South Africa launch with runs and records

“You get out there and the wicket starts playing really well. It’s initially a big sigh of relief, and secondly your instinct takes over and it becomes a see-ball, hit-ball mentality. Marrying the two is crucial.” – Aiden Markram

Telford Vice / The Kotla

BISHAN Singh Bedi has given cricket so much, and still his gifts keep coming. On Saturday the stand that bears his name and curves along the western boundary at the ground formerly known as the Kotla bequeathed a generous pool of shade that spread and deepened as the sun sank behind it.

The spectators gathered there would have been relieved to escape the sharp end of the 38-degree heat. But they still had to breathe air rated, forebodingly, as “very unhealthy”. It stained the sky the colour of a bedraggled dish towel, which had holes ripped into it by Delhi’s famous swooping and swirling black kites.  

Not that Sri Lanka had time or opportunity for bird-watching, even though they spent much of the afternoon looking upward. They did so in search of the ball that South Africa’s batters had sent booming boundaryward. The Lankans couldn’t hide from the heat, and their increasingly heaving gasps as they chased leather meant they took in more of the dirty air than anyone else.

Except, perhaps, for Quinton de Kock, Rassie van der Dussen and Aiden Markram, who spent an accumulated 405 minutes — verging on seven hours — batting in the soupy stickiness. They scored 100, 108 and 106 to propel South Africa to 428/5, the highest total in all 440 games played in men’s World Cup history.

How long did Markram think that would be the benchmark? “The way batters are playing nowadays you wouldn’t be surprised if that record is broken in this competition,” he said, a startling admission for someone whose ton had come off 49 balls.

That made it the fastest of all the 201 centuries in the tournament’s annals, while the 204 De Kock and Van der Dussen shared off 174 is South Africa’s biggest stand for any wicket in their 81 ODIs against the Lankans.

How much of the way the South Africans batted was plotted and how much is what happens when a team’s innings grows wings bigger and stronger than a black kite’s?

“You do a lot of planning before the game,” Markram said. “It’s natural for teams to speculate about conditions, especially for South Africans coming over to India. You’re not always 100% sure how it’s going to play.

“Then you get out there and the wicket starts playing really well. It’s initially a big sigh of relief, and secondly your instinct takes over and it becomes a see-ball, hit-ball mentality. Marrying the two of them is crucial.”

Markram, one of the more demure players in the game, let loose a mighty yawp when he reached his century. De Kock and Van der Dussen, too, didn’t try to stave off animated celebrations. They inspired images of three bottles of freshly uncorked champagne.

“It’s quite strange; you almost get this thing that takes over your body at certain moments,” Markram said. “There’s a lot of passion in this team to give our absolute all at this World Cup and see how far it can get us.

“We’ve been known to start slowly so we put a lot of emphasis on today’s game, to start well and play the same cricket we’ve been playing to manage to sneak into this competition. All of those emotions mixed up and building up comes out.”

South Africa have won six of their eight opening matches at a World Cup. But the two they lost became attached to memories they would prefer not to have: at home in 2003, when they crashed out of the tournament in the pool stage, and in England in 2019, when they slumped to their worst performance in the event by losing five of their completed eight matches. So Saturday’s success meant more, to the players, than just one win.    

Similarly, with South Africa building a wall of runs and records it wasn’t a day for picking out particular strokes. But De Kock’s sweetly timed off-side dab in the 31st to a wide delivery from Matheesha Pathirana, sending it scooting away for four, stood out. As did David Miller hoisting Kasun Rajitha into the stratosphere for a straight six to end the 49th, which had Tabraiz Shamsi in the dugout covering his mouth with his hand in empathy.

And to think so brutal an onslaught had begun placidly, with De Kock and Van der Dussen needing until midway through the 18th to bring up the hundred. The Lankans put some back into their new-ball effort and occasional deliveries skidded on, which was how Temba Bavuma was trapped in front by Dilshan Madushanka in the third.     

