Amla, de Villiers hit tons as SA beat Windies

Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers scored hundreds as South Africa defeated West Indies by 66 runs in their rain-affected one-day international.

Amla anchored the top half of the South African batting with 102 from 109 balls, and de Villiers kept the momentum going with the same score from 101 balls, as the Proteas, put in to bat, reached 280 for seven from their rain-reduced 48 overs on a slow Vivian Richards Cricket Ground pitch on Saturday.

South Africa then dismissed West Indies, who had been set a Duckworth/Lewis target of 288, for 215 in 44.1 overs to clinch a 1-0 lead in the five-match series, which continues on Monday at this venue.

Morne Morkel was the most successful South African bowler with three wickets for 40 runs from eight overs, while Dale Steyn, Ryan McLaren, and Johan Botha collected two wickets apiece.

“We want to play well, and we want to win this series,” said South Africa captain Graeme Smith.

“We want to have a very successful tour of the Caribbean.

I have said this a number of times. We have a lot of bouncing back to do, following the Twenty20 World Cup, and we want to do it well.”

“This is just the first match, and the matches are very close together, so recovery is going to be important to us being successful.”

West Indies captain Chris Gayle, whose 45 from 39 balls was the home team’s top score, felt let down by the batting again.

“It’s one of those things that we can’t seem to catch a break with our batting, so we will have to go back to the drawing board,” said Gayle.

“We are not going to give-up. We know that we are not playing good cricket now.”

Steyn set West Indies back early, when he had Andre Fletcher caught at slip for four in the third over.

South Africa were put on the defensive, however, when Gayle gave West Indies a typically flourishing start.

Ryan McLaren had Dwayne Bravo caught behind for 15, and Morkel had Gayle caught in the deep to leave West Indies 69 for three in the 13th over.

The South Africans then saw Ramnaresh Sarwan make 38, and left-handed compatriot Narsingh Deonarine get 26 to stage a recovery with a stand of 61 for the fourth wicket.

Botha made the breakthrough in the 27th over, when Deonarine top-edged a sweep, and was caught at backward square leg, and Morkel bowled Sarwan, as West Indies slipped to 140 for five.

Kieron Pollard joined Denesh Ramdin, and they put on 52 for the sixth wicket.

Steyn returned for another spell, and bowled Ramdin for 17, when the batsman chopped on, and West Indies lost their last five wickets for 23 runs from 35 deliveries.

Amla, later named man-of-the-match, reached his second ODI hundred from 106 balls, when he steered a short, rising delivery from Pollard to third man for a single in the 33rd over.

De Villiers later reached his seventh ODI hundred from 99 balls, when he dragged a delivery from Ravi Rampaul through mid-on for a single in the 44th over.

They added 129 for the third wicket, after play started half-hour later than scheduled, and a near half-hour stoppage for rain further marred the match.

Amla put on 53 for the first wicket with Smith either side of the rain break before the Proteas’ captain edged a flat-footed drive, and was caught behind for 18 in the seventh over off Bravo, who also had Jacques Kallis caught at third man for one to leave South Africa 57 for two.

After de Villiers added 54 for the fourth wicket with left-hander JP Duminy, South Africa lost four wickets for 40 runs from the last 41 deliveries of their innings.

Bravo was the most successful West Indies bowler with three wickets for 40 runs.

South Africa thrash Windies by 66 runs in ODI

South Africa eased to a 66-run victory over West Indies thanks to centuries by Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers and some aggressive bowling in the first one-day international on Saturday.

West Indies’ batsmen wilted to 215 all out from 44.1 overs as they chased the tourists’ total of 280-7 from 48 overs which was powered by Amla and de Villiers who both scored 102.

Amla registered his second career ODI century while de Villiers struck his third ODI ton on the trot as they put on 129 for the third wicket to lay the foundation for a big total.

Amla struck eight fours at the Sir Vivian Richards Cricket Grounds from 109 deliveries while de Villiers hit five fours and two sixes off 101 balls.

