365WCX_1999JUN05
Saturday, June 5, 1999
05-Jun-1999
************* CRICINFO365 WORLD CUP EXTRA **************
Saturday, June 5, 1999. World Cup Edition No. 20
IN THIS EDITION:
* Match Report: Pakistan v South Africa
* Shoaib: the destroyer and the destroyed
* Quotes
* Magic Moment
* Quick Singles
* Full scorecard
* Super Six Points Table
* Sunday's fixture
CricInfo365's World Cup coverage:
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IT'S KLUSENER AGAIN AS SOUTH AFRICA WIN A THRILLER
By Keith Lane at Trent Bridge
Cold weather and rain may have greeted the South Africans at practice on
Friday afternoon, but it was nothing compared to the cold shoulder they might have
expected from their normally loyal supporters if they had lost here. A match described as the
battle of the Titans at the start of the World Cup ended with a classic finale
as the Proteas escaped with a 3 wicket win and an over to spare.
Wasim Akram won the toss and elected to bat first on a pitch that turned out
to be slightly slow in pace, and yet offered some nice bounce through to the
keepers. For the sixth match in a row South Africa used the same XI, with Shaun
Pollock and Jacques Kallis taking the new ball. Pakistan opened their
innings with Saaed Anwar and Wajahatullah Wasti. As has been the norm the
new ball showed early movement, both through the air and off the
pitch.
It was Anwar who opened the Pakistan score off Pollock's first over
with a little flick off his hips to deep backward square leg and Wasti who
on drove the first boundary off Kallis's second over.
The first scare for Pakistan came in the sixth over when Anwar, on 10, cut
Kallis to Rhodes who, by his standards, put down a relatively simple catch.
After eight overs Pollock made way for Alan Donald who had Wasti driving and
edging past second slip for four first ball up. Pollock's rest was brief. He
took over from Kallis the very next over. Donald, bowling at a constant
86 mph, and Pollock kept a very tight line, restricting the Pakistan
batsmen to pushing and nudging for ones and twos,
most of these coming from behind the wicket. Pollock after six overs was
replaced by Steve Elworthy.
With the run rate at just on 3 runs per over Anwar drove at Elworthy's
second delivery only to edge one going away from him to the gloves
of Mark Boucher. The young Abdur Razzaq was next man in but tight
bowling, particularly from Elworthy, continued to put pressure on the
batsmen with the 50 only coming up in the 17 th over.
Donald got his just reward in the 19 th over when Wasti on 17, not using his
feet, followed one outside the off edging a faint touch to Boucher for the
second wicket to fall on 58. This brought Ijaz Ahmed to the wicket who
opened his scoring with a delicate flick off his toes for a four to the
deep mid wicket fence.
Kallis replaced Donald but was guilty of bowling on both sides of the wicket
and giving away wides down the leg side. At the other end Elworthy, who has
been the biggest surprise in the South African team, had Ijaz continually
playing and missing outside the off. Getting some nice lift from just short
of a length it appeared as if he was getting the better of Ahmed.
Razzaq sensed the urgent need for runs and plundered two one bounce fours, one to
mid wicket and one to long off, off the bowling of Lance Klusener. Trying it
once to often to the economic Elworthy had him hoisting a pull to Gary
Kirsten at deep mid-wicket to be caught for 30 off 60 balls and Pakistan
stuck on 102/3 in the 30 th over.
Elworthy finished his 10 over spell with the highly impressive figures of
10-2-23-2 only to go to fine leg and see Ahmed send a slower ball from
Klusener over the wide long on fence for the maximum. The Pakistan fans
delight was short lived as Ahmed drove the next ball to a diving Cullinan at
cover to be sent back to the changing rooms for 23 off 36 balls.
As Inzimam-ul-Haq was still at the wicket there was always a chance of a run out,
and once more he did not disappoint. Taking a quick single to Rhodes was
always going to be dangerous, but he went anyway and was out to a direct hit.
Inzimam-ul-Haq had been run out for the 30 th time in a One Day International,
this time for 4 off 15 balls and he left Pakistan struggling at 118/5 in the 35th over.
Youhana and the new man at the wicket, Moin Khan,
resorted to pushing the ball into the gaps. Youhana injured his leg
taking a quick single called for a runner and Ijaz Ahmed obliged.
Taking a quick single to a ball played back towards Klusener, Ahmed was
Caught short by the bowler's direct hit from close range. Azhar Mahmood
Came to the crease with South Africa looking in command and restricting
Pakistan to under the 200.