But the effects of the sun, the air, the flattening pitch and the small, fast outfield mounted on Sri Lanka, and the South Africans escaped the leash in the 23rd. With De Kock hitting Dhananjaya de Silva for four through the covers and six over long-on, the over went for a dozen runs and took South Africa’s runrate for the innings into double figures. They never looked back. Even Bedi might have struggled to reel them in. That Sri Lanka fielded judiciously told its own story. How many more runs would they have haemorrhaged had they been sloppy?   

The crowd of 15,496 would have swelled the stands and grass banks in most of South Africa’s major grounds. In Delhi they amounted to little more than a third of capacity. During the interval they probably thought they had seen their money’s worth, and more so when Marco Jansen’s first delivery, an inswinger, nailed a flummoxed Pathum Nissanka’s middle stump. Happily, the fans would have been mistaken.

Kusal Mendis tore into his task with gusto that suggested he thought the target — more than Sri Lanka had successfully chased in the 440 ODIs in which they had batted second — was attainable. He made 51 of their first 54 runs, and took his team to 94/2 after 10. At the same stage South Africa had been 48/1.

But Hurricane Mendis always looked like blowing itself out. It was a question of when, which was answered in the 13th — he edged a widish, sharply bouncing delivery from Kagiso Rabada to Klaasen, who kept wicket in the absence of the cramping De Kock.

That was the first of three wickets that fell for 41 in 45 balls. With them went any chance the Lankans might have had of answering their massive ask in the affirmative. Charith Asalanka and Dasun Shanaka scored half-centuries — the latter’s was his first in 20 completed white-ball innings — and they shared 82 off 72. But it was all for show, not dough.

Maybe the South Africans knew that. It would explain their messy display in the field, and the three dropped catches and another chance that didn’t go to hand. The plan seemed to be to bowl straight, but that left minimal margin for error given the willing pitch and the confines of the ground.

When you’ve piled up 428, slipping discipline is unlikely to come back to bite you where it hurts. It didn’t: Sri Lanka were dismissed for 326 in 44.5. But that won’t wash against more competitive opponents — like Australia, who South Africa face in Lucknow on Thursday. Before then they should rope in Bishan Singh Bedi to conduct a masterclass. 

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Lankans go where Dutch feared they would not tread

“They’re just cutthroat tournaments.” — Scott Edwards, Netherlands captain

Telford Vice / Geelong, Victoria

DID the real Sri Lanka team stand up in beating the Netherlands in Geelong on Thursday? Will the side who shambled to defeat against Namibia on Sunday be remembered as aberrations who took a wrong turn on their way out of a bad dream and ended up bang in the middle of Kardinia Park?

No, not least because only three of Sunday’s XI — Danushka Gunathilaka, Pramod Madushan and Dushmantha Theekshana — did not feature on Thursday. And because the two matches were played on the same pitch, albeit that the ball came onto the bat more fluidly on Thursday.

But you would be forgiven for believing the Sri Lankans who strode the field like they owned it only four days after they had looked like they had never been out of their own backyards had not been introduced to each other.

Neither a first-baller suffered by Dhananjaya de Silva, who was trapped in front by Paul van Meekeren — with a delivery that the gizmos said would have missed leg stump — immediately after van Meekeren had yorked Pathum Nissanka, nor the fact that only two Lankans reached 30 could derail the Asian express on its way to 162/6.

Kusal Mendis batted through six partnerships for his 44-ball 79, a commanding innings that endured into the last over and lent authority to a batting line-up who had shown none of that quality in being dismissed for 108 on Sunday. Max O’Dowd’s unbeaten 71 kept the Dutch in touch with the game at least theoretically, but Sri Lanka’s 16-run victory — and their u-turn from the cliff edge of elimination — was never in serious doubt.

The result took the Lankans from third to first place in the Group A standings. Like them, the Netherlands had won two of their three matches and were in second place — good enough to also go through to the second round. But the Europeans faced a nervous evening because they needed the United Arab Emirates to do what they hadn’t yet done in two editions of this event: win.