All-rounder Dwayne Bravo bowled with control to finish with figures of three for 40 from 10 overs.

In the run chase Chris Gayle top scored for the hosts with 45 from 39 balls including eight powerful fours while Kieron Pollard blasted 44 from 37 deliveries with five fours and a six.

Their efforts were not nearly adequate enough to threaten South Africa’s total as lanky pacer Morne Morkel captured three for 40 from eight overs. He was supported by Dale Steyn and Ryan McLaren (both two for 37) and Johan Botha (two for 47).

The second game in the five-match series will take place on Monday at the same venue before the teams move to Dominica for a double header and Jamaica for the final game.

(Editing by Ken Ferris and Peter Rutherford; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Albie Morkel a big threat for Australia: Ponting

Pretoria, Mar.29 (ANI): Australia cricket captain Ricky Ponting has identified big-hitting South Africa all-rounder Albie Morkel as the player to stop in the Pro20 international on Sunday.

Morkel smashed four boundaries and two sixes to score 37 off 19 balls as South Africa beat Australia by four wickets on Friday to win the first Pro20 match at the Wanderers.

He also starred with similar late-innings hitting as the Proteas won a one-day international series 4-1 in Australia in January.

“He probably won a couple of games single-handedly with his batting in Australia. His power hitting (Friday) probably got them over the line again,” Ponting said.

“So he is a very, very dangerous hitter. They use him very well. They hold him off as late as they possibly can and let him go in for the final onslaught really,” he added.

Pro20 squads:outh Africa: Johan Botha (captain), Yusuf Abdulla, Hashim Amla, Mark Boucher, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Herschelle Gibbs, Johan Louw, Albie Morkel, Justin Ontong, Wayne Parnell, Robin Peterson, Dale Steyn, Roelof van der Merwe and Vaughn van Jaarsveld

Australia: Ricky Ponting (captain), Michael Clarke, Nathan Bracken, Callum Ferguson, Brett Geeves, Brad Haddin, Shane Harwood, Nathan Hauritz, James Hopes, David Hussey, Michael Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Ben Laughlin, Marcus North, David Warner and Cameron White. (ANI)

Oz to push for series whitewash, Ponting targets Proteas skipper Kallis

Cape Town (South Africa), Mar.19 (ANI): Australia have made clear their intentions to push hard for a 3-0 sweep of their Test series against South Africa by suggesting that stand-in Proteas skipper Jacques Kallis has “enough on his plate”.

Kallis quit as vice-captain in 2007 after being left out of Proteas’ squad for the ICC Twenty20 World Cup.

The 33-year-old is the only South African in Test cricket’s 10,000-run club and has also taken 258 wickets at 30.88 in 130 matches, as well as being one of the game’s finest slips fielders.

Australia captain Ricky Ponting strongly hinted that leg-spinner Bryce McGain could be handed his Test debut at Cape Town at the age of 36 with a view to the Ashes series that starts in Cardiff on July 8.

But the skipper is also keen to see how Kallis reacts to the pressure of having such an enormous amount of responsibility within the team.

Asked if tensions within the home team would work in Australia’s favour, Ponting said: “You’d probably think so.

“One of them (Prince) not wanting to be captain and them having a reluctant captain (Kallis) at the moment,” Ponting said.

“I don’t think Kallis is the sort of guy that would be jumping up and down to do the captaincy knowing the sort of laid-back guy he is on the field and he has got enough on his plate anyway with being a top-four batter and an all-rounder,” Fox Sports quoted Ponting, as saying.

“He’s someone who bowls their 20 overs an innings for them, he has got a lot on his plate. I think we saw something similar when England came to Australia in 2006-07 Andrew Flintoff was captain,” he added.

Prince missed South Africa’s 2-1 triumph in Australia in December and January because of a thumb injury and his place in the middle-order has been taken by JP Duminy.

The Proteas have dropped Neil McKenzie and Smith is out injured with Prince recalled for the third Test to open alongside debutant Imraan Khan.