At the start of the 47 th over Pakistan were 172/6 with Donald running in to
bowl to Khan. At the end of the over Pakistan had moved to 189/6 with Khan
smashing "White Lightning" for two fours and a six, reaching his 50 in 48
balls. Then it was Pollock's turn to give away 13 runs, another four and a
six to Khan, and bring up Pakistan's 200 in the 48 th over.
Khan's electrifying innings came to an end in the next over, with the score
on 206, run out by Cronje from cover for 63 off 56 balls including six fours
and two sixes.
So South Africa came to the wicket needing 221 to win with Gary Kirsten and
Herschelle Gibbs given the task of seeing off Wasim Akram and Shoaib
Akhtar. Kirsten struck first with a four pulled off Akram, but Gibbs facing
his third ball from Akhtar guided a catch to Ijaz Ahmed without troubling
the scorers and South Africa were 7/1. Hansie Cronje, a surprise at
number three, came out to join Kirsten.
Akhtar firing at a consistent 93 mph struck again in the sixth over with
Cronje on four guiding a shorter ball outside the off down the throat of
Saqlain Mushtaq at third man. In the eight over Kirsten took a nasty lifter
from Akhtar on the glove, and needed some assistance from the South African
dressing room. The next ball he cut, top edged and Inzimam-ul-Haq at first
slip, standing nearly on the inner ring, let the ball slip through his hands
to race to the third man boundary.
Kirsten was the next South African to leave the arena when padding up to a
ball from Akram and adjudged lbw by umpire Darrell Hair. Darryl Cullinan and
Jacques Kallis now had the unenviable task of rebuilding the South African
innings and giving their supporters something to cheer about. The Pakistan
supporters on the other hand could be heard vocally supporting every ball
bowled.
Cullinan's patience eventually ran out when slashing a drive straight at
Saaed Anwar who after juggling held on to the catch at cover to give Mahmood
his first wicket of the innings. There was further trouble for
South Africa in the 20 th over when Jonty
Rhodes, before scoring, walked in front of a ball from Mahmood to be trapped
right in front. The top order of South Africa had once again failed and a
major task awaited the middle order to recover from 58/5.
Saqlain Mushtaq came on the 24 th over and Shaun Pollock and Kallis were
content to take singles where they were offered, as Moin Khan and Youhana had done
for Pakistan. Mahmood eventually engineered the break through, enticing
Pollock on 30 to stretch for a ball moving away from him and edging a
regulation catch to Inzimam-ul-Haq at first slip. Pollock had helped to pull
the South Africans back into the match with a confidence building
partnership of 77.
Enter Lance Klusener, yet to get out in this World Cup, which seemed to
inspire Kallis into driving Mahmood and then Akhtar forcefully through the
covers for two classic boundaries. An outside edge off Akhtar brought him
another four and the 150 for South Africa in the 38th over.
With Klusener at the wicket Akram first brought back Mushtaq and then
himself, only to see Klusener pull him for a one bounce four to wide
mid-wicket. In the same over, the 40th, Kallis reached his 50 in 89 balls.
Mushtaq then saw a short ball from him sailing over the square leg boundary
and at last the South African supporters had something to cheer about.
With the light failing at the start of the 44 th over, the ball was changed
under a bit of a protest from the Pakistan bowlers. Mushtaq and Ahktar still
had three overs to bowl while Akram had one.
Kallis then had his first rush of blood to the head and paid with
his wicket, top edging an attempted pull to Khan off the bowling of Mushtaq,
out for a patient 54 off 99 balls. Mark Boucher, batting back in his normal
position at nine, now had the task of staying with Klusener.
Klusener was not going to wait for Boucher, and pulled Akhtar for
a lucky top edge four to fine leg, then a huge six to square leg
and managed to get a pad to one down the leg side for four leg byes. Mushtaq
was next to feel the weight of "Beauty" with a fearsome pull for four to
square leg and South Africa found themselves at 203/7 at the end of the 47th
over.
Akram played his last trump card in the 48th over bringing himself back for
his last over. He too had to see Klusener sending the ball way over
backward square leg for the maximum. Boucher sent
Mushtaq's first ball of the 49th over for six over deep mid-wicket, and
somehow South Africa had once again escaped from a losing position.
Klusener should have been out on the last ball of the 49 th over lofting a
top edge to Anwar at extra cover, only to see Anwar mess it up completely,
and Klusener completed two runs for two valuable points and the victory
South Africa need so badly.
=========================================================================
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SHOAIB: THE DESTROYER AND THE DESTROYED
By Trevor Chesterfield
Nottingham - If Shoaib Akhtar drove on British roads as fast as he was timed by the speed
gun at Trent Bridge when he bowled in the World Cup today he would be
ticketed and no doubt deprived of his license.