“They’re just cutthroat tournaments, aren’t they,” Netherlands captain Scott Edwards told a press conference between the games. “We think we’ve played a lot of good cricket in all three of the games. But the nature of these tournaments is that one little slip-up and you can be knocked out. Hopefully the UAE can get up and we’re still going tomorrow.”

After they had toppled the Lankan giants, the Namibians stumbled against the Dutch. Now the Netherlands needed a UAE team who had lost all five of their previous T20 World Cup — or World T20 — games to come good. If the Emiratis won, the Namibians would be marooned in third place and the Lankans and the Dutch would advance to the second round. If Namibia won, their muscular runrate would probably seal them into second place.  

Would the Netherlands hang about to see what would happen? “I’m not sure where we’ll be,” Edwards said. “I think we’ll probably have a little bit of a discussion and share a drink together. It’s been an awesome month or so, and hopefully it continues. But, yeah, we’ll just be enjoying each other’s company.”

They did indeed stay and watch. How could they not, considering what was on the line? And the UAE rewarded them for their trouble by scoring 148/3, their highest total batting first in this tournament since they were bowled out for 151 by the selfsame Netherlands in Sylhet in March 2014. At least one of their top order of Muhammad Waseem, Vriitya Aravind and CP Rizwan were at the crease into the 17th over with Waseem scoring 50 and Rizwan finishing not out on 43. Then Basil Hameed hit 25 not out off 14 and shared 35 off 18 with Rizwan. 

But the Dutch knew only too well what happened that day in Bangladesh more than eight years ago: they knocked off the target with six wickets standing and seven balls to spare. So the tension wouldn’t have eased when Namibia crashed to 69/7 inside 13 overs. Because David Wiese, the human oil rig, the moose in pads, the mountain man, wasn’t among the batters dismissed.

Wiese had joined Jan Frylinck in the eighth over, when the required runrate was 8.58. Soon it had climbed into double figures, reaching two runs a ball after 14. But Wiese was always going to be the difference between the teams, and he found an able ally in Ruben Trumpelmann. Playing his first match of the tournament, Trumpelmann kept a low profile in a stand that grew steadily until the last over loomed with 14 required.

It shouldn’t have come to that. Waseem had bowled the 17th, and Wiese had skied the last delivery to midwicket. Clearly it was wicketkeeper Aravind’s catch. Instead Waseem ended up under the ball — which burst through his hands and plopped, luridly, onto the turf.

So the decision, after a committee meeting in the middle, to entrust Waseem with the final over took guts and gumption. And when Wiese heaved the fourth ball down long-on’s throat with 10 required, it paid off. With that, every Dutchman and each of their fans in the stadium was on their feet and screaming.

Wiese was gone for 55 off 36, and his dismissal ended the partnership at 70 off 44. It also ended the match as a contest. Wiese walked off slowly, mournfully, tossing and catching his bat, searching the night sky for a silver lining. He didn’t find it.

The UAE finished bottom of the group and are on their way home, but that didn’t matter to them as they embraced and prayed and felt the blood of victors, by seven runs, pumping through their veins. The Namibians finished a place above the UAE, but that also didn’t matter. Africa is a long way away, and on their way there they will have too much time to think about what went wrong and what almost went right.

Sri Lanka’s first match of the second round is against the runners-up in Group B — which will be decided in Hobart on Friday — also at the Bellerive Oval on Sunday. The Dutch can look forward to a clash with Bangladesh, also in Hobart, on Monday.

But those are other matters for other days. For Sri Lanka and the Netherlands, and even the UAE, Thursday was about relief and happiness. For Namibia, not so much. Cooper was right. Some teams came here to have their throats cut, others to do the cutting.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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If fairness be the fuel of cricket, let Karunaratne play on

South Africa lost five wickets for fewer than 100 runs in all of their 14 Test innings last season, and 9/84 on Monday.

