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Ken Borland



Dilshan gives Sri Lankan reply promising start 0

Posted on January 04, 2012 by Ken

The flashing blade of captain Tillakaratne Dilshan gave Sri Lanka a promising start to their innings after the batting heroics of Jacques Kallis and AB de Villiers had put South Africa in firm control of the third test at Newlands on Wednesday.

    Sri Lanka ended the second day on 149 for two – a deficit of 431 runs – after Dilshan scored a quickfire 78 to launch the innings.

    South Africa are still obvious favourites to win the final test and the series, however, after Kallis scored a career-best double century and De Villiers an unbeaten 160 as the hosts accumulated 580 for four declared.

    Sri Lanka’s two leading run-scorers – Kumar Sangakkara (35*) and Mahela Jayawardene (7*) – were at the crease at stumps after South Africa claimed the wickets of the two opening batsmen.

    Dilshan was quickly into his stride as he blasted 12 fours in his run-a-ball innings, before falling to leg-spinner Imran Tahir.

    Dilshan lofted a drive into the outfield, but the delivery was a googly that took the inside half of the bat, allowing Graeme Smith to run from deep mid-on and take a super diving catch.

    Lahiru Thirimanne had earlier been bowled through the gate, his attempted drive getting nowhere near a Morne Morkel thunderbolt, for 23.
Following Dilshan’s dismissal 11 overs before stumps, Sangakkara and Jayawardene batted with restraint to survive through to the close.
South Africa declared 40 minutes before tea after a memorable day for Kallis, who finished with 224, while De Villiers helped himself to 160 not out off just 205 balls, with 19 fours and two sixes.
Jacques Rudolph was with De Villiers up until the declaration, scoring 51 not out as he helped to add an unbeaten 127 for the fifth wicket off just 123 balls.
De Villiers and Rudolph were plundering runs at will when Smith declared. South Africa are hunting their first series win at home in three seasons, with this series currently tied 1-1.
Rudolph, having dropped down the order from opening to number six, made his first half-century since his return to the team after a five-year absence.
Kallis, who had resumed on 159, had not exceeded 200 in a test despite amassing 10,000 test runs until his 201 not out against India at Centurion in December, 2010. The 36-year-old needed just 65 deliveries on Wednesday to reach his second double century, in 394 minutes and 280 balls, with 29 fours and a six.
Kallis fell on the stroke of lunch when an attempted lofted drive went off the toe of the bat to Angelo Mathews, who took a tumbling catch at deep mid-on to give persevering left-arm spinner Rangana Herath his only wicket.
Sri Lanka were unable to make any other breakthroughs on the second day with De Villiers advancing to his 13th test century.
South Africa attacked the bowling from the outset, with de Villiers scoring 115 runs off 113 deliveries on Wednesday.
Kallis enjoyed some good fortune as two outside edges, on 171 and 183, managed to go through the hands of Jayawardene in the slips, off the bowling of Dhammika Prasad and Mathews respectively.

