Rickelton rocks, Whitehead rolls

11 centuries, 8 five-wicket hauls in latest round of four-day matches.

Telford Vice | Cape Town

RYAN Rickelton banked his sixth score of 50 or more in his last nine first-class innings at the weekend. The wicketkeeper-batter’s 117 for the Lions followed an effort of 159 for the same team last month, which came after scores of 92 and 109 for South Africa A in June, and 58 and 194 for the Lions in March.

Rickelton’s latest feat was central to the Lions’ division one victory over Boland by an innings and 30 runs at the Wanderers. In the same division, the Titans hammered Western Province by an innings and 139 runs at Newlands thanks to first-innings hundreds by Grant Mokoena, Dean Elgar, Jiveshan Pillay and Ayabulela Gqamane. The Warriors beat North West by 130 runs in Potchefstroom with the help of undefeated centuries by Matthew Breetzke and Rudi Second, and the Dolphins and Knights drew at Kingsmead despite Matthew Kleinveldt’s unbeaten 177 — the highest score of the round — for the visitors. The 141 overs lost to rain and bad light on the first three days in Durban proved the deciding factor. 

After three rounds, the Lions, having won all their matches, lead the division one standings. They are 15.26 points ahead of the Knights, who lead the Warriors by 3.7 points.

Noteworthy history was made in division two, where left-arm spinner Sean Whitehead followed the 66 he scored in the first innings for South Western Districts against Easterns in Oudtshoorn by taking 5/64. He made 45 in the second innings — and then claimed all 10 of Easterns’ wickets for 36.

That made Whitehead only the second player in first-class cricket to take five wickets in one innings, 10 in the other and score 100 or more runs in the same match. The other was EM Grace — the most prominent of WG’s three brothers — who made 192 not out and took 5/77 and 10/69 for Gentlemen of MCC against Gentlemen of Kent in Canterbury in August 1862. Whitehead’s 10-for was the fourth in first-class cricket in South Africa and the first since fast bowler Mario Olivier claimed 10/65 for the Warriors against the Eagles in Bloemfontein in November 2007.

At the Wanderers, Duanne Olivier and Sisanda Magala took four wickets each in Boland’s first innings of 170, of which Janneman Malan made 54. Rickelton’s ton and Kagiso Rapulana’s 65 — and their stand of 140 — steadied the Lions’ reply of 350. Rickelton was caught behind off fast bowler Ferisco Adams, who took 5/24 in a dozen overs. Olivier claimed 5/57 to finish with match figures of 9/95 as Boland shambled to 150 all out with No. 11 Siyabonga Mahima’s 32-ball 47 — 40 of them in boundaries — their top score.

WP chose to field first at Newlands, where the Titans batted for 172 overs before declaring at 647/7. As opening batters, Mokoena’s 154 and Elgar’s 117 — they shared 231 — didn’t raise eyebrows. But when No. 7 Pillay scored 113 not out and No. 9 Gqamane made an unbeaten 117 in an unbroken stand of 199, the annals were consulted. Turns out that’s not the highest eighth-wicket stand in first-class cricket in South Africa, but it’s only the sixth time four centuries have been scored in an innings in the country and just the second time in a game not involving at least one national or international team.

Off-spinner Simon Harmer snapped up 7/76 as WP crashed to 195 all out, their last nine wickets tumbling for 103. The home side followed on, and although Daniel Smith made 83 and Kyle Verreynne 50 in a decent total of 313, the damage had been done in the first innings. Harmer and slow left-armer Neil Brand shared six wickets, which gave Harmer match figures of 10/225.       

Edward Moore’s 79, Lesiba Ngoepe’s 88 and Diego Rosier’s 52, and Alindile Mhletywa’s patient 46, which came off 131 balls, helped the Warriors reach 334 in Potch. The visitors lost their last four wickets for one run.