Telford Vice | Wanderers

A happy clamour rose from the outfield near the boundary at the Corlett Drive End of the Wanderers before play resumed on Monday. It sounded too hopeful to come from a team who had been dismissed for 157 on Sunday, and who were only nine runs ahead with nine wickets to get before their batters would have a chance to redeem themselves. But, yes, that team was Sri Lanka, who seemed to be having too much fun warming-up for day two of the second Test.

Less than four hours later, a different sound emanated from the field. It was made by Vishwa Fernando bellowing in defiance. And well he might have. Fernando had led the visitors’ effort to stay in the match by taking 5/101 in 23.4 overs of relentless aggression.

It is not intended as a backhanded compliment to say he made South Africa’s batters look Sri Lankan in their timid and sluggish response to his deliveries, which sniped off the seam quickly enough to force errors. Debutant Asitha Fernando posed a similar threat, and a pitch that had quickened — as Wanderers surfaces are wont to do after the first day — allowed the Lankan new-ball pair to strutt their stuff in style.  

South Africa planned to bat once, as they did to win the first Test in Centurion. Instead, their lead was limited to 145. What with their last nine wickets disappearing for 84 runs in less than 25 overs, you might wonder how they managed to forge that far ahead.

The answer was the 184 that Dean Elgar and Rassie van der Dussen shared for the second wicket. Elgar took his overnight 92 to 127, his 13th century and the first scored by a South Africa opener at home in 11 Tests. Van der Dussen, who walks out to bat to the fury of a song by a seminal Afrikaans punk rock band, Fokofpolisiekar, which translates as Fuck Off Police Car — sample lyrics: “Aim for my heart/It pumps wilderness in here/” — made a gritty, gnarly 67. The unappreciative will complain that he hasn’t scored a century in his 43 innings across the formats.

For almost four hours Elgar and Van der Dussen built South Africa’s advantage resolutely while ensuring the Sri Lankans couldn’t get the memory of their own awful batting out of their heads. But once they were separated, early in the second hour when Elgar nudged Dushmantha Chameera to first slip, the match swung and it was the South Africans who were left to wonder what might have been. None of their other nine players reached 20 or faced more than 30 balls.

Brittle batting is hardly a new problem for the home side, who lost five wickets for fewer than 100 runs in all of the 14 Test innings they had against India and England last season. In half of those innings, five wickets tumbled for fewer than 50. On Monday, the first five wickets that fell went down for 39 runs and the last five for 45. However you measure it, that’s the eighth occasion in 16 innings that South Africa have sacrificed five for fewer than 50. 

The home side were probably still thinking about what had gone wrong this time when they were welcomed back into the field by the ominous opening of Beethoven’s fifth symphony booming from the ground’s speakers. Was the doomful music meant for them or their opponents?

By then, Lungi Ngidi had already had an eventful time. He drove the second ball he faced, from Vishwa Fernando, handsomely through the covers for four, hammered him down the ground for another boundary, chested him over the wicketkeeper for still another, and was smacked square on the side of the helmet by Asitha Fernando. Ngidi’s fend to gully ended the innings and completed Vishwa Fernando’s five-wicket haul. The big South African filled the gaps between those events with mighty blows that, often, did not connect.

So there was little surprise that Ngidi was central to the next nugget of drama, which came with the 15th ball of Sri Lanka’s second innings. Delivered from round the wicket, it snuck through Kusal Perera’s uncertain drive. The ball hit nothing except the leg-side bail, and broke it in two. In the desolate concrete cavern, leather splintering wood sounded like bone crunched between teeth.

Nothing as visceral happened for the next hour-and-a-half while Dimuth Karunaratne and Lahiru Thirimanne took Sri Lanka into the final hour with a stand of 86 that was ended by a delivery from Ngidi that looked to be veering harmlessly down the leg side until Thirimanne flapped at it and gloved a catch behind. With his next ball, which swung still further, Ngidi removed Kusal Mendis the same way, this time with the help of Quinton de Kock’s diving catch.

