Saturday, September 29, 2012

South Africa out to erase poor Australia record


Match facts

September 30, 2012
Start time 1530 local (1000 GMT)


Big Picture

Another classic encounter beckons for this group as the "best of enemies," as they were once called meet. South Africa and Australia history at major tournaments needs only one number to get blood boiling: 1999.
But there are others. In the 2007 World Cup, South Africa lost twice to Australia, once in the group stage and once in the semi-final. Australia have had the better of South Africa in major tournaments since Sydney 1992, when South Africa beat them by nine wickets.

Sri Lanka qualifies for Twenty20 2012 Semi Final



ICC World Twenty20 2012 Standings

GROUP 1MATWONLOSTTIEDN/RNET RRPTSLAST 5
1Sri Lanka22000+1.0294
2England21100-0.1152
3West Indies21100-0.6212
4New Zealand20200-0.2680
GROUP 2MATWONLOSTTIEDN/RNET RRPTSLAST 5
1Australia11000+2.5062
2Pakistan11000+0.2652
3South Africa10100-0.2650
4India10100-2.5060

England beats New Zealand by 6 wickets


Varied, unorthodox Sri Lanka hammer West Indies

Sri Lanka 130 for 1 (Jayawardene 65*, Sangakkara 39*) beat West Indies 129 for 5 (Samuels 50, Bravo 40, A Mendis 2-12) by nine wickets 


A delightfully unorthodox Sri Lankan attack working at close to its best handcuffed a power-packed West Indies line-up, conceding just 129 runs even though they got just five wickets in the 20 overs. The Sri Lankan top three made light work of the target, the lowest-ever challenge in Pallekele, taking a big step towards the semi-final what with the heft net run-rate bonus from the win with 28 balls to spare.
Between Ajantha Mendis' different bamboozlements, Nuwan Kulasekara's mix of inswingers and huge slower balls and Jeevan Mendis' skiddy legrollers, Lasith malinga could afford to have an off half-day, even though he too came back with two superb overs in the end to stifle any ambitions West Indies might have had after the rebuild by half-centurion Marlon Samuels and Dwayne Bravo, who scored 40 off 34.
Kulasekara got big man Chris Gayle out with a slower delivery about 25kmph slower than his usual delivery. Ajantha began with a wicket-maiden, toying around with Johnson Charles, and ended with one run and Kieron Pollard's wicket in the 16th over. Jeevan played his part in slowing down and eventually getting rid of Bravo, who looked threatening. Jeevan even managed to slip in a jig to match Gayle's wicket celebrations.
Sri Lanka were on for this game from the moment Tillakaratne Dilshan dived at short point to keep the first ball of the match down to a dot; their fielding hardly ever let up throughout the rest of the innings, except for a half-chance missed by Kumar Sangakkara. There was tension and anticipation around with the way West Indies had played out four quiet overs without the loss of a wicket. Usually one of two things happen at such tmes: either Gayle launches or his team slips after his wicket.
Mahela Jayawardene wanted the wickets. He brought on Ajantha well in earnestness. Charles had no clue which way Mendis turned it, and he finally jumped out of the crease more in hope than anything. He was beaten by the googly, and stumped easily. Mendis conceded only leg-byes in that over: take out his middle match and his figures in the tournament now read 5-3-8-7. In the next over Kulasekara produced the massive slower ball. Gayle waited and waited, but all he could manage was an edge, which Sangakkara accepted with a forward dive. With Gayle's first failure of the tournament, the celebrations suggested the match had been won.
Bravo and Marlon Samuels, though, were not to oblige that soon. Samuels, with his deft touches, and Bravo, with his power, rebuilt the innings with a partnership of 65 in 9.2 overs. The strike-rate may not have been great, but the approach made for good viewing. Bravo's extra-cover drives matched Samuels' late-cuts for aesthetics. They preferred the pace that Angelo Mathews and Malinga provided, but Jeevan put the brakes on, conceding just two in his first over, and getting Bravo to pull to long-on in the second.
Mendis came back to finish off Pollard, but Andre Russell, the new man in, broke the maiden. He and Samuels took 21 off Kulasekara's comeback over, but Malinga pulled them back with a mix of yorkers and slower balls in the 19th. An underwhelming 10 runs came in the last two overs, and Sri Lanka took all the momentum into the chase.
Dilshan got the chase off to a start similar to the one he had provided in the field. The first three balls he faced he smacked for fours. Fidel Edwards was the culprit providing him width. Replacing Samuel Badree who went for 20 in his quota in the last match, Edwards had gone for 12 off the first three balls. Ravi Rampaul followed it up with a superb over, removing Dilshan, but Jayawardene and Sangakkara were too good against an attack comprising three specialist bowlers and defending just 129.
The two showed respect to Sunil Narine, if only because they could afford to, taking just 23 off his four overs, but others weren't accorded such nicety. Sangakkara reached 1000 international runs along the way, and Jayawardene a seventh fifty. Once Narine was done, they launched an attack in a bid to increase the net run-rate. They did so without playing funky Twenty20 shots. The last 43 runs came off just 20 balls, and ticket to Colombo was all but booked.

