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West Indies
seal a historic victory
Port Elizabeth—Few gave West Indies any chance of breaking their
downhill slide when they started the three-Test series in South Africa,
but it has taken the team just four days to turn things around in a
quite spectacular manner. Thirty-one months after they had last won a
Test match, West Indies demolished South Africa by 128 runs, and inside
four days, to take a 1-0 lead in the series and provide a glorious
finish to their year.
West Indies dominated large parts of the Test, but it seemed they had
given South Africa a sniff when they collapsed on the third evening.
They managed just 175 in their second innings, but their fast bowlers
turned in another awesome display to ensure that 389 was more than
enough runs to defend.
For South Africa, it was a shock defeat. For the second time in the
match, the top order collapsed without a trace - the first four wickets
went down with just 45 on the board. Jacques Kallis revived the
run-chase with a flawless 85 and added 112 with AB de Villiers to give
them a chance, but once he was at the receiving end of an unfortunate
decision, the result was never in doubt.
The blows that made the difference were delivered within the first ten
overs of the run-chase. The last time West Indies won an overseas Test
against meaningful opposition - against England, in June 2000 - Curtly
Ambrose and Courtney Walsh were the new-ball operators, but Fidel
Edwards and Daren Powell turned in the sort of display that even those
legends would have been proud of.
Powell and Edwards began in superb fashion. They raced in, consistently
clocking around 140 kph, and tested the batsmen with pace, swing and
bounce. Powell kept it mostly on a good length around off, and attempted
to beat the batsmen by swing and seam, while Edwards varied his length
cleverly, either bowling it full, or attacking the body with
well-directed short balls. One such delivery accounted for Graeme Smith,
who tried to fend off a snorter, and could only glove it for Daren Ganga
to take a diving catch.
By then South Africa had already lost two other wickets: if Smith had a
poor game with the bat, his opening partner had a nightmare. For the
second time, Herschelle Gibbs was done in by Powell without scoring -
this time, he shouldered arms to one which came in with the angle and
was crashing towards off stump. It was his second pair in Test cricket -
both of which have come in his last ten Tests - and his extended poor
run suggests South Africa will have serious questions to answer before
the next match. Hashim Amla, coming off successive hundreds in his
previous two Tests, failed to negotiate Edwards’ pace and swing, and
when Smith fell soon after, South Africa were reeling at 20 for 3. It
got even worse immediately after lunch, when Ashwell Prince failed to
come up with the answers to Jerome Taylor’s probing off-stump
line.—Agencies
South Africa’s best batsman, though, was still around, and he batted
like one. The footwork was precise, the defensive technique was
immaculate, and the strokeplay was fabulous. Three glorious fours just
before lunch - a cover drive, an on-drive, and a square cut, all off
Taylor - were ominous signs for West Indies, and the break only made
Kallis’ concentration stronger. The on-drives were a feature of his
innings, but he also cut and pulled powerfully. Powell tested him midway
through the afternoon session with a fiery spell peppered with plenty of
short stuff, but Kallis negotiated it all with scarcely a hiccup.
de Villiers, meanwhile, continued from where he had left off in the
first innings, driving strongly square on the off side. Not only did the
pair get plenty, they also did so quickly, scoring at more than
three-and-a-half an over. Chris Gayle even tried a few overs of spin,
but nothing worked till Edwards banged in a short ball that Kallis tried
to hook. The ball missed bat and glove, took his shoulder, looped to
Denesh Ramdin who dived, held on to the catch, and then threw the ball
in the air in sheer delight. Umpire Russel Tiffin agreed with the
appeal, but replays indicated Kallis was hard done by.
Once Kallis fell, the rest was easy. Mark Boucher fell to the pull shot
for the second time in the match, Paul Harris chopped one on to his
stumps, and de Villiers holed out to mid-on. Dale Steyn and Andre Nel
prolonged the innings with an entertaining 67-run partnership, but that
was only delaying the inevitable. The end finally came when Makhaya
Ntini spooned a top-edge to Powell. The celebrations were fairly
low-key, which perhaps suggests they are looking for much bigger rewards
from this tour. The three-match Test series is, after all, only one game
old. |