South Africa’s crazy beautiful win

“Sometimes you’re very grateful to get random victories like that.” – Aiden Markram

Telford Vice / Cape Town

ARNOS Vale’s spanking new world class floodlights had been turned off and the sun was thinking about coming up to start another perfect day in the potted paradise of Kingstown, St Vincent. So what was that dazzling in the dawn?

It was South Africa’s sheer chutzpah, Nepal’s shimmering commitment, and the sharpness of a contest between teams who had never met before at a ground where only one of them had played previously. 

South Africa took on West Indies at Arnos Vale in an ODI, albeit in May 2001. But for much of their innings in a men’s T20 World Cup game on Saturday, Nepal looked like they knew the conditions forwards, backwards, sideways and inside out.

They won the toss and chose to field, and deployed four spinners in an attack of seven to render some of the most celebrated batters in the game close to clueless. South Africa were limited to 115/7. It’s their highest total in the four matches they have played in the tournament but there was little to celebrate. 

Nepal needed victory to stay in the running for the Super Eights. And they were in with a shout until the last ball of the match. With two required, Gulsan Jha failed to lay a bat on the ice-cool Ottneil Baartman’s short delivery. The batters tried to scramble a bye to tie the scores and force a super over. Quinton de Kock’s throw to the non-striker’s end hit Jha in the back, sending the ball towards mid-on — where Heinrich Klaasen fielded and flicked onto the stumps with Jha short of his ground to seal South Africa’s one-run win.

That it took this kind of craziness to get the job done left Markram not best pleased. “On the whole tonight we were nowhere near our best,” he told a press conference. “We lacked intensity and conviction in how we wanted to play and in our gameplans. Nepal put us under a lot of pressure. They showed the quality they have and made life really difficult for us. We’ll take lots of learnings from a night like this, as I’m sure they will. They’ll also take a lot of confidence from having us on the ropes.”

As imperfect as South Africa’s display was, it means they will take a perfect record of played four, won four into the Super Eights — not least because Tabraiz Shamsi, who featured in his first match of the tournament and was his team’s only specialist spinner, was in rasping form for his 4/19.

Shamsi dented Nepal’s resolve in the eighth over — his first — by bowling Kushal Bhurtel and Rohit Paudel with deliveries that ragged from well outside off stump. In his fourth over — the 18th, with a gettable 18 needed off as many balls — Shamsi stepped up again to nail Aasif Sheikh’s off bail and have Dipendra Singh Airee caught behind off the glove down leg.

Shamsi’s stellar performance wasn’t what Markram was talking about when he said: “We’ve all watched this game enough; we know funny things can happen. Sometimes you’re very grateful to get random victories like that.”

Too many of those random funny things happened for South Africa’s liking. Reeza Hendricks laboured to 43 off 49, and he wasn’t alone. Only Tristan Stubbs, who made an unbeaten 27 off 18, scored faster than a run a ball. Stubbs was the sole South African who batted with anything like confidence as six wickets crashed for 48 runs inside nine overs.

The malaise was epitomised in the 14th when David Miller trudged off, convinced by what he had seen on the big screen that Nepal’s review would succeed. Miller had swept at a top spinner from Bhurtel that struck him on the back pad. There seemed to be reasonable doubt about where the ball had pitched and what it might have hit unimpeded, so Joel Wilson’s decision of not out was justified. But the gizmos said the ball would have clipped a bail, and the umpire’s call stood.

Miller, confused by the delivery itself and by what he thought he saw on the replay, turned on his heel deep in the outfield and went back to the crease. It’s a rare day when a player as fine and experienced is fooled twice by the same ball. 

Two deliveries earlier Bhurtel had had Heinrich Klaasen juggled but held by Karan KC on the extra cover boundary. In Bhurtel’s previous over Markram dragged a leg break onto his stumps. Bhurtel added the wickets of Marco Jansen and Kagiso Rabada in a haul of 4/19 in which both his leg break and his googly were frequently unhittable.

Sandeep Lamichhane, playing his first international since early November because of a conviction for rape of which has since been acquitted, looked like he had never been away when his first two deliveries, perfect leg breaks, ripped past Hendricks’ outside edge. Lamichhane took no wickets, but the pressure he piled on was worth several.

Nepal were similarly impressive at the crease. In the 13th, Sheikh hammered no less a bowler than Rabada not just for six but onto what used to be an airport runway. Talk about being cleared for take-off. In the 19th, Sompal Kami picked Anrich Nortjé’s back-of-the-hand slower ball well enough to also send it screaming into the Caribbean’s dark sky.

