Sports
Bosch’s maiden five-for helps South Africa complete monster win over Zimbabwe
The first ball of the day set the tone. Corbin Bosch wished Zimbabwe good morning by cramping Nick Welch with a sharp short delivery, which he ended up fending to short leg. That left Bosch on a hat-trick after he had had Takudzwanashe Kaitano caught at third slip off what had turned out to be the last ball of the third day. Sean Williams avoided the hat-trick, but soon after, a collapse of 4 for 18 left little scope for Zimbabwe to take the game deep after South Africa had set them 537 to win. The visitors won by 328 runs soon after lunch.
From 82 for 6, Zimbabwe captain Craig Ervine and Wellington Masakadza doubled the total in a fighting seventh-wicket partnership of 83. South Africa’s frustration lasted for just over an hour, as a superb diving catch by Tony de Zorzi – again at short leg – helped Bosch break the stand. Ervine departed on 49 to give Bosch his fourth wicket, and with that, ended South Africa’s irritation.
Bosch bagged his maiden Test five-for, when, four overs later, he had Vincent Masekesa chopping on. That added to the milestone of scoring his first Test hundred with the bat on the first day, and made Bosch the fifth South African to achieve that double in a Test. Eventually, his and Wiaan Mulder’s all-round heroics, coupled with debutant Lhuan-dre Pretorius’ 153 on day one, confined Zimbabwe to their heaviest Test defeat in terms of runs.
But apart from that union between Ervine and Masakadza, Zimbabwe provided brief spells of entertainment on the fourth day. Although Williams arrived to bat in a tricky situation, he didn’t hesitate in attacking the bowlers. He had four boundaries off his first eight balls, and fell for 26 off 18 balls when, in the 25th over, he ended up top-edging a short ball from Bosch to Kyle Verreynne.
Codi Yusuf replaced Bosch in the 28th over, and had Prince Masvaure caught at second slip for 12. Yusuf’s fun continued when Wessly Madhevere nicked to Verreynne in the 30th over, and Tafadzwa Tsiga found fourth slip in the 32nd. But Ervine and Masakadza blunted all that with a flurry of boundaries.
Ervine had already swept, reverse swept and chipped Keshav Maharaj for boundaries, and Masakadza didn’t shy away from playing his shots either. When on 10, Mulder had Masakadza dropped by Verreynne, and the life Masakadza got helped the stand grow. The partnership passed fifty in the 33rd over when Ervine reverse swept Maharaj past slip, as the left-arm spinner looked short of ideas both as bowler and captain.
After lunch, when Masakadza punched Bosch for four past gully to raise his maiden Test fifty – his previous highest Test score was 17 – there seemed to be no end to South Africa’s misery. But when Bosch had Ervine caught by de Zorzi, that started another collapse. Masekesa and Masakadza followed, but there was more annoyance in store for South Africa.
Blessing Muzarabani, Zimbabwe’s No. 10, went 4, 4, 6 off part-time legspinner Dewald Brevis in the 64th over, and then smashed a six and four each off Maharaj in the 66th. Finally, two overs later, Brevis had his first Test wicket when Tanaka Chivanga chipped down the pitch and missed a ball outside leg, and was stumped. South Africa now have a 1-0 lead in the two-match series.
Brief scores:
South Africa 418 for 9 dec in 90 overs (Lhuan-dre Pretorius 153, Corbin Bosch 100*, Tanaka Chivanga 4-83) and 369 in 82.5 overs (Wiaan Mulder 147, Keshav Maharaj 51, Wellington Masakadza 4-98) beat Zimbabwe 251 in 67.4 overs (Sean Williams 137; Wiaan Mulder 4-50, Codi Yusuf 3-42, Keshav Maharaj 3-70) and208 in 66.2 overs (Wellington Masakadza 57; Corbin Bosch 5-43, Codi Yusuf 3-22) by 328 runs
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Shaky middle order a concern for Sri Lanka in World Cup
The fall of the once mighty West Indies has been steep across formats, yet in T20 cricket they still land the odd knockout punch. Sri Lanka, too, have slipped from the heady days when they were perennial contenders at ICC events and nowhere is the decline more glaring than in the shortest format. Still, old pros refuse to write them off. Nasser Hussain has tipped the islanders to spring a surprise while Jason Gillespie pencilled them in as semi-final material.
The faith is not blind. Sri Lanka know these conditions like the back of their hand and their bowlers possess enough tricks to put any batting line up in trouble. The worry lies elsewhere, a middle order that resembles a jigsaw with pieces missing.
In the modern game an IPL contract is often a golden ticket to the national side, yet Sri Lanka’s initial move to overlook Kamindu Mendis in favour of Test captain Dhananjaya de Silva raised eyebrows. It betrayed a mindset stuck in a different era.
Sunday’s scare against Ireland rammed home the point. Sri Lanka went 57 balls without a boundary until Kamindu broke the shackles with a cheeky reverse sweep, innovation that is the lifeblood of T20 cricket. How such a weapon was left in the holster in the first place is anyone’s guess.
Sri Lanka remain the only side juggling three captains across formats while playing all three of them in the T20 side.
