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West Indies skipper hoping landmark victory blows a Gayle
PORT ELIZABETH (South Africa)—New West Indian captain Chris Gayle hailed
a “thrilling” win against South Africa as a career highlight and said
the challenge for his young team was to continue to improve.
“It’s really thrilling to beat South Africa in four days,” he said after
a 128-run triumph in the first Test at St George’s Park here on
Saturday.
Asked whether he had been involved in a better West Indian win, he said:
“It’s the best one so far because we have a lot of young players,
inexperienced guys. It’s really pleasing to see the way they operate
under pressure.” It was the first away Test win for the West Indies,
other than against minnows Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, since they beat
England by an innings and 93 runs in Birmingham in June 2000.
Set 389 to win, South Africa succumbed to consistent pressure from the
West Indian fast bowlers and were bowled out for 260. After years of
being pilloried as world cricket’s most prominent under-performers,
Gayle said leading in a series was a new challenge for the West Indies.
He said the team would celebrate on Saturday night before starting to
prepare for the second Test of the three-match series, starting in Cape
Town on Wednesday.
“The challenge is how we cope with it. We will have to stick to basics
and play some good cricket,” said Gayle. South African captain Graeme
Smith said his team needed to bounce back, as they had done in home
series against India and Pakistan last season when on both occasions
they clinched the series by winning the final match. “We let ourselves
down on day one when we allowed them to bat the way they did and then we
didn’t bat well enough in our first innings,” said Smith. “We have got
to rebound. We’ve done it before. We know we’re better individually and
as a team than what we showed in the past four days.” Smith defended a
decision to rest several of the key South African players ahead of the
Test because of a gruelling schedule over the next year. “Three days of
rain didn’t help our preparations but we have no excuses,” he said.
South Africa were never in contention on Saturday after slumping to 45
for four, although Jacques Kallis (85) and AB de Villiers (60) provided
resistance in a fifth wicket stand of 112, while Andre Nel (34) and Dale
Steyn (33 not out) delayed the end with a hard-hitting ninth wicket
partnership of 67.
South Africa’s troubles started early when Daren Powell dismissed
Herschelle Gibbs for his second duck of the match. Fellow fast bowler
Fidel Edwards built up impressive pace to claim the wickets of Hashim
Amla and Smith as South Africa slumped to 20 for three. Kallis and
Ashwell Prince survived until lunch but Prince fell to Jerome Taylor
four balls after the interval, edging a low catch to Gayle at first
slip.
—Agencies |