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Ireland v South Africa, Super Eights, Guyana
Kallis eases professional South Africa home
The Bulletin by Andrew McGlashan
April 3, 2007
South Africa
165 for 3 (Kallis 66*, Prince 47*) beat Ireland 152 for 8 (White 30,
Langeveldt 3-41) by seven wickets (D/L method)
Jacques Kallis helped himself to a steady half-century as South Africa
boosted their Super Eights position with a handsome seven-wicket win against
Ireland. An adjusted target of 160 offered few challenges after a competent
performance from the bowlers in a match cut to 35 overs by a two-hour rain
break early in Ireland's innings.
Ireland were on the backfoot from the start,
asked to bat on an overcast day, and their innings was twice reduced. Having
struggled against the new ball they had no momentum to build on. Shaun
Pollock created the early pressure then Andrew Hall and Charl Langeveldt
showed their experience in the closing overs.
But South Africa, who were reduced to 91 for
8 by Ireland in a warm-up match, were kept on their toes. Boyd Rankin's
first-over removal of AB de Villiers hinted that the run chase could be a
testing affair. There was movement for Rankin and David Langford-Smith, but
unlike their South African counterparts they didn't quite have the skill to
build pressure.
Kallis, in a situation where scoring rate
wasn't the major factor, played himself in before unfurling a range of
stunning cover drives. Graeme Smith, too, took the innings by the scruff of
the neck, using his typically agricultural strokeplay to make major inroads
into the target. Paul Mooney was given a harsh introduction into World Cup
action, his first two overs dispatched for 23 as he regularly dropped short
and wide.
Smith was approaching a record of five
consecutive World Cup half-centuries, but somehow Trent Johnston reached
down in his follow through to pluck out a well-struck drive. Herschelle
Gibbs didn't last long, picking out midwicket as Rankin returned and struck
again, but Ireland's last chance went with two dropped catches in three
overs.
Rankin couldn't repeat his captain's reflexes
when he spilled a return catch offered by Kallis on 40, then Johnston
himself did all the hard work in getting to a top-edged sweep off the same
batsman but the ball went through his hands. Kallis's second fifty of the
tournament came of a comfortable 61 balls while Ashwell Prince added the
finishes touches, showing rare aggression as skipped down the pitch to the
spinners on his return to the team. However, despite winning with 21 balls
to spare their overall net run-rate is still in the negative column,
something they'll need to watch as the Super Eights continues.
But efficiency was the watch word for South
Africa throughout the day, from the moment Pollock trapped Jeremy Bray lbw
for his second consecutive duck without a run on the board. When the major
rain arrived Ireland were 23 for 1 off 11 overs and on resumption were in
the position of having to decided whether to stick or twist; the
Duckworth-Lewis method looks favorably on more wickets left at the end, but
the batsmen couldn't waste time prodding around.
William Porterfield succumbed trying to go
over cover, but Eoin Morgan, who hasn't produced the scores expected of him
during the tournament, showed some of his best timing until he was surprised
by Hall's express bouncer. When Niall O'Brien got a leading edge to
Langeveldt, now comfortably South Africa's top wicket-taker, Ireland
threatened to fall apart at 77 for 4 in the 23rd over. However, Andrew
White, who struck firmly against England again used the long handle, but
after dispatching some of South Africa's finest he clubbed a knee-high full
toss from Smith to midwicket.
This match brought together some old foes,
the coaches are both good friends, while Andre Botha grew up in South
Africa. Botha, though, fell to one of the numerous pieces of sharp field -
this occasion AB de Villiers at cover - as the experience of Hall and
Langeveldt shone through with four wickets falling for eight runs.
Langford-Smith and Johnston enjoyed slightly more success, adding 28 off 22
balls, with that Irish spirit which has been their hallmark. But their
giant-killing of the opening phase has turned into a harsh reality check
about the demands of living at the top table.
Andrew McGlashan is editorial assistant of
Cricinfo
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