All star of the match

Oram leads New Zealand to stunning upset

ESPNcricinfo staff
25-Mar-2011
Jacob Oram celebrates the wicket of Dale Steyn  •  Associated Press

Jacob Oram celebrates the wicket of Dale Steyn  •  Associated Press

South Africa were cruising at 108 for 2 in the 25th over when Jacques Kallis fell and they crash-landed spectacularly to be shot out for 172. The self-destructive streak was demonically masochistic in nature and it will perhaps require shrinks to understand this dramatic denouement. Once they realised their opponents were cracking under pressure, New Zealand went in for the kill, with close-in fielders and disciplined bowling, led by Jacob Oram who took four wickets and a great catch.
It was that catch that turned the night for New Zealand. Kallis had pulled to left of deep midwicket where Oram rushed across and held his balance to take a beauty. For South Africa, it proved to be the beginning of the end.
The pressure really escalated after the run out of AB de Villiers. New Zealand crowded the bat with close-in men, ready to sledge and eager to pile on the pressure, and Johan Botha cracked in the 33rd over. It was a lovely legcutter from Oram and Botha played down the wrong line to lose his off stump. Oram, who was the man who started it all with that Kallis catch, wasn't done yet. In the 35th over, he lured Robin Peterson into edging an attempted cut to the keeper and South Africa were swaying away like drunken men at 132 for 7. South Africa's nerves were frayed further when Dale Steyn square drove Nathan McCullum in the air to backward point, where who else but Oram accepted the offering.
Faf du Plessis threatened to do the improbably but Oram returned to kill the contest in the 43rd over. It was also an over that captured the entire madness of the evening. du Plessis had crashed the first delivery of the over back at Oram who couldn't hold on to a very difficult chance, and once the six was hit, one had to ask the question: was the night turning for Oram? Was it swinging towards du Plessis? But du Plessis sliced the fifth ball straight to extra cover and South Africa had well and truly sunk into oblivion.