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Ken Borland



SA will have to think again 0

Posted on February 17, 2012 by Ken

The blow-by-blow updates for South Africa 1st T20 against New Zealand in Wellington – 
South Africa will have to think again after New Zealand beat them by six wickets with four balls to spare in the first T20 international at the Westpac Stadium in Wellington on Friday.
20th over – Six runs are needed for victory off the final over to be bowled by off-spinner Johan Botha. James Franklin drives the first ball to long-on, who is too wide, and the batsmen get two runs. The left-hander then cracks a full ball outside off stump through the covers for the winning four.
19th over – Zimbabwe-born Colin de Grandhomme is out for just two as he skies a heave at a short ball from Morne Morkel to Richard Levi at deep midwicket.
18th over – Martin Guptill is felled as he misses a hook at a short ball from Rusty Theron, but responds by flat-batting the next ball high over mid-on for four.
17th over – Super batting by Kane Williamson as he frees his arms and slices a short, bouncy delivery outside off stump from Morne Morkel up and over point for four. <b>WICKET</b> – But Williamson is run out for 24 off the next ball as he pushes Morkel into the leg-side, brother Albie runs in and scores a fine direct hit at the bowler’s end.
15th over – Williamson pounces on a delivery from JP Duminy that is just a fraction short, pulling it for four. Two balls later, Williamson comes down the pitch and drives the off-spinner between long-on and cow-corner for a one-bounce four.
13th over – <b>WICKET</b> – Duminy comes on and strikes with his second ball – Brendon McCullum (16) tries to cut, but there is a bit of turn and he inside-edges the ball on to his pad, from where it ricochets into his stumps. Guptill shows McCullum what he should have done as he neatly cuts the last ball of the over for four.
10th over – Guptill goes to a 36-ball half-century with a majestic straight hit for six off Morne Morkel – that was like a Lee Westwood drive straight 320 metres down the middle of the fairway!
9th over – Johan Botha drops a bit short and Guptill pulls viciously over midwicket for four.
8th over – <b>WICKET</b> – Theron enters the attack and strikes with his first ball! Rob Nicol comes down the pitch and chips the ball back over the bowler’s head, Hashim Amla takes a beautiful catch running from long-on. Nicol is out for 13.
6th over – Lonwabo Tsotsobe drops short and Guptill heaves a big six over midwicket. Three balls later, Tsotsobe bowls a slower ball in the slot and Guptill monsters an even bigger six – that’s into the trusses of the roof of The Cake Tin!
4th over – Nicol gets his first boundary as he slaps a short and wide delivery from Tsotsobe straight down the ground.
3rd over – Guptill launches into the first two balls of Albie Morkel’s second over, slicing a four over the overs and then bashing a shortish delivery over wide mid-on for six.
2nd over – Guptill gets going as he stands tall and slaps Tsotsobe through mid-off for four.
South Africa innings
Johan Botha and Albie Morkel took South Africa to 147 for six in their 20 overs in the first T20 international against New Zealand at the Westpac Stadium in Wellington on Friday.
20th over – An important boundary for South Africa as Botha flicks a sweep from outside off stump behind square-leg for four off Kyle Mills. The next ball is in a similar place and Botha launches it superbly through the hands of a leaping Nathan McCullum at long-off for six.
18th over – Good innovation by JP Duminy sees him start Tim Southee’s final over with successive boundaries. The left-hander begins by paddling a full ball outside off stump up and over short fine-leg for four. Duminy then gives himself some room to leg and slices another full delivery through the covers for another boundary. <b>WICKET</b> – The bowler has the last laugh, however, as he sends down a good bouncer, which Duminy tries to hook, but top-edges to Mills at fine leg. Duminy’s 41 off 37 balls was a very important innings for South Africa.
17th over – Mills bowls a full toss outside off stump and Albie Morkel slaps it through the covers for four.
16th over – <b>WICKET</b> – More exceptional fielding by New Zealand gets rid of Justin Ontong. Southee is back in the attack and his second ball is in the blockhole and Ontong chips it back to the bowler, who takes a magnificent low return catch in his follow-through. Ontong scored 32 off 17 balls, providing the innings with a vital boost towards respectability.
15th over – Awesome batting by Ontong as he ends Kane Williamson’s over with four successive sixes! Ontong, who should have been given out for seven in the previous over when he edged a sweep at Rob Nicol, comes down the pitch to the third ball of the over and slog-sweeps it for a majestic six. Ontong is down the wicket again to the next ball, which is a full toss, and pulls it for a flat six. The next ball is flatter but too short and Ontong heaves it again over midwicket, before the off-spinner pushes the last ball of the over wide outside off stump, but the batsman reads it and slaps it over long-on for six more!
9th over – <b>WICKET</b> – AB de Villiers, who was fortunate to survive a stumping referral off the brothers McCullum before had scored, slaps a delivery from left-arm spinner Roneel Hira with tremendous power to short extra cover. But the brilliant Martin Guptill snaps up a beauty, low to the turf. A disbelieving De Villiers, who scored just eight off 17 balls, doesn’t believe the catch was taken cleanly but the South African captain is sent on his way after a television referral.
6th over – <b>WICKET</b> – Southee is brought into the attack and his first ball to Richard Levi is a bouncer, which the debutant tries to hook, misses and is struck on the helmet. Two balls later, Levi steps outside leg-stump, but Southee follows him and a cramped drive is skewed to long-on. Levi is out for 13 off 12 balls.
5th over – <b>WICKET</b> – Colin Ingram is out for a duck as he comes down the pitch to his second ball and tries a big drive, but a good delivery from Nathan McCullum turns nicely away from the bat and Ingram is stumped after Brendon McCullum takes the ball on the rebound.
4th over – And now Mills concedes the first six of the match as Hashim Amla launches a slower ball over the covers for six. <b>WICKET</b> – Amla smashes the next ball straight back at Mills, the ball bursting through his hands and coming to rest next to the popping crease. Amla decides to sneak a quick single, but is beaten by a superb piece of fielding by Martin Guptill, who sprints in from mid-off and slides into the stumps to complete the run out. Amla looked good in scoring 19 off 15 balls, with two fours and a six. But it’s an expensive over for Mills as Levi swings the next ball over midwicket for six and ends the over by hooking a bouncer for a one-bounce four.
3rd over – Another wonderful shot by Hashim Amla as he steps away from the ball bowled around the wicket by off-spinner Nathan McCullum, and lashes it off the back foot from off-stump, through the covers for four.
2nd over – The first boundary of the innings off the 11th ball and a super shot too by Amla, who drives Mills on the up, over the covers for four.