Mendis paused before he trudged off, perhaps to wonder what he had done to deserve a hattrick of ducks in the series, this one a first-baller. Not many steps into his journey back to the dressingroom, he had cause to pause again — this time to pick up his bat, which he had dropped.  

With an hour left in the day, surely the meanest delivery debutant Minod Bhanuka has yet faced leapt off the top edge of his horizontal bat and steepled into the dazzling afternoon sky. The ball had been bowled by Anrich Nortjé, and it would take some catching. Keshav Maharaj, who has yet to bowl in the match and lasted for only eight deliveries with the bat, made many metres towards the midwicket boundary, flung himself headlong, cupped the catch in both hands, crashed to earth, and held on. Even if he has no other personal reason to remember this match, he has that. And the noise his amazed teammates made as they ran all the way to where he lay and then rose to mob him with praise.

Far from that madding throng the quietest man on the ground stood solitary at the other end of the pitch. He was still there at stumps, alone in his zen garden, deep in the sound of his silence. He had nursed his team into the lead with an innings of more than three hours of selfless stillness. It might have been ended twice in the last three overs, once with an edge over the slips, then with a blooped return catch that fell safely. And deservedly so. Sri Lanka, just five runs ahead with four wickets already lost, probably won’t win this match. But Karunaratne deserves the nine runs he needs to reach his century.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Du Plessis demoralises decimated Sri Lanka

Did Dean Elgar cry when Faf du Plessis got out for 199? Don’t be silly. People as tough as Elgar do not have tear ducts.

Telford Vice | Centurion

THE voice from above was emphatic: “It’s too hot! Don’t fall over!” Makhaya Ntini, now 43, a touch more ballast on his frame than in his playing days, his burgeoning afro silvering at the edges, still has his boom. So when he stood in his commentator’s get-up in Centurion’s open air pressbox on Monday and yelled his advice in voluble, voluptuous isiXhosa at a veteran member of the dressingroom staff making his way across the outfield many metres below, no-one in the ground could fail to hear his warning.

That was an hour before the start of the third day of the first Test between South Africa and Sri Lanka. After lunch, Ntini was proved not only correct but also prophetic. It was 31 degrees Celsius and three Sri Lankans had fallen over. Three more, that is. They could argue that they didn’t heed Ntini’s words because they don’t understand isiXhosa.

Lahiru Kumara, bowling the sixth over of the second session and his eighth of the day, left the field with his hand hovering over his groin after one delivery. Then Niroshan Dickwella went down as if he had been shot. Turns out he had been: by a bee that had stung him on the back of his neck. A buggy parked beyond the cover boundary, the same one that had ferried Dhananjaya de Silva to the dressingroom on his way out of the series with a torn thigh muscle on Friday, nudged closer in readiness. But, after treatment on the field, Dickwella returned to the fray.

That drama had barely subsided when Wanindu Hasaranga, in trying to stop Faf du Plessis’ smear for four off Dasun Shanaka, crashed to earth on the extra cover boundary and struggled to regain his footing because of an ankle or a knee issue. This time the buggy was required. The same dressingroom attendant Ntini had addressed from on high in the morning hurried to Hasaranga to hand him a requisite face mask for the journey. If you wanted to be cruel, you could have said those Lankans who weren’t going down like flies were being zapped by bees.

An hour later Hasaranga appeared at the top of the stairs that lead from the dressingroom to the field, and made his way, gingerly, down all 48 of them. Two overs after that the debutant leg spinner was bowling.

Mickey Arthur looked increasingly ill with each passing calamity. He had suffered the withdrawal of Angelo Matthews before the tour and Suranga Lakmal before the match, both with a dodgy hamstrings. Then came de Silva and, on Saturday, the removal of Kasun Rajitha with a groin injury. And then Kumara, Dickwella and Hasaranga were stricken. Who could blame Sri Lanka’s coach if all he could do was stare apoplectically at the field while keeping his mouth covered by the crook of his elbow like someone trying to keep his lunch where it belonged?