The team’s top order generally fires out of the blocks, tearing along at more than ten an over in the Power Play, but from the seventh over the wheels begin to wobble. The innings turns into a grind and too often they fail to bat the full 20 overs.
When the field spreads and spinners take centre stage, the basics come into play, “milking the bowling”, running hard between the wickets, pinching “one for the throw”. These old school charms may be out of fashion but they still win matches. Soft hands, using the feet, rotating strike, virtues that have been tossed out in the pursuit of the glory shot.
Even associate sides such as UAE and USA boast thriving franchise leagues. Sri Lanka have the LPL, but it has been a stop start affair and has yet to produce a conveyor belt of finishers. Power hitters are thin on the ground. Kusal Janith Perera remains the cleanest striker in the country yet barely scraped into the squad and appears to be cooling his heels among the reserves.
Most nations pick a squad and then anoint a captain. Sri Lanka appear to have done it the other way round. Of course there have been exceptions. Mike Brearley never managed a Test hundred yet marshalled Botham, Gatting and Willis to Ashes glory; Bob Simpson was hauled out of retirement at 41 to steady an Australia stripped bare by the Packer exodus and did a sterling job.
Dasun Shanaka, however, is neither Brearley nor Simpson. For a side searching for direction, he has begun to look like deadwood rather than driftwood. Sri Lanka need to ask some tough questions.
Sports
Boxing icon Douglas Pereira is no more
Sri Lanka lost another boxing icon in Melbourne, Australia with the passing of Douglas Pereira, who succumbed to a heart attack aged 74.
Douglas Pereira ruled the boxing ring with authority during the late 1960’s and early 70’s winning at most prestigious meets in Sri Lanka such as the Stubbs Shield for St. Mary’s College, Dehiwala where they were a dominant force winning a triple crown in 1967, 68 and 69.
He was a fleet footed fighter with lightening speed with his hands.
He joined the Sri Lanka Air Force later and continued his skillful dominance winning his weight class at the Layton Cup, Nationals and other national events before being selected to the Sri Lanka team to the Asian Boxing Championships in Thailand in 1973.
He was part of a three- member Sri Lanka contingent which included fellow Marian Chavo de Kauwe, the latter, who claimed a Silver medal after losing on a split decision in the Gold medal final.
Douggie as he was fondly known to all, was a cheerful larrikin and a lovable soul. Despite being involved in a sport that could sometimes be brutal, he didn’t have a bad bone in his body and was always a pleasure to be around.
Boxing aside, he captained St. Mary’s at rugby at a time when the little school in Dehiwala was at the forefront of many sports.
During his time as a member of St. Mary’s Stubbs Shield team that won the triple crown in the late 1960s, he was blessed to be in an era, where the boys from Dehiwala dominated the ring for around a decade or more.
The team that dominated the Stubbs Shield during that time comprised some of the best pugilists in schools at the time with revered names like Bernard de Zilwa, Hans VanCyulenberg, Godfrey Van Heer, Chavo de Kauwe, Douglas Pereira, Nigel Jansen, Milroy Byrde, ML Peris, Vasantha Perera, Andre Vanderwert and a few others that many on that era would recall.
That tradition continued with more success afterwards as the later generation kept the standard going after Douggie’s team exploits.
Since migrating to Australia, Douglas Pereira chose to live a life away from the limelight unlike his days in Sri Lanka where he was well known and respected as a leading sportsman.
Douggie was ill for a long period before he left us.
The Marian family in Australia and around the world, including his school in Sri Lanka, mourn his passing.
Trevine Rodrigo in Melbourne.
Sports
Osanda century helps Nalanda
Under 19 Cricket
An unbeaten century by Osanda Pamuditha helped Nalanda post 349 for nine wickets in their allotted 80 overs in reply to Mahinda’s massive total of 507 for seven wickets declared as the Under 19 traditional cricket encounter between the two schools ended in a draw at Campbell Place on Tuesday.
Petes earn first innngs points against Sebs
Janith Panditharathna and Sadeesha Silva took four wickets each for St. Peter’s (319) to restrict St. Sebastian’s to 255 runs and take first innings points in a Division I Tier A match at Moratuwa. In their second essay the Petes were 251 for eight at close with Savi Fernando overcoming the first innings dissapointment with a half century. For the home team Adesh Almeida was the standout performer taking five wickets and scoring a half century.
At Ambepussa, Ameesha Rasanjana anchored the top order batting line up with a knock of 90 runs for Richmond to post 283 runs against St. Anthony’s Katugastota (34/0).
In the Tier B tournament, Wesley’s Sri Lanka Under 19 paceman Jeewahan Sriram took six wickets to restrict Sri Sumangala to 245 runs at Bandaragama, while Kushan Subasinghe top scored with 129 runs to set the stage for St. Anne’s to post 411 for seven against St. Anthony’s Wattala (60/1).
In the other Tier B match at Weeraketiya, Deneth Sithumina held Moratu Vidyalaya batting together with a 198-ball 85 runs for them to post 171 runs against St. Aloysius’ Galle (84/3). (RF)
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