Ontong & Duminy give SA a total to bowl to 0

Posted on February 17, 2012 by Ken

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Contrasting innings by Justin Ontong and JP Duminy gave South Africa 147 for six and a total they could bowl to in the first T20 international against New Zealand at the Westpac Stadium in Wellington on Friday.
Clever bowling, backed by magnificent fielding, had given New Zealand another stranglehold over the South African batsmen after they had been sent in to bat and it needed an extraordinary over of hitting by Ontong to give the tourists a respectable total.
South Africa had been reduced to 52 for four after nine overs and Duminy and Ontong had struggled to find anything else but singles as they added 23 runs in the next five overs.
Ontong, who had seemingly edged a sweep off part-time spinner Rob Nicol to wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum in the previous over, then laid into off-spinner Kane Williamson, ending his second over with four successive sixes, three of them to deep midwicket and the fourth over long-on.
The bristling Tim Southee returned to claim Ontong’s wicket for 32 off 17 balls, taking a magnificent low return catch, and Doug Bracewell, who recently skittled Australia in a shock test win for New Zealand, then bowled a superb penultimate over that cost just three runs, two of them being leg-byes.
Fifteen runs would come from the final over, however, as Johan Botha hit Kyle Mills for a four and a six.
Openers Hashim Amla (19) and Richard Levi (13) had started brightly for South Africa, adding 24 off 20 balls, but the brilliance of Martin Guptill in the field had much to do with the visitors’ top-order woes.
Guptill dashed in from mid-off and slid into the stumps to run out Amla and then snapped up a wonderful low catch at short extra-cover to remove AB de Villiers for eight after the South African captain had slapped a delivery from left-arm spinner Roneel Hira with tremendous power and timing.
A top-class delivery from off-spinner Nathan McCullum had removed Colin Ingram for a two-ball duck, brother Brendon completing a juggled stumping after a foray down the pitch by the left-hander.
Duminy gave himself time to settle and refused to let the pressure get to him as he accumulated an important 41 off 37 balls, although he was fortunate to survive an lbw appeal off Williamson on 21.
Southee (4-0-28-3) and Nathan McCullum (4-0-16-1 with the new ball) did much to unsettle the South African batsmen.

NZ conditions pose challenge – Kirsten 0

Posted on February 15, 2012 by Ken

Coach Gary Kirsten is sure his team has the skill and talent to win anywhere in the world but believes the team’s tour of New Zealand will provide the South Africans with a stiff challenge.

“I believe we have a quality team that has enough skill and talent to confront any conditions. It’s our responsibility to do well around the world in any conditions. It is important if we want to be a champion team to win series in all formats of the game, all over the world,” Kirsten said at O.R. Tambo International Airport on Friday, just prior to the team’s departure for New Zealand.

