South Africa (438/4) Beat India (224/10) by 214 Runs Giant Margin in Last ODI
South Africa won their first-ever bilateral series in India after Faf du
Plessis' first, Quinton de Kock's second and AB de Villiers' third
centuries of the series helped the visitors soar to the highest total in
the five matches, the highest at the Wankhede and the highest against
India. They did not subject India to their biggest margin of defeat, but
they did bowl them out more than 200 runs short of the target, no mean
feat in batsmen-friendly conditions.
South Africa's line-up enjoyed the track, which offered almost no bounce
or turn, and applied aggression in waves reminiscent of the day nine
years ago when they scored this exact number of runs against Australia
at the Wanderers. Then, South Africa were chasing, this time they were
making India's bowlers do that. India have never conceded more runs in
an ODI; South Africa have scored more but only by one. This was their
sixth score over 400 and fourth in 2015 alone, and it underlined their
ability to dominate opposition on their own turf.
India will be disappointed by the way their challenge died in both
departments. Their bowlers began with an over-reliance on the short ball
and then just ran out of ideas while their batsmen showed the right
intent upfront but lost wickets trying to sustain the scoring rate. In
the end, they conceded a second series to South Africa on the tour with
the main event, the Tests, still to come.
The signs of South African authority were evident from the start. They
raced to fifty inside six overs during which Hashim Amla became the
fastest batsmen to 6,000 ODI runs. Amla was dismissed cheaply for a
fifth time in the series but that did not have an impact on South
Africa's morale.
De Kock owned the pull shot and with the seamers failing to generate
anything, MS Dhoni introduced spin in the seventh over. Harbhajan Singh
kept things tight at first but the tension was routinely broken at the
other end. South Africa grew in confidence, brought up 100 in the 15th
over and appeared unstoppable until de Kock hit Amit Mishra in the air
to mid-off and presented a chance. Mohit Sharma got fingertips to the
ball but could not hold on. De Kock was on 58 at the time and Mohit's
mistake would prove costly.
He was seeing the ball well and found the rope so regularly, there was
barely a need for singles. More than two-thirds of his runs came in
boundaries but he reached his century, his fifth against India and
eighth overall, with a single.
Du Plessis had almost been a spectator in the proceedings and allowed de
Kock most of the strike but when de Kock was caught on the long-off
boundary, he knew he had to take over. With de Villiers egging him on,
du Plessis upped the ante, assisted by Dhoni using part-timers Suresh
Raina and Virat Kohli against South Africa's two most destructive
batsmen. They pierced the gaps and hit with power as the intensity
increased.
De Villiers injected impetus into the innings with his scoring rate -
his fifty came off 34 balls - and du Plessis followed suit. After taking
61 balls to score fifty, he needed just 44 more deliveries to get a
century, even as he battled cramps to get there.
South Africa entered the last ten overs on 294 for 2 but would have been
wary of the squeeze that can strike with the new playing conditions.
This time, they were not strangled. Du Plessis plundered 24 runs off the
43rd over, bowled by Axar Patel, even though he could barely stand up
and had to retire hurt on 133.
South Africa Won the Series by 3-2 |
India lost Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli in the first eight overs of the
reply but Shikhar Dhawan, who had been middling until this match, and
Ajinkya Rahane kept them in it. Rahane was particularly severe on Dale
Steyn and Imran Tahir but neither of them targeted South Africa's fifth
bowler, Behardien, as much as they should have. Still, they applied
pressure, forced mistakes from South Africa in the field and were on
track despite the length of the journey.
Then it all changed when Kagiso Rabada proved there is no substitute for
pure pace. He was brought back on in the 23nd over, angled a fuller
ball across Dhawan and drew the leading edge. Hashim Amla fell face
first taking the catch and India were faltering. In Rabada's next over,
he dished up a leg-stump yorker than snuck past Suresh Raina and broke
the back of the Indian chase.
Rahane, who batted with composure and class and scored 50 off 41 balls,
was feeling the heat. He holed out to midwicket off Dale Steyn, whose
veins popped. In South Africa, the corks would have been doing the same
as the series was all but sealed. India lost their last five wickets for
29 runs and South Africa secured a second limited-overs series on their
longest-ever visit to India.
S C O R E B O A R D
South Africa won by 214 runs
South Africa (438/4) Beat India (224/10) by 214 Runs Giant Margin in Last ODI
Reviewed by Rahul Hazra
on
12:16 PM
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