All of which was cheered into that sky by the thousands of Nepal fans in the stands. “We feel very grateful to them, the way they come and support us,” Paudel told a press conference. “We wanted to give them a gift today but it didn’t go our way.”

Even so, Paudel felt emboldened enough to say, “The way we played today shows that we belong here.” Few would disagree. Certainly not Markram: “We’re at the same hotel as them, and they’re a great bunch of guys; very friendly, very respectful. The way they approach their game and the cricket they’re playing results in them getting a fantastic fan base. The players deserve it and it’s fantastic to see the fans buying into it. I don’t know too much about Nepal cricket, but looking at it from the outside I would say it’s in a great place and that there are exciting times ahead for them.”

The press, perhaps because Nepal got so close, aimed harsh questions at Paudel. What tricks had he missed? “We missed nothing,” he said. “We played good cricket but still we ended up on the losing side.”

Did the climax of the match mean Nepal had “lost presence of mind? You didn’t relay a message to the batters. Don’t you feel that we are clueless in these situations?”

Paudel fired back a question of his own: “How can I pass on a message in those situations? I couldn’t do it in the middle of the over, when we required two from two.”

Could the batting order have been better? “If we had won the match the batting order would raise no questions.”

As Nepal will learn, small things win games like this. Things like Baartman confirming with the umpire that the penultimate ball of the game, which was short and had sailed out of Jha’s reach by not quite enough distance to be wided for height, was indeed the one allowed bouncer for the over. And things like, as Baartman stood at the top of his run to bowl the final delivery, De Kock shaking his wicketkeeping glove off his throwing hand because he knew the bye was on and that he would have to unload the ball in a hurry.

So the Nepalese shouldn’t be hard on themselves or their team. This hurts because the outcome could easily have been starkly different, and because it condemned the fans and their team to a homeward journey of more than 14,000 kilometres weeks earlier than they would have liked. But there is solace to be taken from Markram’s words, and from what Shamsi told a television interviewer when he collected his player-of-the-match prize. Nepal, Shamsi said, had “played a beautiful game”. Indeed. It dazzled still in the dawn.

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South Africa shaken but stirred to buck Dutch trend

“There was a lot more pressure at the end than when I went in at 12/4.” – David Miller

Telford Vice / Cape Town

AIDEN Markram is a decent bloke. He is not the man who stalked off the field spitting mad, offering a face like thunder, like he could bite the head off a live snake, effing and blinding as he went, firing words that would have been understood by South Africans only, but to all clearly filthy, after 15 balls of his team’s innings in Nassau County on Saturday.

And yet that really was Markram — who had chased a legside delivery from Vivian Kingma and, his bat well away from his body, edged the ball. Scott Edwards, who would have been unsighted for much of the moment, dived scooped a fine low catch.

Markram knew he was out before Chris Gaffney and Sharfuddoula asked Richard Kettleborough upstairs to take a look because Edwards’ gloves had snared the ball close to the turf. All Markram could do while the umpires dissected the details of his error was stand there and fume.

By then he had seen Reeza Hendricks and Quinton de Kock entangle themselves in a terrible tango that could only end in the latter’s run out off the first ball of the innings. De Kock became the first South Africa player to suffer a diamond duck — dismissed without facing a delivery — in a T20I. Markram had also seen, from the non-striker’s end, the top of Hendricks’ off stump nailed by a straightening ball from Logan van Beek.

And now this; an unedifying stroke and, consequently, a scoreboard that read 3/3. Let the effing and blinding begin. A dozen deliveries later Heinrich Klaasen pulled Kingma to square leg and South Africa were 12/4.

Only then, when Tristan Stubbs and his old head on young shoulders and old hand David Miller took the game by the scruff of its neck, did Markram’s team look like winning. But the stand of 65 off 72 didn’t look enough when Stubbs and Marco Jansen were removed 10 balls apart.

It needed all of the experience Miller has gathered in his 291 internationals to drag his team home, with seven balls remaining, with an unbeaten 59 off 51. He finished the match with a six off Bas de Leede smote flat over square leg.

“There was a lot more pressure at the end than when I went in at 12/4,” Miller told a press conference. “We got over the line with our tailenders, and I had a lot of faith in them. But you do have those thoughts about how difficult it has been to get boundaries and now we need the boundaries. It’s about managing that space and trusting that if the ball is there you’ve got no other option but to take it down. It’s about being in that positive frame of mind and making sure you’re really capitalised if they do give you the ball [to hit].”

Did he have fun? “It’s all about situations and moments and, given the situation that we were in, I really enjoyed that innings, getting over the line and getting another two points.”