“But New Zealand aren’t easy to beat at home, they are streetsmart and they understand their conditions, and it’s going to be a very competitive series. We need to stack up performances, to play well consistently, that’s our focus.”

Kirsten is acutely aware that, in terms of his team’s worthiness to be rated the best in the world, they have to perform consistently overseas as well and, what doesn’t come out in the wash in New Zealand is bound to come out in the rinse in England.

“We’ve set long-term goals and being number one is part of that. And this tour is also important for our tour to England. It will be more of the same over there, so this tour is not a standalone. Consistency is not just suddenly going to come right – it’s a process that takes time,” Kirsten said.

The seven-week tour is also a momentous occasion for AB de Villiers because he is captaining South Africa for the first time on tour. The 27-year-old sees the tour as an ideal opportunity for some team-spirit to grow.

“I’m very excited because it’s my first tour as captain and it means we’ll get the chance to get some team-spirit going. It’s tough doing that at home because everything’s quite disjointed. On tour, there’s nothing else for you to do but be with your team-mates.

“It was a bit of a rollercoaster against Sri Lanka and I learnt a few lessons. I enjoy being positive, but it didn’t always come off. But I thought the guys responded well to my leadership and it was a step in the right direction for me,” De Villiers said.

Kirsten added that it will be important for the team to acclimatise to the different conditions in New Zealand.

“We’re purposefully going a bit earlier than usual because the guys need a lot of time in the nets. They need time to get used to the pace and bounce, and we’ll have five full days for practice. It is different over there, even the weather – the warmest it gets is about 21 degrees. We need six or seven days to acclimatise because there’s also the jetlag to get over,” Kirsten said.

For the South Africans, there is also the small matter of revenge after New Zealand knocked them out of the World Cup in their ill-tempered last meeting.

NZ tour a warm-up for England – Kirsten 0

Posted on February 15, 2012 by Ken

South Africa coach Gary Kirsten said that his team’s tour of New Zealand was an important warm-up for their England trip later this year and that it was the Proteas’ responsibility to perform well away from home.
    The South Africa team left Johannesburg for New Zealand on Friday, and will play three T20 internationals, three ODIs and three tests between February 17 and March 27.
    “I believe we have a quality team that has enough skill and talent to confront any conditions. It’s our responsibility to do well around the world in any conditions. It is important if we want to be a champion team to win series in all formats of the game, all over the world,” Kirsten told a news conference at Johannesburg International Airport on Friday.
    “We’ve set long-term goals and this series is part of that. It’s important for our tour to England because it’s going to be a very competitive series. New Zealand aren’t easy to beat at home and we need to stack up performances, to play well consistently, that’s our focus.
    “It will then be more of the same for the England tour. This New Zealand tour is not a standalone event. Developing consistency is not suddenly just going to come right, it’s a process that takes time,” Kirsten said.
    AB de Villiers will be leading the team in the limited-overs matches and he said his first tour as skipper would be an ideal opportunity to move forward in his captaincy, after steering South Africa to a hard-fought 3-2 series win over Sri Lanka at home last month.
    “I’m very excited because it’s my first tour as captain and it means we’ll get the chance to get some team-spirit going. It’s tough doing that at home because everything’s quite disjointed. On tour, there’s nothing else to do but be with your team-mates.
    “It was a bit of a rollercoaster against Sri Lanka and I learnt a few lessons. I enjoy being positive, but it didn’t always come off. But I thought the guys responded well to my leadership and it was a step in the right direction,” De Villiers said.
    Kirsten said it was important the team got into their stride as quickly as possible in New Zealand.
    “We’re purposefully going a bit earlier than usual because the guys need a lot of time in the nets. They need time to get used to the pace and bounce, and they’ll have five good days of practice. It is different over there, even the weather – the warmest it gets is about 21 degrees. We need six or seven days to acclimatise because there’s also the jetlag to get over,” Kirsten said.
    The World Cup-winning India coach said New Zealand’s greatest strength was their ability to think on their feet.
    “They are streetsmart and understand their conditions well,” Kirsten said.
    South Africa’s T20 squad includes three new faces in fast bowler Marchant de Lange, uncapped explosive opening batsman Richard Levi and experienced middle-order batsman Justin Ontong.
    De Lange took seven for 81 in the first innings of his test debut against Sri Lanka, while Ontong has played two tests, 26 ODIs and three T20 internationals for South Africa, the last of which was three years ago.
    Senior players such as Graeme Smith, Jacques Kallis and Dale Steyn have been left out of the T20 squad but will fly out to join the rest of the team before the ODIs.
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