South Africa 287 for 5 (Amla 150, Smith 52) beat England 207 (Bell 45, Patel 45) by 80 runs
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South Africa became the first side to be ranked No. 1 in all three
formats and did it in fitting style, with a crushing 80-run victory in
the second one-day international to end England's run of 10 consecutive
wins. South Africa's success was, not for the first time on this tour,
set around a fantastic innings from Hashim Amla as he made a career-best
150 from 124 balls on a pitch that was far from easy for strokeplay.
Amla's innings, South Africa's sixth-highest in one-day internationals,
marshalled South Africa to an imposing 287 for 5 and England never
really threatening to get close once Ian Bell's sprightly knock was
ended by Robin Peterson. The spinners played a key role on a helpful
surface - England's had earlier found some turn, too - and when Eoin
Morgan pulled JP Duminy to deep midwicket the game was up.
This match, though, was about a man who is having a defining tour. It
was another day when Amla's run-scoring feats came into clear focus as
he became the fastest man to 3000 ODI runs, beating the previous record
held by Viv Richards. His innings included 16 boundaries, ranging from
the expansive flick over midwicket to the cover drive to the wonderfully
cheeky deflection past the keeper off Tim Bresnan late in the innings.
Amla and Graeme Smith added 89 for the first wicket - after being forced
to battle against some lively new-ball bowling - which laid the
platform for South Africa. Amla then took over with one of the finest
pieces of one-day batting you could wish to see. Amla's hundred, his
tenth in one-day internationals, came off 96 balls and it was an innings
full of deft placement. He toyed with the England bowlers right to the
final moment when he threaded Steven Finn through backward point to
reach 150; his third fifty needed just 27 deliveries.
England, though, did not help their cause as far as Amla was concerned.
He could have been run out twice - on 1 when Samit Patel, preferred at
the last minute to Chris Woakes, was slow to the ball from mid-off, and
then on 62 when James Anderson produced a poor throw from short fine leg
- and was also dropped twice. The first catching chance came on 42 when
Craig Kieswetter put down a thin edge off Patel and the wicketkeeper
dropped another, one-handed down the leg side, when Amla had 92.
It was a poor day for Kieswetter and a bad time for fallibility to rear
its head, with Jonny Bairstow and Matt Prior breathing down his neck. In
a tough analysis of his performance he also missed a chance offered by
AB de Villiers, on 1, diving full stretch to his right. It was the
hardest of his chances, but the type Kieswetter had started to pluck out
of thin air.
The early stages looked much like the Test series. Smith and Amla
resisted whatever pressure the England bowlers were able to exert
although both had moments of fortune, especially during the first spells
from Finn and James Anderson. South Africa waited until the sixth over
for their first boundary when Smith, in typical style, took a ball from
well outside off straight past mid-off when most batsman would have
driven through extra cover.
The acceleration started towards the end of the mandatory Powerplay when
overs seven to nine went for a combined 32 runs, including eight
boundaries. Fourteen of those runs came off Bresnan's opening over and
he remained the most expensive bowler. Swann was introduced in the 12th
over but it was Patel who caused the greater problems, particularly to
Smith who was intent on trying to sweep the left-arm spinner.
Smith reached his fifty from 70 balls before his eagerness to press on
during the bowling Powerplay brought his downfall when he top-edged
Bresnan. South Africa's momentum stalled for a period as Duminy
sacrificed himself in a mix-up with Amla (the end result of the innings
showed that was the correct decision) and Dean Elgar, in his first ODI
innings after the Cardiff washout, struggled to tick the scoreboard
over, especially against the spinners. He had laboured to 15 off 28
balls when Swann turned one past his outside edge to take middle. It was
a rare moment for Swann to enjoy in a difficult season.
It took South Africa just two balls to make a breakthrough when Lonwabo
Tsotsobe, the left-arm quick, speared a full delivery under Alastair
Cook's bat to take the off stump. Generally, however, the quick bowlers
pitched a touch too short, which allowed Bell to score freely although
his intent in using his feet also played a part in disrupting the
bowlers' length. No one, though, had the staying power of Amla.
Just as the second-wicket stand was building Jonathan Trott top-edged a
pull towards long leg where Elgar, having almost misjudged the chance
and come in too far, took a stunning catch over his shoulder and managed
to hold on when he hit the ground. It was the sort of fielding
brilliance that England have lacked in recent months.
Peterson's wickets came in contrasting style. His first was the perfect
left-arm spinner's dismissal as Bell, lunging forward, was beaten by one
that turned and struck his off stump. The second was the type a spinner
will happily take an embellish for future reference when Ravi Bopara,
trying to regain form after his time out of cricket, carved a long hop
to cover.
Briefly, Bopara had started to look as though form was returning with a
sweetly struck square drive and a crisp pull - reaching double figures
for the first time since his personal problems curtailed his Test series
against South Africa - but the manner of his dismissal will bring the
pressure back on him. Kieswetter's day did not get much better when he
became Elgar's first international scalp as an outside edge rebounded
off de Villiers and looped to slip; Kieswetter had done himself no
favours by trying to play to leg against the turn. This batting, on a
slow but hardly threatening pitch, did not bode well for the
subcontinent.
To highlight the excellence of what Amla had produced Morgan, one of the
finest timers and placers of a ball in world cricket, struggled to
adjust to conditions and was barely striking above 50 when he picked out
the man at deep midwicket. As Bresnan and Swann offered limp edges to
de Villiers against Wayne Parnell it did not go unnoticed that England,
as a team, were struggling to match what one player, Kevin Pietersen,
had scored on his own at Taunton.
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