No.3 Hashim Amla and middle-order batsman AB De Villiers both indicated they weren’t keen to open.

Prince demanded as captain to have a say in his team’s batting order and was furious when this request was rejected, telling Cricket South Africa to give the captaincy to someone else.

“You can understand the reason he was disgruntled in the first place I guess, being the vice-captain and being left out of the side,” Ponting said.

“But when opportunities come around like that (to be Test captain), I think any Australian would grab that with both hands.”

Ponting says he has been speaking with selector-on-duty Merv Hughes about the possible debut of McGain. (ANI)

Proteas cricket team gradually taking on a migrant hue

Cape Town (South Africa), Mar.16 (ANI): Four of South Africa’s top six batsmen in the forthcoming Test match have brown skins, and had tall left-arm fast bowler Lonwabo Tsotsobe recovered from knee surgery, most of Graeme Smith’s team would have included players from previously repressed communities.

We are talking about Ashwell Prince, who blasted 254 of the best at the weekend to remind the selectors about what they had been missing in the two-nil series defeat against Australia.

Another brown-skinned star in the making is Imraan Khan, who stroked a stylish 145 for KwaZulu-Natal at the Pietermaritzburg’s cricket ground.

Hashim Amla and J.P. Duminy are the other two belonging to minority communities in South Africa, who have made a name for themselves in international cricket.

The current crop confirms that the game is rising in all groupings in South Africa, and is no longer restricted to the whites.

The various non-white communities have never been away from the game. Cricket was strongly played by Indian groups in Natal, where Amla and Imraan were reared, and also in the Cape, where Prince and Duminy took guard.

But it is one thing to play matches against neighbours, another to produce Test cricketers.n the 1990s, South African teams led by Kepler Wessels and Hansie Cronje often did not include a single non-white player.

To now have half of the side non-white is a remarkable achievement, and it has been effected without a bloody revolution.

Imraan is a smallish, left-handed opening batsmen. The 24-year-old has scored hundreds in each of his past four provincial matches.

Mahatma Gandhi’s conscience was awoken after he worked as a lawyer among fellow Indians in Natal.

Although not much of a cricketer, the great man would have been delighted to see Imraan score a hundred for a Natal team that was captained by Ahmed Amla, Hashim’s elder brother.

The Amlas are products of a professional and prosperous Indian family.

Their parents are doctors and the boys attended Durban High School, a prestigious establishment with a strong cricketing tradition.

Makhaya Ntini was shepherding sheep until his ability was recognized and he was sent to Dale College. The Amlas followed a well-trodden path.

Prince was omitted from the first two Tests because the selectors did not want to disrupt a successful side.

Although logical, it meant leaving out a batsmen respected by these opponents who averaged 60 last year.

Unfortunately, Neil McKenzie did not justify the faith shown in him. Even now Prince has been asked to open.

He is entitled to feel aggrieved. Regardless, he has achieved far more than expected. Even with the selectors searching for coloured players, he did not catch the eye.

Except his returns, nothing in his batting tells of exceptional talent. His rise has confirmed the role of character and commitment in batting.

It has also carried a higher significance, forcing those with old minds to confront their demons. (ANI)

South Africa dump failed opener McKenzie and pace bowler Morne Morkel

Durban (South Africa), Mar.11 (ANI): South Africa have dumped opener Neil McKenzie and pace bowler Morne Morkel for the third Test against Australia that begins from March 19 in Cape Town.

The Proteas, who trail Ricky Ponting’s men 2-0 in the three-Test series and have surrendered their chance to take the No.1 ranking from Australia, will also be without skipper Graeme Smith, reports the Sydney Morning Herald.

Smith broke his right little finger when struck by a short ball from Mitchell Johnson while batting in this week’s second Test in Durban and is hoping to return for next month’s five-game one-day series against Australia.