North West mustered 350 in reply, thanks to another three half-centuries — Wesley Marshall made 94, Delano Potgieter 74 and Nicky van der Bergh 64 not out. Medium pacer Mthiwekhaya Nabe and slow left-armer Tsepo Ndwandwa took seven wickets between them.

Breetzke and Moore — who scored 55 — shared 118 for the Warriors’ first wicket, and Breetzke and Second put on 170 for the unbroken third. Breetzke was 152 not out and Second scored an unbeaten 103.

The declaration of 364/2 left North West a target of 349, but they were dismissed for 218 inside 70 overs with Marshall making 65 and Van den Bergh 64. Nabe and left-arm wrist spinner Lizo Makhosi took three wickets each.

There were also three each at Kingsmead for Knights fast bowlers Gerald Coetzee, left-armer Mbulelo Budaza and Alfred Mothoa in the Dolphins’ first innings of 226. Kleinveldt’s sturdy performance and Jacques Snyman’s 94 — they put on 155 for the first wicket — allowed the visitors to declare at 397/4. The Dolphins began their second innings 171 behind, and were three ahead with five wickets standing when the draw was declared.

Whitehead’s heroics helped SWD beat Easterns by 120 runs — and that after the home side were 5/3 on their way to a total of 193 in a second innings in which the visitors used nine bowlers. Asked to chase 186, Easterns were shot out for 65 in 25.1 overs. Oddly, they lost more than one wicket in an over only once.

In another division two match, KwaZulu-Natal Inland beat Border by seven wickets in East London. Thomas Kaber’s 103 not out powered Border’s first innings of 384, but Tshepang Dithole made 162 to bolster the visitors’ reply of 384 in which left-arm wrist spinner Kaber took 5/109. The home side were rattled out for 106 in 51.5 overs with slow left-armer Luke Schlemmer snapping up 6/31. That left KZN Inland a target of just 107, which they reached in 21.4 overs.

Limpopo and Northern Cape drew their division two game in Polokwane. Off-spinner Aubrey Swanepoel took 7/56 in the home side’s first innings of 290. Northern Cape’s reply of 350 hinged on Rivaldo Moonsamy’s 101. Limpopo were dismissed for 185 with Swanepoel claiming 4/65 to complete a match haul of 11/121. The visitors chased 126 to win, and were only five runs away with three wickets in hand when the match ended. 

KZN Inland and Border top the division two standings with 34.46 points each. Matches involving Limpopo and Mpumalanga are not first-class.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Double tons for Zondo, Malan

Warriors, Lions, KZN Inland celebrate victory

Telford Vice | Cape Town

KHAYA Zondo has proven his point where it can never be taken away from him: on the field. In recent weeks his name has become code for being a victim of racial wrongdoing at the Social Justice and Nation-Building (SJN) hearings. On Saturday Zondo gave the game another reason to remember him by completing an undefeated 203 for the Dolphins in their division one match against Western Province at Newlands.

It was one of two double hundreds in the opening round of first-class fixtures, along with Janneman Malan’s 200 not out for Boland against the Knights in Bloemfontein. 

On July 22, Zondo gave testimony at the SJN in which he alleged race-based skulduggery in his omission from South Africa’s XI for the deciding ODI of a series in India in October 2015. Zondo was picked to replace David Miller, who had scored 52 runs in four innings, three of them completed, in the rubber. But Zondo did not play.

South Africa’s then captain, AB de Villiers, insisted Miller be retained because of his experience. The selector on tour, Hussein Manack, acquiesced. So Zondo was removed from the side. He might have kept his place after JP Duminy was ruled out through injury, but that prompted the inclusion of Dean Elgar — who had arrived in India to play in the Test series that was to follow — as a left-handed batter who could bowl spin.

Quinton de Kock, Faf du Plessis and De Villiers scored centuries in a total of 438/4. Miller came to the crease when Du Plessis retired hurt with cramp at the end of the 44th over. He made 22 not out off 12 balls. Elgar took guard with five balls left in the innings and scored five not out. He did not bowl in India’s collapse to 224 all out in 36 overs, sealing what remains South Africa’s only success in five bilateral ODI series in that country. 