How Arthur must have envied his compatriots, who welcomed Kagiso Rabada back from a groin niggle in time for him to be picked for the second Test at the Wanderers on January 3. The sight of Rabada loping languidly around the outfield during lunch must have been a punch in the visitors’ guts. 

And all that before Faf du Plessis fell a solitary run short of completing his first double century, ending a stay of almost seven hours in his 113th innings. He batted at least as well as he did in his first, in November 2012, when he made an undefeated 110 to save the Adelaide Test. This time, he has given South Africa a fine chance of claiming their first Test win in four attempts this year and only their second in their last 10. He did so the way he has always played: with discipline and intelligence, and not a little style. He did not agree: “I’ve made a lot better hundreds — when attacks are at their hottest, when conditions are at their toughest. I wouldn’t put this close to any of those.”

This was Du Plessis’ first century in 18 completed Test innings. He shared record stands for South Africa against Sri Lanka with teammates who are among those who might replace him as captain when Quinton de Kock’s part-time appointment expires at the end of the summer. With Temba Bavuma he put on 179 for the fifth, and he added 133 for the seventh with Keshav Maharaj. Going by the way they batted, Bavuma would make a solid if risk averse leader while the bullish Maharaj might have to be talked out of taking too many risks. Bavuma made 71 off 125 balls, and Maharaj an unbeaten 74 — his highest score — off 105.

Bavuma’s innings ended bizarrely when he flashed at Shanaka, turned on his heel, tucked his bat under his arm, and walked. Except that Marais Erasmus hadn’t given him out and technology showed he hadn’t hit the ball. Why? He thought he had heard a sound, came word from the dressingroom. After 14 half-centuries in 68 innings, the agonising wait for Bavuma’s second century continues.   

When Du Plessis heaved Hasaranga to mid-on, failing to clear Dimuth Karunaratne, who held the catch high, he threw his head back in disappointment. Up in the dressingroom, Mark Boucher did likewise. Dean Elgar, who knows this pain having been dismissed for 199 against Bangladesh in Potchefstroom in September 2017, buried his head in his hands. Was he crying? Don’t be silly. People as tough as Elgar do not have tear ducts.

Morné Morkel, meanwhile, must have been searching for an eraser. Four hours before Du Plessis got out, the fast bowler tweeted: “I’m penciling [Du Plessis] in for a double … perfect day for it.” Whatever the state of the day, it’s rare for South Africans’ praises to be sung by Australian citizens.

Du Plessis’ dismissal prompted the unravelling of an innings in which the last four wickets fell for a dozen runs in 10 deliveries. Two of them went to Hasaranga, whose fortitude for bowling in what must have been pain was rewarded with 4/171 from 45 overs.

South Africa’s 621 was the highest total made by any team in the 25 Tests played at Centurion, and their biggest since January 2016 — 78 Test innings ago. Only six times in their previous 439 Tests have they compiled a higher score.   

Lungi Ngidi had removed Karunaratne and Kusal Mendis by the end of the fifth over of Sri Lanka’s second innings, when still another visiting player lay prone and in need of medical attention. But it seemed all Dinesh Chandimal required was a bandage applied to his achilles, which his pad strap appeared to be pinching.

Mendis and Chandimal ensured the Lankans endured no further hurt, in any sense. Or so it seemed until the close, when the dreaded buggy collected Chandimal at the boundary at the close, perhaps only to spare him a painful walk to the team bus. But, with only five wickets in hand, possibly, and 160 needed to make South Africa bat again, the damage has been done.

The day ended as it began, with Ntini booming from the press box, this time at a cameraperson stationed close to the fence: “You’d better come here! If you stay in the sun for much longer you’ll turn purple!” Many present laughed, but not the Sri Lankans. And not only because they don’t understand isiXhosa.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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