Vice-captain Ashwell Prince, who missed South Africa’s 2-1 series win over Australia in Australia in December and January because of a thumb injury, will lead the side for the third Test.

Prince, whose place in the Johannesburg and Durban Tests was taken by JP Duminy, will be slotted back into the team in an opening role with the uncapped Imraan Khan.

Khan made 100 for the South Africa President’s XI in the tour match in Potchefstroom last month, impressing chairman of selectors Mike Procter.

“That was a tough decision. We just felt that being 2-0 down had some bearing on that,” Procter said when asked if it was a brave move to bring in two new openers at the same time.

“Maybe if we’d drawn this Test match or won it, it might have been a little bit different,” added Procter after South Africa’s 175-run loss on Tuesday in Durban handed Australia a series win.

Prince has played his previous 47 Tests mainly as a No.5 batsman.

Uncapped left-arm quick Wayne Parnell, 19, comes into the 12-man squad for the struggling Morkel, who took two wickets in the Durban Test and struggled for rhythm and accuracy.

However, Morne Morkel’s place in the 11 is likely to be taken by his uncapped brother Albie, who was 12th man in Durban.

South Africa Test squad: Ashwell Prince (capt), Imraan Khan, Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Mark Boucher, Albie Morkel, Paul Harris, Dale Steyn, Makhaya Ntini and Wayne Parnell.

Twenty20 squad (to play Australia on March 27 in Johannesburg and March 29 in Pretoria): Johan Botha (captain), Yusuf Abdulla, Hashim Amla, Mark Boucher, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Herschelle Gibbs, Johann Louw, Albie Morkel, Justin Ontong, Wayne Parnell, Robin Peterson, Dale Steyn, Roelof van der Merwe and Vaughn van Jaarsveld. (ANI)

If Oz wins, mental strength of young side will be sky high: Neilsen

Johannesburg, Mar.2 (ANI): Australia cricket team coach Tim Neilsen has said that if the visitors pull off a victory today against South Africa in the Johannesburg Test, the mental strength of the side that has many youngsters will be sky high.

“I can’t see anything but us winning this game,” Neilsen said after South Africa, set an improbable 454 to win, reached 2-178 at the close on the fourth day at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg.

“If we do win, the mental state of this young side will be over the top. I’m really excited about this young team reaching a position where we can win this Test match,” Fox Sports quoted him as saying further.

Australia collapsed to 207 all out in their second innings as South Africa fought back on their best day of the match. But Australia’s dominance of the first three days left them well placed to bounce back from a home series defeat against the same opponents earlier in the season.

South Africa, who trailed by 246 runs on the first innings, started solidly in their second turn with the bat, with captain Graeme Smith and Neil McKenzie putting on 76 for the first wicket.

McKenzie was caught behind off Mitchell Johnson for 35 but Smith and Hashim Amla batted confidently in a second wicket stand of 54 to raise hopes of a come from behind win for South Africa even better than their 414-run chase in the first Test of the Australian series in Perth last December.

But new cap Ben Hilfenhaus struck a crucial blow when Smith top-edged an attempted pull to mid-on after hitting 69 off 110 balls.

New cap Phil Hughes top-scored for Australia with 75. He was twice given not out despite gloving balls from Morne Morkel to wicketkeeper Mark Boucher, with South Africa failing to refer the decisions to television umpire Asad Rauf.

Kallis sparked the Australian collapse when he dismissed Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey off successive deliveries. Ponting pulled a short ball to deep mid-wicket and Hussey made a mess of an attempted pull to sky the ball to square leg.

Two balls later Kallis at slip dived to his right to hold a sharp edge from Michael Clarke off left-arm spinner Paul Harris.

Hughes finally fell to a sharp diving catch at leg slip off Harris after facing 121 balls and hitting 11 fours and a six.

“It was the only part of this game where we haven’t been in control,” said Neilsen.

