for quality writing

Ken Borland



4-run loss “a fine effort & positive start” – Titans coach 0

Posted on September 04, 2014 by Ken

Unlimited Titans coach Rob Walter said yesterday that batting second and getting within four runs of the Highveld Lions in the Momentum eKasi Challenge at Dobsonville Oval demanded a fine effort from his team in a positive start to their pre-season games.

The Titans, chasing 259 for victory, finished on 254 for seven in their 50 overs, which was a fine recovery from 28 for three and with Heino Kuhn retired hurt. Farhaan Behardien (60) and David Wiese (94) added 113 off 131 balls for the fourth wicket to haul the visitors back into contention, and young Heinrich Klaasen scored a valiant 43 not out but just could not get his team across the line as the experienced Hardus Viljoen and Dwaine Pretorius bowled cleverly at the death.

“I thought we did brilliantly to get close because the pitch got worse and 259 was probably a bit too much on that wicket. It was turning throughout, it was slow, the ball began to go through the top and it was very difficult to get the ball away. So to finish just four short meant it was a very good game, with a lot of positives for us,” Walter told The Pretoria News yesterday.

Perhaps the greatest of these positives was the innings of Wiese which marked the all-rounder out as a batsman of serious ability and not just a lower-order power hitter. Despite coming in after just 10.4 overs with the top-order blown away, Wiese was able to adapt, rebuilding the innings with Behardien while still scoring at a decent rate. He reached his 50 off 62 balls and needed just 40 more deliveries to score his next 44 runs.

“David has worked very hard on his batting after a lean season with the bat and to score 94 on a very tough pitch was a superb effort. He showed really good development in moving away from what he’s been tagged as, what he’s expected to be. To come in with three wickets down early and a man retired hurt is as tough as it gets, but he was able to grind it out until he found his rhythm,” Walter said.

Having shown such great judgement in the 101 balls he faced previously, it came as a surprise when, in a moment of folly, Wiese was run out attempting a second run to deep backward point on 199 for four in the 41st over.

“David turned poorly and didn’t seem to realise he was in trouble. Winning or losing games often hinges on one decision like that and he and Farhaan probably should have gone through to win the game for us. But we speak about losing wickets in the powerplay and Farhaan also got out trying to hit over the top,” Walter said.

While Klaasen was disappointed not to be able to steer the Titans home, his presence adds greatly to the batting depth available to the Titans in the coming season.

“Heinrich has certainly got serious batting capability and he’s already delivered at all levels below franchise level. He was batting in a very tough phase of the game and he didn’t throw it away. His thinking stayed clear, but the Lions were very smart at the death, they bowled back-of-a-length with no pace and I don’t think there would have been a different result even with a more experienced batsman there,” Walter said.

The coach conceded that allowing the Lions to score 258 for seven after winning the toss was too many runs, but he said they wanted to give fringe bowlers the chance of performing in the closing overs. Unfortunately the execution of their skills was poor and the home side, led by Devon Conway, hammered 61 runs in the last five overs.

“We could have wrapped up the innings with spin after Eden Links [4-35] bowled brilliantly and Roelof van der Merwe was turning the ball square, but we wanted to do things differently than we would in an official game and give guys the opportunity of bowling in that phase. A guy like Vincent Moore normally has good skills at the death,” Walter explained.

Titans & Lions kill 2 birds with 1 stone 0

Posted on July 22, 2014 by Ken

The Unlimited Titans and the bizhub Highveld Lions will once again be killing two birds with one stone when they start their pre-season competitive cricket with the Momentum eKasi Challenge, which the Southern Gautengers are hosting this year, at Dobsonville Oval on August 22.

The eKasi Challenge not only boosts grassroots cricket by bringing top franchise players to the townships, but also provides the team with valuable competitive action before the more serious competitions start.

The eKasi Challenge has become a sought-after trophy after just a single year – the Titans hosting and losing the inaugural match last August in Mamelodi – with Lions coach Geoffrey Toyana committing himself yesterday into playing his strongest available side, including five players who will have just returned from Australia on SA A duty.

“We’ll have everyone back and will play our strongest team as we’re looking to start afresh this season after being poor last year. Aaron Phangiso, Hardus Viljoen, Eddie Leie, Temba Bavuma and Kagiso Rabada will all be back and although I was planning to give them a break, they really want to be involved in the game.

“The eKasi Challenge means a lot for us, four or five of our players come from Soweto and it’s a great thing for them to go back and play there,” Toyana said yesterday at the Wanderers for the announcement of the venue.

Titans veteran Ethy Mbhalati said there is a similar sense of expectation in their squad.