And at first South Africa felt the high-powered blast of the young
Pakistani in over-drive as they crumbled to 39 for three and later 58 for
five: a top-order again almost decimated by the pace of young pretender to
Jeff Thomson's crown.
Quiet devastating stuff. With Azhar Mahmood and Wasim Akram adding
to their misery there was some doubt, at 58 for five by the 20th over,
whether South Africa would survive.
This was no platform for victory. A second Chelmsford loomed and the media
vultures at home, so far from the action and so far from reality, were waiting
to peck over the carcass.
The speed gun read 95 then 91 and then 91again. Enough to have braver men
quaking in their pads and boots on yet another inhospitable afternoon of
sullen midlands cloud spreading gloom and heavy with the threat of rain. With 221
needed for victory and the rate required climbing to around seven an over, Shoaib
seemed invincible.
Then up stands Lance Klusener, the Natal swashbuckler whose broadsword of
willow has become one of the star attractions of this tournament. Up charges
Shoaib: six over mid wicket. Up he runs again: four through the covers. It
is over 46 of the South African innings has reached 177 for seven, with only
four runs squeezed out of three overs before, South Africa were becoming just a
little desperate.
Now it is 194 for seven: 15 runs off the over, and Shoaib, who had done so much
to wreck South Africa, had lost it. His rhythm, his pace, his direction, his
confidence had been mauled and rattled, his psyche batted out of shape by
the game's modern master blaster.
It was the sort of humiliation which made the supporters cringe and
grimace in anguish. If you read the headline and the jingoism of the
tabloids, the Rawalpindi Express had worked up such a head of steam no
batsman stood a chance. Suddenly he look forlorn and bothered, and
his skipper, Wasim Akram, put an arm around his shoulders in a consoling
manner. Not the sort of happy ending quiet envisaged: the destroyer
had been destroyed.
Even Wasim, cool, canny and so much in command, felt the wielding Klusener
sword. Another six over mid wicket. From 46 needed to win off 36 balls, it
came down to 18 off 18, then it was over: a scooped drive by Klusener
for two the attempted catch by Saeed Anwar totally botched
and a distraught Shoaib helped from the field, shepherded by his numbed
teammates. What should not have happened did and Klusener
earned his fourth man of the match award of the tournament.
=========================================================================
QUOTES
Heard at today's post-match press conference:
Wasim didn't make the press conference suffering from low sugar levels
Coach Mushtaq Mohammad deputised at the press conference.
Mohammad on Klusener: "No one can get him out anyway."
South African captain Hansie Cronje: "We are getting
caught between being positive and playing it easy. We have not clicked yet"
Cronje on Klusener: "We didn't think that we could win,
but with Lance down the batting order there's always hope"
Cronje on Akhtar: "He is still very inexperienced, but when it comes to speed he
beat Allan Donald"
Cronje on the final: "All we're looking at is getting into the semis, Lance said
to me at the end of the game 'Let's take the points and run'"
=========================================================================
MAGIC MOMENT
Lance Klusener had the nerve to step away to Shoaib Akhtar, bowling in excess
of 90 miles an hour in the deepening gloom at Trent Bridge, and smack the fifth
ball of the 46th over midwicket for a huge six. It signalled the start of a
South African assault on the Pakistani bowling, as Klusener and Boucher took
45 off 28 balls, and forced Wasim to take Shoaib off.
=========================================================================
QUICK SINGLES
* When is he going to get out? Lance Klusener, South Africa's late order hero
and the man who has single-handedly put an end to cricket journalists' habit
of juxtaposing the words 'chokers' and 'South Africa' still has no batting
average without an average. He's played 6 matches, had 5 innings, 5 not outs,
scored 210 runs with a highest score of 52 (not out, obviously) and an amazing
strike rate (runs per 100 balls) of 111.70. However Lance isn't the only one
with impressive figures. Damien Fleming, Manjural Islam, Henry Olonga, Adrian
Dale, Shafiuddin Ahmed, Shoaib Ahktar and Geoff Allott are all unbeaten. But
the best of the lot is Australia's Tom Moody, also unbeaten, with a highest
score of 56 and a strike rate of 167.34.
* Inzamam again restated his claim today to the title of world's worst runner
between the wickets. Against Bangladesh he left Saeed Anwar stranded when he
turned back after starting out on a run from the non-striker's end. Today he got
the bat past the popping crease in time but failed to ground it and was run out.
As he said to Stephen Fay of the Independent newspaper recently: 'It is not true
I am a very bad runner. I am a bad runner'.
