport Park as all the players wore black armbands with Black Lives Matter written on them and all three teams, the officials and the commentators took a knee before the start of play in support of the movement. “I’m happy with how things have unfolded, we’ve had really good communication, nobody felt left out and it was all explained to us. Black Lives Matter and the campaign against Gender Based Violence were the causes that were the focus for today and it was most important for us to show that unity,” De Villiers said.

Sun City star Stenson rewarded with lead three-ball place 0

Posted on January 23, 2019 by Ken

 

Henrik Stenson always said he would return to Sun City for the Nedbank Golf Challenge and his presence in the 2015 field was rewarded with a place in the lead three-ball when the draw was conducted on Tuesday.

The former world number one, who won the 2008 Nedbank Golf Challenge by nine strokes, is the highest-ranked golfer in the 30-man field at number seven and will join defending champion Danny Willett and South African Louis Oosthuizen in the 11.49am tee-off on Thursday, the last three-ball off.

Stenson has the incredibly consistent record of finishing no worse than fourth in his previous five appearances at Gary Player Country Club and was the runner-up in the 2015 FedEx Cup standings.

Charl Schwartzel, who was able to find some winning form in last weekend’s Alfred Dunhill Championship, is in the penultimate three-ball, off at 11.38am, with compatriot Jaco van Zyl and French dazzler Victor Dubuisson.

Branden Grace, who is now the highest-ranked South African golfer at number 15, is off at 11.16am with Australian Steven Bowditch and Byeong Hun-An of South Korea.

The other South African in the field, Sunshine Tour Order of Merit winner Thomas Aiken, finds himself in the 10.43am three-ball in the company of Englishman Tommy Fleetwood and Germany’s two-time major winner Martin Kaymer.

 

Round 1 draw

10:10 – Marc Leishman (Australia), Søren Kjeldsen (Denmark), Webb Simpson (United States)

10:21  Thongchai Jaidee (Thailand), Robert Streb (United States), Scott Piercy (United States)

10:32  Russell Knox (Scotland), Bernd Wiesberger (Austria), Andy Sullivan (England)

10:43 Tommy Fleetwood (England), Thomas Aiken (South Africa), Martin Kaymer (Germany)

10:54  Matthew Fitzpatrick (England), Ross Fisher (England), Keegan Bradley (United States)

11:05  Shane Lowry (Ireland), Lee Westwood (England), Emiliano Grillo (Argentina)

11:16 Steven Bowditch (Australia), Byeong Hun-An (South Korea), Branden Grace (South Africa)

11:27 Miguel Angel Jiménez (Spain), Kiradech Aphibarnrat (Thailand), Chris Wood (England)

11:38 Jaco van Zyl (South Africa), Victor Dubuisson (France), Charl Schwartzel (South Africa)

11:49 Henrik Stenson (Sweden), Louis Oosthuizen (South Africa), Danny Willett (England)

 

Basson leads, but battling own mediocre record in co-sanctioned events 0

Posted on December 10, 2018 by Ken

 

Christiaan Basson is one of the more consistent performers on the Sunshine Tour so his blistering eight-under-par 64 to claim the lead in the first round of the Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek is not a total shock, but the 33-year-old from Cape Town is battling his own mediocre record in co-sanctioned events with the European Tour.

Basson has played in 30 previous European Tour tournaments, making the cut in just 14 of them, with just a single top-10 finish, in the 2013 South African Open at Glendower. He has gone low in the first round a few times in co-sanctioned events, including last year’s Alfred Dunhill Championship when he opened with a pair of 69s before fading on the weekend with rounds of 74 and 75.

“It’s a funny game and you never know when you’re going to get it right, so when you get it going you must capitalise on it. I think I need to stick with the same game plan – I just tried to hit fairways and tried to play for the right areas of the greens – it worked well, so why change it?” Basson said after his brilliant round at the prestigious course alongside the Crocodile River.

Basson is three shots ahead of the chasing pack on five-under-par which includes three-time champion Charl Schwartzel.

Schwartzel could not finish his round due to a thunderstorm that stopped play at 5.26pm on Thursday, but is looking in ominous form as he collected seven birdies through 17 holes, and missed a couple of makeable putts as well.

Mark Williams of Zimbabwe and Englishman Matt Ford, both of whom collected eagles – on the par-four fourth and par-five 13th holes respectively- are the other golfers tied for second.

Niclas Fasth of Sweden, playing his 500th European Tour event (the 31st golfer to reach the mark) and Joost Luiten of the Netherlands are amongst the large group of golfers on four-under-par, while 2008 champion Richard Sterne is on three-under after 17 holes.

Another former champion, Pablo Martin, the winner of back-to-back titles in 2009/10, was rapidly climbing up the leaderboard as he moved to six-under-par through 15 holes. The Spaniard had started on the 10th, but by the time he walked off the ninth green he was practically weeping as he closed with three successive bogeys to drop down into the group tied for 12th.

Englishman Jeff Inglis had a similar story, starting with five successive birdies but then dropping two shots at the par-four eighth and picking up further bogeys at the 13th, 16th and 17th holes to also finish on three-under.

Louis Oosthuizen started on the 10th and birdied the par-four first hole to go to five-under-par and a share of the lead, but was then derailed by a double-bogey seven on the second, eventually finishing on a two-under-par 70, while defending champion Branden Grace was a stroke further back.

 

All roads lead to Pretoria for the country’s top cricket schools 0

Posted on September 18, 2018 by Ken

 

All roads will lead to Pretoria for the country’s leading schoolboy cricketers over the September 21-24 long weekend with the launch of the North-South T20 Competition organised by the Waterkloof, Menlopark and Centurion high schools.

Sixteen of South Africa’s top school cricket teams have been invited – the three hosts and Nelspruit High School, four Cape schools, four from the northern regions and four from the coastal areas. They have been divided into four groups, comprising one team from each of the categories, with the top two in each pool going into the quarterfinals and semi-finals on Sunday, September 23, followed by the finals on the Monday, 24th.

The grand final will be played at Tuks Cricket Oval and the schools will be competing for prizemoney of R100 000, R50 000 going to the winners, R25 000 to the other finalist, R15 000 for third place and R10 000 for the winners of the Plate competition, which has been included to ensure teams play cricket right through to the Monday.

Waterkloof are in Group A and will be joined by Bishops from Cape Town, Bloemfontein powerhouses Grey College and KwaZulu-Natal’s Westville High. Group B features Nelspruit, Paarl Gim, Rustenburg and Glenwood; Centurion host Group C with SACS, Potch Volkskool and Northwood taking them on, while Group D will be contested by hosts Menlopark and visitors Wynberg BHS, NoordKaap and St Andrew’s all the way from Grahamstown.

Leading umpire Johan Cloete is one of the founders of the tournament and is serving as the inaugural chairman.

“We want to have national status in the near future, we want to make it the most successful schools competition. The teams, with more than 200 boys participating, will all be based at Camp Discovery, where there are fields to practise and they can interact afterwards, while PitchVision will live-stream two games a day. The fact we have AB de Villiers as the ambassador for the tournament speaks volumes for how far we want to go.

“For the duration of the tournament, sponsors WeBuyCars.co.za are offering discounts of between two to eight thousand rand for all parents, players, organisers or coaches, while we have also had great support from the Atterbury Trust, WAD Holdings, Glenfair Boulevard, Puma and IXU,” Cloete said.

 

 

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