“It’s very exciting, just remembering Mamelodi last year and the amount of people that came to watch, making a noise and supporting, that makes it a more serious game. I love spending time with the kids, it’s what I enjoy the most and there could be another Ethy Mbhalati in the eKasi.

“You just want to leave something for them, show them that there are people from the townships who are in top cricket.

“The guys are looking fit, we’ve been running and bowling and hitting balls for the last couple of months and we can’t wait for the season to start,” Mbhalati said.

It seems the cries of Black African youth in the townships for greater opportunities in cricket are being heard, thanks to Cricket South Africa, Momentum and the two Gauteng franchises joining forces in such an effective manner.

“I have to thank Momentum for coming up with this plan to bring cricket to eKasi. We would have had so many township cricketers playing at a high level if it had happened before. As Phangy [Aaron Phangiso] always says, ‘don’t forget your roots and where you come from’ – which is eKasi,” Mbhalati said.

The face of South African domestic cricket will change even more in the coming season with every franchise team required to field two Black African players and Mbhalati said the effect of this could be phenomenal.

“There’s always a starting point but we need to go from two to three to four. We’ve got enough talent, we don’t need to worry about that, it won’t be a problem. We can pick four now and they would do well, they would be there on merit.

“Maybe if this had happened in the past, we would have had more Makhaya Ntinis, Lonwabo Tsotsobes or Monde Zondekis by now. If you have three or four Black Africans playing then it brings even more hype to eKasi. If there’s only one Black African in a team, then people in the township wonder if they can make it, but if there are three then they think maybe they can be the fourth player,” Mbhalati said.

The positive effects of seeing role-models in action are obvious; and bringing those same heroes to the townships can only prove the success of the eKasi Challenge concept.

 

 

Titans announce fixtures for pre-season Sixes tournament 0

Posted on June 06, 2014 by Ken

 

The Titans’ bold efforts to reorganise pre-season domestic cricket moved a step closer on Thursday with the announcement of the fixtures for the inaugural Global Softech Sixes to be played at SuperSport Park from September 4-7.

The Sixes tournament is the brainchild of Titans CEO Jacques Faul and is an attempt to attract a new audience to an enterprising brand of cricket, with an emphasis on corporate hospitality.

The first Global Softech Sixes will bring the six domestic franchises and six African countries including South Africa to Centurion for an event that Faul is hoping will grow to rival the famous Hong Kong Sixes.

There are going to be eight five-overs-a-side games on each of the four days and the South African team to play in Hong Kong this year will be announced after the tournament.

A major attraction of the event is the chance it will provide for leading players in Zimbabwe, Namibia, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania to play top-class cricket against the stars of the South African game.

“This is exciting for Africa cricket and our 23 member countries. It has never happened before in Africa, it is a special and unique concept, and it will be televised through the whole continent,” Cassim Suleman, the CEO of the Africa Cricket Association, said.

Africa Cricket CEO Cassim Suleman

Dolphins coach Lance Klusener said the Global Softech Sixes will provide some competitive preparation for his team ahead of their participation in the Champions League T20.

“Any time out in the middle before the Champions League will be like gold. It’s only five overs, so our batsmen can get used to swiping from ball one, and it will be even more useful to the bowlers, who get a chance to bowl an over of yorkers. We’ll be able to see where we are in terms of our skills,” Klusener said.

Fixtures

Thursday, September 4: 10h00 Cobras v Knights; 10h50 Titans v Warriors; 11h40 Dolphins v Lions; 12h30 Warriors v Cobras; 13h20 Lions v Titans; 14h10 Knights v Dolphins; 15h00 Cobras v Lions; 15h50 Titans v Dolphins.

Friday, September 5: 10h00 Warriors v Knights; 10h50 Dolphins v Cobras; 11h40 Knights v Titans; 12h30 Warriors v Lions; 13h20 Titans v Cobras; 14h10 Warriors v Dolphins; 15h00 Knights v Lions; 16h10 Franchise Sixes final.

Saturday, September 6: 10h00 Kenya v Namibia; 10h50 Uganda v Tanzania; 11h40 South Africa v Zimbabwe; 12h30 Tanzania v Kenya; 13h20 Zimbabwe v Uganda; 14h10 Namibia v South Africa; 15h00 Kenya v Zimbabwe; 15h50 Uganda v South Africa.

Sunday, September 7: 10h00 Tanzania v Namibia; 10h50 South Africa v Kenya; 11h40 Namibia v Uganda; 12h30 Tanzania v Zimbabwe; 13h20 Uganda v Kenya; 14h10 Tanzania v South Africa; 15h00 Namibia v Zimbabwe; 16h10 Africa Sixes final.

 

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Thought of the Day

    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.

     

     



↑ Top