Kallis a calming influence alongside me – Petersen 0

Posted on January 03, 2012 by Ken

Alviro Petersen scored a fine century in his comeback test for South Africa against Sri Lanka at Newlands on Tuesday and later praised Jacques Kallis for being a calming influence as he batted alongside him.
    Opening batsman Petersen, playing his first test since last January, scored 109, while Kallis ended the day on 159 not out to steer South Africa to a commanding 347 for three at stumps on the first day.
    “I have to give Jacques full credit, he was back to as South Africa have known him. We had lots of conversations about the areas to score in, what the bowlers are trying to do and he was just a calming influence. A guy with over 12 000 runs is not just going to stand there with a mouth full of teeth,” Petersen told a news conference after the end of play.
    Petersen and Kallis shared a record third-wicket stand of 205, South Africa’s best for any wicket against Sri Lanka, and Petersen said it had been a case of playing the conditions and the match situation correctly after South Africa had slipped to 56 for two.
    “We’d lost a couple of wickets and the game was in the balance. But we played the conditions well, we put the bad ball away and once we were set, we just kept building the partnership,” Petersen said.
    The 31-year-old said the South Africans had been surprised by how the Sri Lankan attack had bowled at them.
    “We were surprised by the lines and lengths of their bowling; we were surprised by the number of short balls they bowled,” Petersen said.
    Sri Lanka bowling coach Champaka Ramanayake conceded that his attack had been poor.
    “We did not bowl well at all, especially in the first session when we could have kept them to under 80 runs. Our line wasn’t so bad, but the length was either too far up or a bit short.
    “If we could have kept them under 300 at stumps, I would have been very happy, but the fifty runs extra was because of bad bowling,” Ramanayake said.
    Sri Lanka had won the toss and controversially sent the South Africans in to bat, with Ramanayake admitting that they had misread the pitch.
    “We thought that pitch would do something, but it did not do as much as expected. It became a good pitch after the first session, but we did not bowl well – that was the main reason,” Ramanayake said.
    The South Africans would have batted first if they had won the toss, Petersen confirmed.
    “We were surprised they sent us in, the pitch looked quite dry this morning and we wanted to bat first anyway. We made full use of the conditions and would like to get a big first-innings total. I think the pitch will deteriorate, it’s really dry and this afternoon some balls hit the cracks and they were already loose. It will turn and we want to put scoreboard pressure on the Sri Lankans,” Petersen said.


Majestic Kallis puts SA in command 0

Posted on January 03, 2012 by Ken

A top-class unbeaten century by Jacques Kallis put South Africa in a commanding position after the first day of the third and decisive test against Sri Lanka at Newlands on Tuesday.

    Kallis had compiled a majestic 159 not out as South Africa racked up 347 for three by stumps, having been sent in to bat by Sri Lanka captain Tillakaratne Dilshan.

    It turned out to be a disastrous decision for Sri Lanka as Kallis and fellow centurion Alviro Petersen made merry against a wayward attack. The pair added 205 in 212 minutes for the third wicket, South Africa’s biggest stand against Sri Lanka for any wicket.

    On a ground where he now averages 78.19, Kallis hammered 21 fours and a six in his 41st century in his 150th test, driving the ball with immense authority.

    Petersen, playing his first test since January last year, gazed with admiration from the other end at Kallis’s imperious innings, but he notched a brilliant century of his own, his second, making 109 off 188 balls, with 13 fours and a six.

    He used his feet beautifully and drove with sweet timing, scoring heavily on the leg-side. But Petersen eventually fell in the ninth over after tea when he was caught by a diving Dilshan at short-cover after driving loosely at a slower ball from left-arm seamer Chanaka Welegedara.

    AB de Villiers then came in and played some handsome strokes against a toothless attack as he breezed to 45 not out by the close.

    Kallis now stands in second place on the list of leading run-scorers at one venue, having notched 2033 at Newlands in 20 tests on his home ground. Only Mahela Jayawardene, with 2697 runs in 24 tests at Colombo’s Sinhalese Sports Club, has scored more at a single venue.

South Africa’s leading run-scorer also completed a full set of centuries against every other test-playing nation, the second South African after current coach Gary Kirsten and 11th batsman overall to do so.

    South Africa, trying to win a series at home for the first time in three years, had slipped to 56 for two after being sent in to bat as seamer Dhammika Prasad struck twice in the first hour, keeping to a tight line and removing both Graeme Smith and Hashim Amla for 16, before Sri Lanka’s bowling effort descended into near-chaos.

Prasad, brought into the Sri Lanka side for the first time in the series to replace the injured Dilhara Fernando, got a wicket with his first ball as the left-handed Smith chopped a delivery that was angling across him back into his stumps.

Smith had looked in very good form, hitting three fours off Welegedara in the previous over from the Wynberg End.

Amla then played across a straight delivery from Prasad to be trapped lbw.

South Africa decided to recall Petersen in a shuffling of their batting line-up, with Rudolph moving down to number six and Ashwell Prince being dropped. Pace bowler Vernon Philander also returned after injury, replacing Marchant de Lange.