Neilsen said the bowlers had not been as consistent as they were in the first innings but they had the opportunity to apply enough pressure on the final day to create the eight chances they needed to clinch a win.(ANI)

If Oz wins, mental strength of young side will be sky high: Neilsen

Johannesburg, Mar.2 (ANI): Australia cricket team coach Tim Neilsen has said that if the visitors pull off a victory today against South Africa in the Johannesburg Test, the mental strength of the side that has many youngsters will be sky high.

“I can’t see anything but us winning this game,” Neilsen said after South Africa, set an improbable 454 to win, reached 2-178 at the close on the fourth day at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg.

“If we do win, the mental state of this young side will be over the top. I’m really excited about this young team reaching a position where we can win this Test match,” Fox Sports quoted him as saying further.

Australia collapsed to 207 all out in their second innings as South Africa fought back on their best day of the match. But Australia’s dominance of the first three days left them well placed to bounce back from a home series defeat against the same opponents earlier in the season.

South Africa, who trailed by 246 runs on the first innings, started solidly in their second turn with the bat, with captain Graeme Smith and Neil McKenzie putting on 76 for the first wicket.

McKenzie was caught behind off Mitchell Johnson for 35 but Smith and Hashim Amla batted confidently in a second wicket stand of 54 to raise hopes of a come from behind win for South Africa even better than their 414-run chase in the first Test of the Australian series in Perth last December.

But new cap Ben Hilfenhaus struck a crucial blow when Smith top-edged an attempted pull to mid-on after hitting 69 off 110 balls.

New cap Phil Hughes top-scored for Australia with 75. He was twice given not out despite gloving balls from Morne Morkel to wicketkeeper Mark Boucher, with South Africa failing to refer the decisions to television umpire Asad Rauf.

Kallis sparked the Australian collapse when he dismissed Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey off successive deliveries. Ponting pulled a short ball to deep mid-wicket and Hussey made a mess of an attempted pull to sky the ball to square leg.

Two balls later Kallis at slip dived to his right to hold a sharp edge from Michael Clarke off left-arm spinner Paul Harris.

Hughes finally fell to a sharp diving catch at leg slip off Harris after facing 121 balls and hitting 11 fours and a six.

“It was the only part of this game where we haven’t been in control,” said Neilsen.

Neilsen said the bowlers had not been as consistent as they were in the first innings but they had the opportunity to apply enough pressure on the final day to create the eight chances they needed to clinch a win.(ANI)

If Oz wins, mental strength of young side will be sky high: Neilsen

Johannesburg, Mar.2 (ANI): Australia cricket team coach Tim Neilsen has said that if the visitors pull off a victory today against South Africa in the Johannesburg Test, the mental strength of the side that has many youngsters will be sky high.

“I can’t see anything but us winning this game,” Neilsen said after South Africa, set an improbable 454 to win, reached 2-178 at the close on the fourth day at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg.

“If we do win, the mental state of this young side will be over the top. I’m really excited about this young team reaching a position where we can win this Test match,” Fox Sports quoted him as saying further.

Australia collapsed to 207 all out in their second innings as South Africa fought back on their best day of the match. But Australia’s dominance of the first three days left them well placed to bounce back from a home series defeat against the same opponents earlier in the season.

South Africa, who trailed by 246 runs on the first innings, started solidly in their second turn with the bat, with captain Graeme Smith and Neil McKenzie putting on 76 for the first wicket.

McKenzie was caught behind off Mitchell Johnson for 35 but Smith and Hashim Amla batted confidently in a second wicket stand of 54 to raise hopes of a come from behind win for South Africa even better than their 414-run chase in the first Test of the Australian series in Perth last December.

But new cap Ben Hilfenhaus struck a crucial blow when Smith top-edged an attempted pull to mid-on after hitting 69 off 110 balls.

New cap Phil Hughes top-scored for Australia with 75. He was twice given not out despite gloving balls from Morne Morkel to wicketkeeper Mark Boucher, with South Africa failing to refer the decisions to television umpire Asad Rauf.

