2nd ODI Match SA vs ZIM 2018
SA vs ZIM match
South Africa Beat The Zimbabwe
In
2nd ODI Match
South Africa win by 120 runs
ODI 1 of 3 (SA leads 2-0)
South Africa - 198 47.3/50 ov RR:
4.16
Zimbabwe - 78 24/50 ov RR: 3.25
v
South Africa have won by 120 runs
v
Zimbabwe bundled out, Tahir(6/24)
takes hat-trick
v
Zimbabwe 78 all out in 199-run
chase, hosts win series
v
Dale Steyn's (60) maiden
half-century revives South Africa
v
Chatara's(3/42) accuracy, guile
curtails hosts to 198 all out
Playing his first ODI for almost
two years, legendary Proteas fast bowler Dale Steyn struck a career-best 60
with the bat to rescue his side from 101/7 before claiming the first two
wickets to fall and ensure Zimbabwe never got close to South Africa’s 198.
Imran Tahir then took six
wickets, including a hat-trick, to turn a stroll to victory into a rout as
South Africa claimed an unassailable 2-0 lead in the ODI series.
That South Africa would end with
a margin of victory of 120 runs seemed unthinkable when they found themselves
101/7, seemingly headed for a total lower than their eventual margin of
victory.
Phehlukwayo and Steyn rescued South Africa
with the bat Phehlukwayo and Steyn rescued South Africa with the bat
With few exceptions, South
Africa’s top order entirely failed to contribute. Dean Elgar nicked off to
Tendai Chatara, pushing meekly inside the line rather than leaving committedly,
Reeza Hendricks bottom-edged Kyle Jarvis onto his stumps when not fully
forward, and Heinrich Klaasen picking out midwicket pulling a ball that was too
full for the shot.
Aiden Markram alone offered
resistance, his serenity putting into perspective the perils of the rest of the
top order. But having made his way to 35 and looking set for much more, he
attempted to thrash a long-hop to the fence and only succeeding in edging
behind. He, like Hendricks, were perhaps the victims of uneven bounce, which
Steyn would go on to extract with gusto.
Markram’s fall left the Proteas
49/4, and though Khaya Zondo and Christiaan Jonker added a useful 36, there was
little air of permanence, and little surprise when the latter departed for a
frenetic 19-ball 25, bowled slogging wildly.
Zondo was more sedate, but still
departed for 21, stumped as he tried to stretch out to the pitch of the ball,
and when captain JP Duminy was pinned plumb in front by Jarvis, South Africa
were in huge trouble.
Steyn made a career-best 60 before being
bowled Steyn made a career-best 60 before being bowled
Into the fray entered Dale Steyn,
joining the unflappable Andile Phehlukwayo, and the two put together the
match’s defining stand. There was none of the indecision that wracked the top
order, nor the carelessness that muddied the middle. Simply a readjusting of
expectations, a decision taken not to do anything silly, and the clear heads to
ensure their new plan was seen through.
As Steyn said after coming off
“we thought we'll take it at four an over batting five overs at a time”, and
that’s almost exactly what they did in adding 75 in 15 overs risk-free. Even as
the supposedly senior batsman fell, strangled down the leg-side, Steyn plowed
on.
He came into the game with an ODI
high score of 35, but there have been hints in the past, notably in a Test
match 76 against Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, and Peter Siddle to rescue South
Africa from 251/8 back in 2008, that somewhere beneath the surface a batsman
lurked, if ever he was needed. He reached his maiden ODI fifty with a glorious
straight six to prove the point
Zimbabwe struggled with the uneven bounce
Zimbabwe struggled with the uneven bounce
By the time he missed a Donald
Tiripano full toss and was bowled for 60, near double the game’s next highest
score, he had helped South Africa add 97 vital runs for the last three wickets,
and just as importantly claimed the momentum heading into the innings break.
His side never relinquished it.
Steyn’s contribution was far from
over, and he unleashed a thrilling, visceral spell, reminiscent of the great
fast bowler injuries have prevented him from being in recent times. There was
copious uneven bounce by this point, so much so that some observers wondered if
the game might be called off, and no one wielded it like Steyn, hitting the
uneasy length time and again, one ball spitting, the next skittling, and the
batsmen clueless.
Hamilton Masakadza gritted it out for a time
Hamilton Masakadza gritted it out for a time
He started the rot, nipping one
in to Solomon Mire’s front pad and enticing a pull from Craig Ervine which was
intercepted by a special catch from Phehlukwayo, he and Steyn combining once
more.
Captain Hamilton Masakadza and
Brendan Taylor toughed out four overs of some of the trickiest and scariest
fast bowling, before seemingly getting some respite in the form of leg-spinner
Tahir, and at 43/2 Zimbabwe might have had their noses ahead.
Instead Tahir ended the game in a
flash.
Imran Tahir claimed six wickets, including a
hat-trick Imran Tahir claimed six wickets, including a hat-trick
It was he who ended the
Masakadza-Taylor stand, fooling the latter with a googly, before Lungi Ngidi
made it two in three balls, angling one in to Zimbabwe’s skipper’s pads. Still,
even at 58/4 there was slight hope. Twelve balls later, Zimbabwe were 64/9 and
the hope was gone. Tahir claimed four of them, including three in three balls
either side of the 19th when Phehlukwayo removed Elton Chigumbura.
The last wicket held out for four
overs before Tahir, his googly unpickable, fittingly claimed the last, Chatara
holing out to Steyn, South Africa’s old-stagers showing one last time that
nothing can trump experience.
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