Most Runs

POSPLAYERMATINNSNORUNSHSAVEBFSR100504S6S
1Brendon McCullum44019012347.50115165.21101710
2Luke Wright44118199*60.33103175.72021312
3Shane Watson3311647282.0096170.8302913
4Eoin Morgan44113071*43.3396135.410167
5Tillakaratne Dilshan4401287632.0090142.2201133
6Alex Hales4401216830.2595127.3601132
7Mahela Jayawardene44111857*39.3397121.6401134
8David Warner33111763*58.5078150.0001145
9Kumar Sangakkara4411154438.3381141.9700121
10Chris Gayle4301145838.0077148.0502118
11Johnson Charles4301128437.3389125.8401144
12Imran Nazir3301117237.0063176.1901173
13James Franklin4411065035.3380132.500184
14Virat Kohli3301055035.0084125.0001122
15Mohammad Hafeez3301034534.3394109.5700103
16Rob Nicol4301025834.0083122.890175
17Marlon Samuels4301025034.0075136.000276
18Shakib Al Hassan220958447.5062153.2201132
19Ross Taylor441852628.3361139.340091
20Nasir Jamshed331855642.5051166.660146
21Dwayne Bravo331784039.0063123.800073
22Gautam Gambhir330724524.0058124.130090
23Umar Akmal3216643*66.0056117.850072
24Nasir Hossain220665033.0052126.920181
25Suresh Raina331653832.5053122.6400100
26Richard Levi3316250*31.0056110.710170
27JP Duminy321604860.0043139.530033
28Jeevan Mendis4325843*58.0044131.810061
29Rohit Sharma3325755*57.0036158.330151
30AB de Villiers320553027.5031177.410033
31Hashim Amla3315432*27.0048112.500070
32Martin Guptill330543818.0050108.000071
33Gulbodin Naib220494424.5046106.520053
34Kevin O'Brien220483524.0044109.090051
35Craig Ervine220473723.505388.670041
36Niall O'Brien220452522.5045100.000021
37MS Dhoni3314218*21.0038110.520051
38Craig Kieswetter44039359.754782.970042
39Irfan Pathan320393119.5038102.630031
40Michael Hussey3213828*38.0030126.660031
41Kane Williamson430361712.004090.000030
42Jonny Bairstow441361812.004481.810041
43Mohammad Ashraful220352117.5034102.940060
44Ed Joyce220331716.503789.180060
45Mohammad Nabi220323116.0023139.130022
46Umar Gul310323232.0017188.230023
47Jos Buttler442321516.0028114.280040
48Karim Sadiq220312615.503491.170030
49Nawroz Mangal220302215.0027111.110021
50Dilshan Munaweera220301715.003390.900040