Sri Lanka also brought in opening batsman Lahiru Thirimanne in place of Tharanga Paranavitana.

Sri Lanka won last week’s second test in Durban by 208 runs to level the series at 1-1.


Smith says SA not mentally tough enough 0

Posted on January 02, 2012 by Ken

South Africa captain Graeme Smith described his team as not being mentally tough enough ahead of the series-deciding third test against Sri Lanka starting at Newlands on Tuesday.
South Africa won the first test at Centurion by an innings, but then suffered an ignominious 208-run defeat at the hands of Sri Lanka in last week’s test in Durban.
“I can’t fault the training nor the effort, they’ve been outstanding. But mentally we need to be a bit stronger, that’s the only thing I can put my finger on. We just didn’t adapt well to conditions in Durban and recently, we haven’t played our best cricket in those conditions. But when we’ve toured the sub-continent, we’ve adapted well, so maybe it is more of a mindset thing.
“It’s easier for us when the ball does go through and there’s good carry, but when it doesn’t, we need to adapt, we need to shift mentally,” Smith told a news conference at Newlands on Monday.
Sri Lanka, having failed to win their eight previous tests in South Africa before coming to Durban, were seen as rank underdogs but can now win the series if they beat the hosts in Cape Town.

    “We have had a very hard time here and before the series, everyone was saying that we are underdogs and can’t beat South Africa. But if we play our brand of cricket and stick to the basics, then we believe that we can perform in any conditions,” Sri Lanka captain Tillakaratne Dilshan said.

    South Africa have made two changes to their starting XI for the third test, with 34-year-old left-handed batsman Ashwell Prince being dropped after he scored just 11, being caught reverse-sweeping, and seven, during which he was complicit in the running out of Hashim Amla for 51, in Durban.

    Alviro Petersen replaces Prince and will open the batting with Smith, with Jacques Rudolph dropping down to number six.

    Seamer Vernon Philander, who has taken 24 wickets in his first three tests, will return to the side after he suffered a minor knee injury in Durban. Marchant de Lange is the unfortunate bowler to stand down after he took seven wickets in the first innings of the second test.

    Sri Lanka are waiting on the fitness of wicketkeeper/batsman Dinesh Chandimal, who entered test cricket with a bang at Kingsmead, scoring half-centuries in each innings, but was struck a nasty blow on the elbow while batting in the nets on Sunday.

    “Chandimal’s elbow is getting better, but it’s a bruise in a nasty place. It would be a loss for us if he can’t play, because he did a great job for us in the last test,” Dilshan said.

    The fitness of Dilhara Fernando is also in doubt, with Dilshan saying the veteran pace bowler was suffering from knee pain. The 28-year-old seamer Dhammika Prasad is in line to take his place.

    For South Africa, the pressure is on for them to put another infuriatingly inconsistent year behind them and start 2012 with a win.

    “All these ups and downs – it’s been the story of my career! I’ve played under that pressure since I was 22 and I was probably stupid enough to take the captaincy at that age! But it’s about bouncing back and getting things right over the next five days,” Smith said.

    South Africa team – Graeme Smith, Alviro Petersen, Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis, AB de Villiers, Jacques Rudolph, Mark Boucher, Vernon Philander, Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel, Imran Tahir.

    Probable Sri Lanka team – Tharanga Paranavitana, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Kumar Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardene, Thilan Samaraweera, Angelo Mathews, Dinesh Chandimal, Dhammika Prasad, Thisara Perera, Rangana Herath, Chanaka Welegedara.


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    Revelation 3:15 – “I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other.”

    How can you expect blessings without obeying?

    How can you expect the presence of God without spending time quietly before him?

    Be sincere in your commitment to Him; be willing to sacrifice time so that you can grow spiritually; be disciplined in prayer and Bible study; worship God in spirit and truth.

    Have you totally surrendered to God? Have you cheerfully given him everything you are and everything you have?

    If you love Christ, accept the challenges of that love: Placing Christ in the centre of your life means complete surrender to Him.

     

     

     



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