Brilliant Tahir spins SA to big victory

Published February 18, 2017
AUCKLAND: South African leg-spinner Imran Tahir celebrates after dismissing New Zealand’s Luke Ronchi during the one-off T20 International at Eden Park.—AFP
AUCKLAND: South African leg-spinner Imran Tahir celebrates after dismissing New Zealand’s Luke Ronchi during the one-off T20 International at Eden Park.—AFP

AUCKLAND: Leg-spinner Imran Tahir justified his position as the top-ranked bowler in white-ball cricket with an inspired display in South Africa’s 78-run victory over New Zealand in their one-off Twenty20 International at Eden Park on Friday.

Tahir, who took two wickets in two balls in his second over, had his figures marginally sullied by successive sixes from Colin de Grandhomme but still finished with a career-best 5-24 in 3.5 overs, with the home batsmen unable to pick his googly.

The 37-year-old was able to build on a superb performance by opening bowler Chris Morris, who was also denied a hat-trick on his way to figures of 2-10 in his initial three-over spell.

Andile Phehlukwayo claimed three victims, including the vital wicket of New Zealand captain Kane Williamson, as the hosts were dismissed for 107 in 14.5 overs in pursuit of South Africa’s 185 for six.

“They played well in all departments. Frustrating from our perspective, we didn’t fire a shot,” Williamson told reporters.

“On this ground, you don’t know what a good score is. We pulled it back (when bowling) and probably gave ourselves a par target. But rotating strike is hard on drop-in surfaces and we lacked partnerships.”

The loss was New Zealand’s first at home this summer.

The South African top order also underlined how dangerous they would be in the five match one-day series that starts at Seddon Park in Hamilton on Sunday with nearly all of them making telling contributions.

While Quinton de Kock fell for a duck in the third over, Hashim Amla (62), captain Faf du Plessis (36), AB de Villiers (26) and JP Duminy (29) all scored quickly.

Amla hit nine boundaries and a six in his 43-ball innings and combined with du Plessis in an 87-run partnership from 8.3 overs as the visitors looked well set to score in excess of 200.

De Grandhomme, however, dismissed both du Plessis and de Villiers to leave their side on 145-4 in the 16th over, ensuring the all-rounders needed to push the innings on.

Opening New Zealand bowler Trent Boult finished with an impressive 2-8 from four overs.

“We played some good cricket,” du Plessis said.

“We were consistent with the bat on a wicket that bounced and we played really well.

“We have had six or seven months that have been amazing. We are confident but we know that we have to rock up every day and perform.”

Scoreboard

SOUTH AFRICA:

H. Amla c Bruce b Wheeler 62 Q. de Kock c Santner b Boult 0 F. du Plessis lbw b de Grandhomme 36 AB de Villiers c Wheeler b de Grandhomme 26 JP Duminy run out Ronchi 29 F. Behardien c Anderson b Boult 8 C. Morris not out 9 W. Parnell not out 4

EXTRAS (B-4, LB-4, W-3) 11

TOTAL (6 wickets; 20 overs) 185

FALL OF WKTS: 1-15 (de Kock), 2-102 (du Plessis), 3-123 (Amla), 4-145 (de Villiers), 5-171 (Behardien), 6-181 (Duminy).

BOWLING: Boult 4-0-8-2, Wheeler 4-0-49-1, Southee 4-0-47-0, Santner 4-0-40-0, de Grandhomme 3-0-22-0, Munro 1-0-11-0.

NEW ZEALAND:

G. Phillips c de Kock b Morris 5 K Williamson c Parnell b Phehlukwayo 13 C.Munro b Morris 0 T.Bruce b Tahir 33 C. Anderson c de Kock b Phehlukwayo 6 C. de Grandhomme c Duminy b Tahir 15 L. Ronchi c de Kock b Tahir 0 M. Santner c Amla b Phehlukwayo 5 B. Wheeler b Tahir 6 T. Southee b Tahir 20 T. Boult not out 1

EXTRAS (LB-1, W-2) 3

TOTAL (all out; 14.5 overs) 107

FALL OF WKTS: 1-10 (Phillips), 2-10 (Morris), 3-38 (Williamson), 4-55 (Anderson), 5-60 (Bruce), 6-60 (Ronchi) 7-68 (Santner), 8-80 (de Grandhomme), 9-106 (Wheeler).

BOWLING: Morris 3-1-10-2, Paterson 2-0-13-0, Parnell 3-0-40-0, Phehlukwayo 3-0-19-3, Tahir 3.5-0-24-5.

UMPIRE: Chris Brown, Wayne Knights (both New Zealand)

THIRD UMPIRE: Tony Gillies (Australia)

MATCH REFEREE: Javagal Srinath (India)

Published in Dawn, February 18th, 2017

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