Kallis sparked the Australian collapse when he dismissed Ricky Ponting and Michael Hussey off successive deliveries. Ponting pulled a short ball to deep mid-wicket and Hussey made a mess of an attempted pull to sky the ball to square leg.

Two balls later Kallis at slip dived to his right to hold a sharp edge from Michael Clarke off left-arm spinner Paul Harris.

Hughes finally fell to a sharp diving catch at leg slip off Harris after facing 121 balls and hitting 11 fours and a six.

“It was the only part of this game where we haven’t been in control,” said Neilsen.

Neilsen said the bowlers had not been as consistent as they were in the first innings but they had the opportunity to apply enough pressure on the final day to create the eight chances they needed to clinch a win.(ANI)

Dhoni reclaims top spot in Reliance Mobile ICC Player rankings

Dubai, Jan.31 (ANI): India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has reclaimed the top rank in the Reliance Mobile ICC Player rankings for ODI batsmen from the West Indies Chris Gayle.

Dhoni’s 61 not out against Sri Lanka in his side’s first ODI of a five-match series has enabled the 27-year-old wicketkeeper-batsman to regain his place at the head of the table. There will be ample opportunity for Dhoni to put daylight between him and the chasing pack as the rest of the series unfolds in Colombo.

Further down the batting table there have been a few noticeable movements, including South Africa’s AB de Villiers who has shot up 10 places to rejoin the top 10 for the first time since August 2008. De Villiers made a strong impression with the bat during South Africa’s 4-1 series win over Australia appearing in four of the five ODIs and averaging 63.66 for the series.

It wasn’t all bad news for Australia as Michael Hussey has climbed two places to return to the top five in the batsmen’s rankings. Hussey scored 78 in the fifth and final ODI in Perth as his side went down by 39 runs.

Meanwhile, South Africa’s Jacques Kallis has slipped two places to 14th while Sri Lanka’s Kumar Sangakkara has risen one place to joint-16th with Pakistan’s Shoaib Malik and Salman Butt.

India’s Gautam Gambhir has climbed four places to claim the number 20 spot in the rankings. It is the first time the 27-year-old has been in the top-20 since August 2008 when he reached 19th place during a previous tour to Sri Lanka.

South Africa’s Jean-Paul Duminy and Hashim Amla have also made inroads on the table. Duminy who has had an exceptional series with the bat, in both Tests and ODIs, has climbed eight places to take 29th position while his team-mate Amla has risen a substantial 34 places after an impressive performance in Australia. Amla’s 97 in Perth and series average of 49.75 has pushed the 25-year-old right-handed batsman up to 37th place.

Zimbabwe’s Elton Chigumbura has also climbed the batsman rankings, some 11 places to go joint 47th with Bangladesh’s Mohammad Ashraful.

The Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI bowlers has seen no change in the top five with the table still headed by New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori followed by Sri Lanka’s Nuwan Kulasekara. However, further down the top 20 there has been plenty of movement, most noticeably from South Africa’s Johan Botha.

The 26-year-old off-spinner has shot up 13 places in the rankings to take 13th place, the highest of his career so far. Botha, who captained the Proteas to victory over Australia, took a total of eight wickets in the five matches at an average of 23.50 and an impressive economy-rate of exactly four runs per over.

India’s Zaheer Khan has climbed two places in the rankings to go joint-ninth, level with England’s Andrew Flintoff.

Australia’s Mitchell Johnson has slipped out of the top 10 for the first time since July 2008. The 27-year-old fast bowler has dropped seven places to go 14th, one place below Botha.

Outside of the top 20, South Africa’s Dale Steyn is steadily climbing the table, gaining 10 places to take 35th spot after his four-match appearance in Australia. Five places below Steyn, in 40th, is Zimbabwe’s Ray Price. Price has also climbed 10 positions in the table after making a good start for Zimbabwe in their five-match series in Kenya.