The episode struck a nerve in South Africa, where black and brown players wrote to CSA complaining of being sent on tour to make up the transformation numbers in the squad and not being given the game time they deserved. Zondo has since played five ODIs, all in 2018, but believes the affair has stunted his career.

“It feels like things are constantly being done and it all feels like it stems from 2015,” he told the SJN. “I can’t even get into the South Africa A side. How? They complain about not having black batsmen. I’m a black batsman who scored two centuries [last] season, but they can’t seem to involve me. No other black batsman scored a century this year. My question is, what is it about me that they have such a big issue?

“The performances are not enough. Maybe it’s because I’m not tall enough. There are all sorts of reasons that are put. Things keep being done, over and over and over. It’s almost like they want to say, when my career is over, ‘See he only played five games [for South Africa]; he was never good enough.’”

On Saturday, the second day of the Newlands match, he showed he remains good enough, scoring 174 of his runs in the 68.4 overs the Dolphins faced before declaring. Zondo scored his 13th first-class century in his 205th innings. He marked reaching his maiden double ton by taking a knee — another nod, it will be seen, to 2015 and all that.

Zondo’s feat was the 54th double century seen in senior first-class cricket in South Africa since the advent of the franchise era in 2004/05. The system was restructured before the start of the 2021/22 season, when 15 provincially affiliated teams replaced the six franchises. The 55th double century followed on Monday, courtesy of Malan.

The Dolphins declared their first innings closed at 489/8 on Saturday, and slow left-armer Bryce Parson took 5/82 to help dismiss WP 220 runs behind. The follow-on was enforced, and the home side were 190/7 when rain ended the match.

The Titans beat the Warriors by one wicket in a first division clash in Centurion, where fast bowler Glenton Stuurman took 5/34 in the home side’s first innings of 134. Opener Edward Moore scored 110 in the visitors’ reply of 258. Sibonelo Makhanya and Jordan Hermann shared a century stand in the Titans’ second dig of 359, which left the Warriors a target of 236. Lesiba Ngoepe and Marco Jansen scored half-centuries and No. 9 Tiaan van Vuuren hit 32 not out off 34 balls. Van Vuuren and No. 11 Mthiwekhaya Nabe posted a stand 24 for the last wicket to seal victory.

At the Wanderers, the Lions beat North West by an innings and 72 runs in another division one game. The visitors were bundled out for 159 with Duanne Olivier and Lutho Sipamla sharing seven wickets. Ryan Rickleton’s 159 anchored the Lions reply of 408. North West crashed to 177 all out in 43.4 overs in their second innings. This time Olivier and Malusi Siboto split seven wickets. Olivier claimed match figures of 7/109.

Also in the first division, the Knights and Boland drew in Bloemfontein in a match that was robbed of its entire first day by rain. Pite van Biljon’s 137 bolstered the home side’s first innings of 320. Malan was 139 not out overnight, but it seemed his sturdy batting might be in vain when Boland shambled to 230/7. Enter No. 9 Ferisco Adams to score 127 and put on 260 with the double centurion, which resulted in a declaration at 520/9. The Knights were 143/2 when hands were shaken on the draw.

In two second division matches, KwaZulu-Natal Inland beat Easterns by an innings and 109 runs in Pietermaritzburg and Limpopo and Border drew in Polokwane. Luke Schlemmer scored 153 in the home side’s first innings of 440/6 declared and Easterns were dismissed for 107 in reply. They followed on, and off-spinner Michael Erlank took 5/67 as they were dismissed for 224. In Polokwane, Marco Marais made 146 in Border’s first innings of 392. Left-arm wrist spinner Thomas Kaber took 6/75 in Limpopo’s reply of 192. Border declared at 190/3 to set Limpopo 391 to win. They were 377/8 when stumps were drawn. The latter match was not first-class because it involved Limpopo, who have not been awarded that status.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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