At the other end of the pitch for the last four minutes of the game stood Keshav Maharaj, who faced only one ball. And thereby hangs a tale of context. Before this match, the 16th of the men’s T20 World Cup, Maharaj had never been on the winning side in white-ball internationals against the Netherlands and de Leede had never finished in the losing XI against South Africa. That is no longer the case, on both counts.

This quirk of the recent history between the teams hangs on a certain sleight of fact. Maharaj and de Leede played in a washed out ODI in Centurion in November 2021, in the 2022 T20 World Cup match in Adelaide the next November — when the Dutch earned a shock victory by 13 runs — and in the ODI World Cup game in Dharamsala in October — when the Netherlands’ 38-run win didn’t come as a shock. Neither featured in the ODIs in Benoni and at the Wanderers in March and April last year, which fell between the World Cup games.

Neither Maharaj nor de Leede would have thought the reversal of their fortunes would have been in doubt when the Dutch shambled to a total of 103/9. Whatever had happened in the teams’ previous two tournament tussles, the Netherlands were surely doomed to defeat.

And not, for a change at this ground, because of the pitch. The outfield was still painfully slow but the erratic bounce that has hogged the headlines for several days had been eradicated. The surface hadn’t been reinvented as a belter. Rather, it was vastly improved for batting compared to what had gone before.

Closer to the truth was that the South Africans bowled sublimely and caught superbly, with Ottneil Baartman showing keen intelligence to take 4/11 in his second T20I. It was the kind of massive attack a major side should unleash on opponents who, whatever they might say or even believe, continue to be considered minnows. 

Accordingly, the Netherlands’ powerplay of 20/3 was the lowest in this edition of the tournament. Until South Africa slumped to 16/4 in theirs. Markram was part of that problem, and the look on his face as he exited stage left said he knew it. Decent bloke or not, that truth hurt.

Even so, it helps when you can leave a hurtful truth in the dressingroom; when it doesn’t follow you to the hotel. Especially when you’ll be back at the same ground on Monday, leading your team against Bangladesh. Markram’s and his team’s memories of Saturday won’t be purely positive. But they will be more good than bad, and that’s all that matters.

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South Africa’s slow days at Sabina

“The batters will have a good chat and reflect. Then hopefully we can come out and do a better job.” – Reeza Hendricks

Telford Vice / Cape Town

SOUTH Africa have played more than twice as many men’s matches across the formats in England, and almost twice as many in Australia, as they have in West Indies. But they have been significantly more successful in the Caribbean than in England or Australia.

That wasn’t the case at Sabina Park on Thursday. West Indies, who were headed for an IPLesque total when they reached 115/1 in 10.5 overs, were limited to 175/8. South Africa were never in the hunt in their reply, slumping to 96/6 after 14 overs and being dismissed for 147 in 19.5. The Windies’ victory, by 28 runs, was their biggest over South Africa in terms of runs in the 20 T20Is the teams have contested.

That result is an outlier. South Africa’s winning percentage in the Caribbean, 59.38, is higher than any other major team’s. It is also higher than South Africa have achieved in India (48.88%), Pakistan (47.37%), New Zealand (45.16%), Australia (41.32%), Sri Lanka (37.93%) and England (32.65%).

Doubtless the South Africans’ success in the Caribbean is tied to the fact that, because of apartheid, they never played there during most of West Indies’ pomp — they first toured the region in April 1992. But it remains true that they win more often on the islands than in most away countries.

Not on Thursday, when they were undone by canny opponents on a sluggish pitch. Consequently competitive performances by their players were few and far between. Thoughtful, skilful bowling by Andile Phehlukwayo and debutant Ottneil Baartman and Andile Phehlukwayo claimed 6/54 in the eight overs they bowled between them. Opener Reeza Hendricks, who was ninth out for a 51-ball 87, delivered the visitors’ only noteworthy innings.

“[Brandon] King played an unbelievable knock [of 79 off 45], but then our bowlers brought it back nicely,” Hendricks told reporters in Kingston. “I thought we did a great job to restrict them to the total we did. But the conditions changed a lot and that put us on the back foot. The pitch played alright in the first innings, but then it got a lot slower and assisted the spin bowlers, which made it challenging.”

The teams will return to the scene on Saturday for the second of the series’ three matches, and South Africa’s supporters will look for signs of lessons having been learnt. “The batters will have a good chat now and reflect on [Thursday’s] game,” Hendricks said. “Then hopefully we can come out and do a better job.”

Or maybe it’s just Sabina Park, where South Africa have the lowest winning percentage — 33.33 — among all of the dozen West Indians grounds on which they have played. So there is good news and bad news for their fans.

The last two games of the rubber, on Saturday and Sunday, will also be played in Kingston. But the vibrant Jamaican capital is not one of the nine American and West Indian host cities for the T20 World Cup, which starts with a game between the United States and Canada in Dallas next Sunday.