=========================================================================
SCORECARD
ODI # 1474
ICC World Cup, 1999, 2nd Super Six Match
Pakistan v South Africa
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
5 June 1999 (50-over match)
Result: South Africa won by 3 wickets
Points: South Africa 2, Pakistan 0
Toss: Pakistan
Umpires: DB Hair (Aus) and DR Shepherd
TV Umpire: DB Cowie (NZ)
Match Referee: JR Reid (NZ)
Man of the Match: L Klusener
Pakistan innings (50 overs maximum) R B 4 6
Saeed Anwar c Boucher b Elworthy 23 37 2 0
Wajahatullah Wasti c Boucher b Donald 17 56 2 0
Abdur Razzaq c Kirsten b Elworthy 30 60 2 0
Ijaz Ahmed c Cullinan b Klusener 23 36 1 1
Inzamam-ul-Haq run out (Rhodes) 4 15 0 0
Yousuf Youhana run out (Klusener) 17 27 1 0
+Moin Khan run out (Cronje/Boucher) 63 56 6 2
Azhar Mahmood not out 15 10 1 0
*Wasim Akram not out 5 3 1 0
Extras (b 4, lb 8, w 11) 23
Total (7 wickets, 50 overs) 220
DNB: Saqlain Mushtaq, Shoaib Akhtar.
FoW: 1-41 (Saeed Anwar, 13.2 ov), 2-58 (Wajahatullah, 18.4 ov),
3-102 (Abdur Razzaq, 29.5 ov), 4-111 (Ijaz Ahmed, 32.3 ov),
5-118 (Inzamam-ul-Haq, 35.1 ov), 6-150 (Yousuf Youhana, 42.6 ov),
7-206 (Moin Khan, 48.5 ov).
Bowling O M R W
Pollock 10 1 42 0
Kallis 10 0 47 0 (7w)
Donald 10 2 49 1 (2w)
Elworthy 10 2 23 2 (1w)
Klusener 9 0 41 1
Cronje 1 0 6 0 (1w)
South Africa innings (target: 221 runs from 50 overs) R B 4 6
G Kirsten lbw b Wasim Akram 19 38 3 0
HH Gibbs c Ijaz Ahmed b Shoaib Akhtar 0 3 0 0
*WJ Cronje c Saqlain Mushtaq b Shoaib Akhtar 4 15 1 0
DJ Cullinan c Saeed Anwar b Azhar Mahmood 18 42 2 0
JH Kallis c Moin Khan b Saqlain Mushtaq 54 98 3 0
JN Rhodes lbw b Azhar Mahmood 0 6 0 0
SM Pollock c Inzamam-ul-Haq b Azhar Mahmood 30 45 3 0
L Klusener not out 46 41 3 3
+MV Boucher not out 12 15 0 1
Extras (lb 11, w 14, nb 13) 38
Total (7 wickets, 49 overs) 221
DNB: S Elworthy, AA Donald.
FoW: 1-7 (Gibbs, 1.3 ov), 2-19 (Cronje, 5.4 ov),
3-39 (Kirsten, 10.6 ov), 4-55 (Cullinan, 17.4 ov),
5-58 (Rhodes, 19.6 ov), 6-135 (Pollock, 36.1 ov),
7-176 (Kallis, 44.2 ov).
Bowling O M R W
Wasim Akram 10 0 44 1 (5nb, 2w)
Shoaib Akhtar 9 1 51 2 (3nb, 1w)
Azhar Mahmood 10 1 24 3 (3w)
Abdur Razzaq 10 1 40 0 (1nb, 3w)
Saqlain Mushtaq 10 0 51 1 (3w)
Reserve match referee: R Subba Row
4th (reserve) umpire: A Clarkson
Moin Khan 50 off 48 balls, 5x4 1x6
JH Kallis 1x5
JH Kallis 50 off 89 balls, 3x4 0x6
=========================================================================
World Cup 1999 Super Six Points Table:
P W L NR T Pts Net-RR PCF
Pakistan 3 2 1 - - 4 +0.44 4
Zimbabwe 2 2 - - - 4 +0.33 4
South Africa 3 2 1 - - 4 -0.20 2
Australia 3 1 2 - - 2 +0.29 0
South Africa 3 2 1 - - 4 -0.20 2
New Zealand 2 1 1 - - 2 -0.40 2
India 3 - 3 - - 0 -0.51 0
=========================================================================
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WORLD CUP - SUNDAY'S FIXTURES:
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Note: Match commences at 10.45am British Summer Time. (0945 GMT -
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Also contributed to today's edition: Trevor Chesterfield, John Houlihan and Alex Balfour.
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