Peaches, and creamed
Plays of the Day, England v South Africa, Super Eights, Barbados
Sambit Bal in Barbados
17-Apr-2007
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Double death, nearly
Everybody knows about the slow death at Steve Bucknor's hands. But
Michael Vaughan, the long-suffering one-day batsman, very nearly died
twice. Andre Nel struck him on the pads with his second ball just when
Vaughan seemed to be getting into his stride. Nel was sure he had
nailed his man but, as Bucknor contemplated, Vaughan charged off the
blocks for a non-existent run. It was only after the throw missed the
mark with Vaughan stranded in the middle that Bucknor raised his finger.
The ball
Andrew Hall to Andrew Flintoff. It started way outside off, dipped back in the air, and cut sharply in off the pitch to snake through the prodding bat and the pad. It wasn't quite in the class of Waqar Younis in terms of pace, but for the rest, it was the perfect demonstration of reverse swing.
KP Nelled
It was always going to be the most interesting contest within the contest,
Kevin Pietersen v Andre Nel, and a pity it was that it ended before it
even started. Nel's second ball to Pietersen was a screamer at the
throat that forced an awkward evasive action. Nel charged down the wicket
with his customary stare but Pietersen, as most batsmen have learnt to do
with Nel, just looked away. The next one was short again and Pietersen
managed only a bottom edge to cover as he swiveled to pull, prompting a
similar routine from Nel. After managing an unconvincing single in the
next over, Pieterson obviously decided that he had enough and gave the
charge. But as he looked to whip it to leg, the ball squared him up,
found the leading edge, and scooped to mid off. Graeme Smith would have
caught it even if he had to dive underground.
The loudest cheer...
... was reserved for Makhaya Ntini, who waltzed on to the field with a
couple of bottles for his teammates when Andrew Strauss fell in the
33rd over. Even though Ntini has not distinguished himself in this World
Cup, tongues got wagging this morning when his name was found missing
from the team sheet. It was a wicket that would have suited Ntini, so
the question was whether the decision had anything do with the late-night
shenanigans. Or perhaps not, because, even though he enjoys his time out,
Ntini isn't much of a drinker. Dropped or not, though, the fans love him.
And then of course, there was Monty when he batted.
The shot
Over 3.4. Sajid Mahmood, pitches it fractionally short and A B de Villers latches on to it like lightning. It's not an extravagant stroke - there is no room for that - but a shot played with the speed of the hand and positive intent. It sums up the difference in approach: England were tentative and unsure, and South Africa were in for the kill.
The banner
A bunch of English fans, and there plenty at the ground today, started
the day with 'God Save the Queen'. By the end of the day however,
'Queen' had been crossed out. It had been replaced by "Our Team".
The quote
"Today we demolished it". Graeme Smith, in response to a question if
South Africa had left the chokers' tag behind with today's win.
Sambit Bal is the editor of Cricinfo and Cricinfo Magazine