There has been no change in the top-ranked player in the Reliance Mobile ICC Player Rankings for ODI all-rounders, with Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan still top of the table. However, Kallis has dropped out of the top five and has been replaced by Gayle. (ANI)

Aussies ready to bounce back: Ponting

Perth, Jan.29 (ANI): Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting is confident that his team will bounce back from the reverses in the Test and one-day series against the South Africans, notwithstanding the poor form of “Mr. Fixit” left-hand batsman Michael Hussey.

Gone are the days when Hussey would routinely rescue Australia or add the late-order icing on the cake to formidable scores.

Hussey, 33, has two half-centuries in all forms of the game this summer.

The return of Michael Clarke means Hussey should drop to No. 5 on Friday in the dead-rubber clash with the Proteas in Perth – but not No. 7 where he plundered 706 runs at 117.6 in 20 one-day innings, is also an option.
“I think in one-day cricket you want to get your best players in as early as you can,” Fox Sports quoted Ponting, as saying.

“You know that if you get those guys in, in certain situations they will make bigger scores and get the job done for you. I guess Huss, when Andrew Symonds and Michael Clarke are in the side, is a No. 6 player,” he added.
“We spoke about everything we wanted to do, but we weren’t good enough to do that,” Ponting said.

Hussey struggled for 85 runs in the three-Test series against South Africa at an average of 17, well below the 79.8 he averaged after 16 innings in the baggy green.
In four one-day internationals this summer, Hussey has made 74 runs at 18.5, with a strike rate of 76.

Brilliant South African top-order batsman Hashim Amla said Australia should ride through the rough times with Hussey, a veteran of 97 one-day games.

“Everybody goes through a certain patch. Michael has been a phenomenal cricketer since he’s come into the Australian team, you are bound to make a bigger impact at some time or the other as he has done. “I don’t think we look at it as he’s any lesser player. We still respect him, we know what he is capable of,” Amla said. (ANI)

Ponting cops the blame for Oz losing ODI, Test series to Proteas

Adelaide, Jan.27 (ANI): Skipper Ricky Ponting has taken responsibility for Australia’s limp surrender to South Africa in this summer’s one day series, as also the preceding Test series between the two sides.

No touring side has won a Test and one-day series in Australia since Richie Richardson’s West Indians in 1992-93.
“Once again we lost wickets in clusters, our momentum went down the drain and 220 was never going to be enough,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Ponting as saying after his side lost by eight wickets to the South Africans in the fourth one-day international played here.

“I am as much to blame as anybody. I have got off to good starts in every game and haven’t capitalised on that. Again today, 60-odd wasn’t good enough, and as I said, 50s just don’t win you anything,” Ponting added.

Ponting top scored with 63 in a lost cause.

Set only 223 to win, South Africa romped home with the help of blistering knocks from the blades of Herschelle Gibbs (38 from 29 balls), Hashim Amla (80 not out) and A B de Villiers (82 not out).
In doing so they fulfilled coach Mickey Arthur’s prediction that success in Adelaide would turn a good tour into a great one. (ANI)

Proteas breeze to ODI series win over Australia

Adelaide, Jan.26 (ANI): The Australian cricket team’s hype around Australia Day came to nought on Monday with South Africa registering an eight wicket victory against them in the fourth one-day international played here.

South Africa spearheaded themselves to a series victory (three games to one), by scoring the required 223 runs, thanks to telling knocks of 82 not out and 80 not out by batsmen A. B. de Villiers and Hashim Amla. Earlier, Australia had scored 222. Skipper Ricky Ponting top scored for the hosts with 63. South African fast bowler Dale Steyn snared three wickets for 49 runs.

The tourists arrived last month hoping for some success against the world champions in the Test and one-day formats, but they will leave with commanding victories in each arena after wrapping up this five-match contest before Friday’s final fixture in Perth.

While South Africa’s order has gained confidence, from Herschelle Gibbs at the top to Albie Morkel and Johan Botha towards the bottom, the Australians are in worse shape than when they began.

