News | Web Resources | Yellow Pages | Free Advertising | Chat
Bangladesh |
Immigration |
E-cards |
Horoscope |
Matrimonial |
Change Your Life! |
South Africa brush aside England to face India |
News
|
|
October
11, 2000
England captain Nasser Hussain admitted his team
had been completely outplayed after South Africa dominated their ICC
KnockOut quarter-final at the Nairobi Gymkhana Club on Tuesday - winning the
game by eight wickets.
"From ball one to the end ball we were
outplayed," said Hussain. "The first ball, the first four or five
overs, they bowled magnificently and the last ball of the match went for
six. And in between they were better than us. That was a pretty good
performance from them and we weren't up to it."
Hussain said England "didn't even come
second" and that was a fair assessment. The South Africans, who are
trying to rid themselves of an unwanted reputation as slow starters, tied up
the England openers in a miserly new ball spell - after eight overs England
were still just five without loss - and then increased the pressure
throughout the innings.
Only Graeme Hick, who made a fighting 65 off 68
balls, was able to cope with the South African attack, but his was a lone
hand as England were bowled out for 182.
South African captain Shaun Pollock led the way
with three for 27 off 9.1 overs (15 runs coming of his fifth over as Marcus
Trescothick tried to carve his way out of trouble) but England were seldom,
if ever, able to free themselves from the shackles.
It was surely no co-incidence that South Africa's
excellence with the ball and in the field marked Allan Donald's return to
the side. Pollock is the captain and has been ranked higher than Donald for
some time, but there is no doubting who is the side's senior bowler.
It was Donald, coming on with the ball 12 overs
old, who nipped out Alec Stewart and Hussain, and thereafter the England
batsmen, Hick excepted, were unable to cope.
The target was very ordinary, scarcely defendable
under the circumstances of this tournament, with England's only hope of
victory lying in bowling South Africa out. And this, as might have been
expected, was an ambition that was to remain unfulfilled.
Andrew Hall went quickly and Gary Kirsten, after
slicing out a rapid 32, followed. Thereafter the game was the preserve of
Jacques Kallis, who was to be named man of the match, and Boeta Dippenaar in
his sixth one-day international. Together they added 132, a record for the
South African third wicket against England.
Before South Africa arrived in Kenya, revealed
Pollock, it had been decided to give Dippenaar a run and he made the most of
an opportunity to build an innings under very little pressure. Indeed, he
outscored Kallis in the latter half of the innings as the senior player,
after reaching 50 off 59 balls, was content to watch the younger man track
down the target.
Dippenaar's second six finished off the match as
he ended unbeaten on 65 - his first ODI half-century - with Kallis still
there on 78, eventually off 110 deliveries. South Africa were
well-satisfied, but they know the Indian batsmen, most particularly Sachin
Tendulkar, may well come at them a good deal harder on Friday than England
were prepared to on Tuesday.
If that is the case, the second semi-final could
be a cracking affair. Source
: Cricinfo Ltd. |