South Africa will start their campaign against Sri Lanka on June 3 in Nassau County, where they will also play the Netherlands and Bangladesh. The temporary venue has been purpose-built for the tournament, and its pitches have been prepared in Australia.

Conditions there will thus be unknown to all, which is perhaps no bad thing. Because sometimes the devil nobody knows is better than those everyone does.

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How to lose, South Africa style

“The important thing is for everyone to give their input and then trust the guys we’ve trusted to do the job for us.”  – Rassie van der Dussen

Telford Vice / Cape Town

THERE is a West Indian way to hit a cricket ball, a method that taunts the limits of torque and machismo and is not at all uneasy on the eye. It’s about curves and crunches and curbing, just, the ambition to smack it clean out of the Caribbean.

That way held sway for 65 deliveries in the first men’s T20I at Sabina Park on Thursday. But canny bowling by South Africa reeled in West Indies’ 115/1 after those 10.5 overs and limited them to a total of 175/8.

Somehow that was enough to hold the visitors, who dithered, dallied and dwindled to defeat by 28 runs — the Windies’ biggest win in terms of runs among the nine successes they have achieved in their 20 games in the format against these opponents. And that despite Reeza Hendricks’ defiant career-best 87 off 51 balls.

Andile Phehlukwayo started rerouting the home side’s innings with a slower ball that claimed the important wicket of Brandon King, courtesy of Rassie van der Dussen hanging onto a steepling catch in the covers. King’s bruising 45-ball 79 — he scored more than three-quarters of his runs in fours and sixes — was the epitome of the West Indian way.

King owned 28 of the first 34 runs in the match that came off the bat. He scored 29 in an opening stand of 36 off 22 with Johnson Charles, and 50 of the 79 that flowed off 44 for the second wicket with Kyle Mayers.  

At the point of King’s dismissal West Indies’ strike rate was 176.92. For the rest of the innings it was 98.36. The nerveless Phehlukwayo did more than his bit to make that happen by bowling Andre Fletcher with an inswinger and trapping Fabian Allen in front in the space of four deliveries in his fourth over. Debutant Ottneil Baartman did much of the rest, overcoming a second over that went for 11 runs to take 3/26.

Phehlukwayo and Baartman bowled with aplomb — their slower balls in particular — to inflict most of the damage as the Windies lost seven wickets for 60 runs in not much more than the second half of their innings.

Van der Dussen was also instrumental in the recovery, consulting with his bowlers at every opportunity and projecting an impression of cool, calm control. He looked like someone who was playing his 124th international across the formats. He didn’t look like someone who was captaining at this level for the first time. He also didn’t seem bothered that he had been left out of South Africa’s squad for the T20 World Cup, which starts in Nassau County, near New York, next Sunday.

“I don’t feel like I need to prove anything,” Van der Dussen had told a press conference on Wednesday. “I think it’s pretty standard what I’m about as a cricketer. Yes, the coach [Rob Walter] has to pick a World Cup squad and there’s only 15 guys who can go. He has to come up with combinations that he feels gives us the best chance. And as a greater squad and as a country, that’s what it’s all about.

“I’m not in a situation where I haven’t played a lot of cricket or even international T20s. As a captain, yes, that’s a new challenge for me. So I’ll try and instill what I think is important, what I think can help the guys go to the World Cup and put in a performance there. We’re all fighting towards the same goal, and I think the important thing is for everyone to give their input and then trust the guys we’ve trusted to do the job for us.”

Trust is a big word in South African sport. The Springboks, South Africa’s men’s rugby union team, who have won a record four World Cups, exude this precious quality in spades. Their cricket counterparts, who have yet to reach a senior men’s World Cup final in either white-ball format, not so much. So there was an ominous familiarity about the South Africans crashing to 107/7 in 15 overs on their way to being bowled out for 147 in 19.5.

They lost Quinton de Kock, Ryan Rickelton and Matthew Breetzke inside five overs with only 35 runs scored. Then Gudakesh Motie and his impressive composure gutted the middle order, removing Van der Dussen and Wiaan Mulder in his second over and Bjorn Fortuin in his fourth.

Hendricks, often unfairly denied his place in the XI in the past, might have pulled off a miracle had his support been more sturdy. It wasn’t, and he holed out trying to Matthew Forde with the penultimate ball of the match. The next, with which Forde cleanbowled Baartman, completed a slide of 7/70 in 54 deliveries.

There is a South African way to lose cricket matches. This was a prime example. They have two chances to sort themselves out, against the same opposition and at the same venue on Saturday and Sunday, before it matters.

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