Throughout the series their batting has struggled to build on strong platforms and they wasted another chance on Monday as they dropped from the comfort of 2 for 110 in the 20th over to 222 in the 48th.

South Africa showed how good the pitch was and how bad Australia’s total was as the home side’s bowlers suffered as well. At times it looked like a tour game and the international batsmen were trying to out-do each other.

Australia failed to copy their pre-match talk and flopped after losing four key wickets in the middle of the innings to throw away the gains made by Ricky Ponting’s aggressive half-century.

They were 2 for 17 in the third over before Ponting and Michael Hussey steered them away from the initial danger in a 93-run partnership. It was the brightest period of the match for the home team before Botha, the captain, restricted them during another strong performance with ball and brain.

Botha picked up two wickets in a ten-over spell worth 28 as the batsmen were unable to work out ways of deflecting him. His first breakthrough came when Hussey (28) was unhappy to be lbw trying to sweep and the collection was completed with a careless shot from Brad Haddin.

Ponting, who edged Albie Morkel on 38 but was given not out, was set for a big score until he found Neil McKenzie at short cover. He walked off wanting more than 63 off 70 as the South Africans congratulated Makhaya Ntini. Ntini (3 for 52) and Dale Steyn (3 for 49) were the most successful bowlers.

In the past five home one-day series Australia have beaten only New Zealand and Bangladesh, a cricinfo report said. (ANI)

Johnson to play against Proteas at SCG on Friday

Sydney, Jan.22 (ANI): Australian pace bowler Mitchell Johnson has been rushed straight back into the Australian team for Friday’s one-day match against South Africa at the SCG.

Johnson returns following a fortnight`s rest after the SCG Test and Ben Hilfenhaus drops out of the 12-man squad for the third match in the five-game series which is locked at 1-1.

Spinner Nathan Hauritz is in with a chance to play his first match of the one-day series with the final side to be named before play on Friday.

“Mitchell will obviously come back in, a couple of weeks off he was obviously jumping out of his skin to get back in the nets to bat and bowl again. That is a good sign for us. Hauritz is in the 12 and Hilfenhaus is the one who misses out, Fox Sports quoted skipper Ricky Ponting, as saying.

The Australian team is as follows: Shaun Marsh, David Warner, Ricky Ponting, Michael Hussey, David Hussey, Cameron White, Brad Haddin (wicketkeeper), James Hopes/Nathan Hauritz, Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Bracken and Shaun Tait.

The South African side (possible): Herschelle Gibbs, Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis, A B de Villiers, J P Duminy, Neil McKenzie, Mark Boucher (wicketkeeper), Albie Morkel, Johan Botha, Dale Steyn/Morne Morkel and Makhaya Ntini. (ANI)

Johnson to play against Proteas at SCG on Friday

Sydney, Jan.22 (ANI): Australian pace bowler Mitchell Johnson has been rushed straight back into the Australian team for Friday’s one-day match against South Africa at the SCG.

Johnson returns following a fortnight`s rest after the SCG Test and Ben Hilfenhaus drops out of the 12-man squad for the third match in the five-game series which is locked at 1-1.

Spinner Nathan Hauritz is in with a chance to play his first match of the one-day series with the final side to be named before play on Friday.

“Mitchell will obviously come back in, a couple of weeks off he was obviously jumping out of his skin to get back in the nets to bat and bowl again. That is a good sign for us. Hauritz is in the 12 and Hilfenhaus is the one who misses out, Fox Sports quoted skipper Ricky Ponting, as saying.

The Australian team is as follows: Shaun Marsh, David Warner, Ricky Ponting, Michael Hussey, David Hussey, Cameron White, Brad Haddin (wicketkeeper), James Hopes/Nathan Hauritz, Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Bracken and Shaun Tait.

The South African side (possible): Herschelle Gibbs, Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis, A B de Villiers, J P Duminy, Neil McKenzie, Mark Boucher (wicketkeeper), Albie Morkel, Johan Botha, Dale Steyn/Morne Morkel and Makhaya Ntini. (ANI)