South Africa seek series win
CAPE TOWN: South Africa will literally be trying to make up for lost time when they take on the West Indies in the third and final Test at Newlands on Friday (tomorrow).Although the West Indies put up an improved performance, South African captain Hashim Amla stopped short of acknowledging their
By our correspondents
January 01, 2015
CAPE TOWN: South Africa will literally be trying to make up for lost time when they take on the West Indies in the third and final Test at Newlands on Friday (tomorrow).
Although the West Indies put up an improved performance, South African captain Hashim Amla stopped short of acknowledging their credentials in his post-match comments after the rain-hit second Test in Port Elizabeth ended in a draw.
Amla suggested that South Africa’s first innings total of 417 for eight could have been bigger had his team not been trying to force the pace after most of the second day’s play was washed out.
He also pointed out that the West Indian reply of 275 for nine was largely due to a third wicket partnership of 176 between Kraigg Brathwaite and Marlon Samuels, who both hit centuries. The next highest West Indian score was 22 by Devon Smith.
According to Amla, the South African bowlers performed well on an unresponsive pitch in Port Elizabeth.
“I think on a different surface we may have picked up a lot more wickets a lot quicker. We did very well to take seven wickets in 35 overs (on day four) so we have a lot of positives to take into the next game,” he said.
Amla clearly felt that South Africa would have been favourites to win if the weather had not cut more than half the playing time from the second Test.
The South African bowlers can expect more pace, bounce and possibly seam movement at Newlands.
South Africa, who lead the series 1-0 after an innings win in the first Test in Centurion, added uncapped off-spinner Simon Harmer to their squad for Newlands.
It would be unusual for South Africa to include two spin bowlers in the same team but Harmer, from the Eastern Cape Warriors franchise, is also a useful batsman.
The West Indies will have to choose between bolstering a fragile batting line-up or go in with the same bowling line-up that played in Port Elizabeth.
After Centurion, they dropped batsman Jermaine Blackwood and picked all-rounder Jason Holder. It led to an improved bowling performance but the lower order batsmen, including Holder, crumbled against the pace of Morne Morkel and spin of Tahir.
West Indian coach Stuart Williams said his team was a “work in progress” and the players were looking forward to playing at Newlands in what is traditionally South African cricket’s biggest occasion.
Squads:
South Africa (likely, from): Hashim Amla (captain), Alviro Petersen, Dean Elgar, Faf du Plessis, AB de Villiers (wkt), Stiaan van Zyl, Temba Bavuma, Vernon Philander, Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel, Imran Tahir, Simon Harmer.
West Indies (from): Denesh Ramdin (captain, wkt), Kraigg Brathwaite, Devon Smith, Leon Johnson, Marlon Samuels, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Jermaine Blackwood, Jerome Taylor, Sulieman Benn, Sheldon Cottrell, Jason Holder, Shannon Gabriel, Narsingh Deonarine, Kenroy Peters, Chadwick Walton (wkt).
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pakistan), Paul Reiffel (Australia). TV umpire: Billy Bowden (New Zealand). Match referee: Ranjan Madugalle (Sri Lanka).
Although the West Indies put up an improved performance, South African captain Hashim Amla stopped short of acknowledging their credentials in his post-match comments after the rain-hit second Test in Port Elizabeth ended in a draw.
Amla suggested that South Africa’s first innings total of 417 for eight could have been bigger had his team not been trying to force the pace after most of the second day’s play was washed out.
He also pointed out that the West Indian reply of 275 for nine was largely due to a third wicket partnership of 176 between Kraigg Brathwaite and Marlon Samuels, who both hit centuries. The next highest West Indian score was 22 by Devon Smith.
According to Amla, the South African bowlers performed well on an unresponsive pitch in Port Elizabeth.
“I think on a different surface we may have picked up a lot more wickets a lot quicker. We did very well to take seven wickets in 35 overs (on day four) so we have a lot of positives to take into the next game,” he said.
Amla clearly felt that South Africa would have been favourites to win if the weather had not cut more than half the playing time from the second Test.
The South African bowlers can expect more pace, bounce and possibly seam movement at Newlands.
South Africa, who lead the series 1-0 after an innings win in the first Test in Centurion, added uncapped off-spinner Simon Harmer to their squad for Newlands.
It would be unusual for South Africa to include two spin bowlers in the same team but Harmer, from the Eastern Cape Warriors franchise, is also a useful batsman.
The West Indies will have to choose between bolstering a fragile batting line-up or go in with the same bowling line-up that played in Port Elizabeth.
After Centurion, they dropped batsman Jermaine Blackwood and picked all-rounder Jason Holder. It led to an improved bowling performance but the lower order batsmen, including Holder, crumbled against the pace of Morne Morkel and spin of Tahir.
West Indian coach Stuart Williams said his team was a “work in progress” and the players were looking forward to playing at Newlands in what is traditionally South African cricket’s biggest occasion.
Squads:
South Africa (likely, from): Hashim Amla (captain), Alviro Petersen, Dean Elgar, Faf du Plessis, AB de Villiers (wkt), Stiaan van Zyl, Temba Bavuma, Vernon Philander, Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel, Imran Tahir, Simon Harmer.
West Indies (from): Denesh Ramdin (captain, wkt), Kraigg Brathwaite, Devon Smith, Leon Johnson, Marlon Samuels, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Jermaine Blackwood, Jerome Taylor, Sulieman Benn, Sheldon Cottrell, Jason Holder, Shannon Gabriel, Narsingh Deonarine, Kenroy Peters, Chadwick Walton (wkt).
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pakistan), Paul Reiffel (Australia). TV umpire: Billy Bowden (New Zealand). Match referee: Ranjan Madugalle (Sri Lanka).
-
King Charles Makes It ‘absolutely Clear’ He Wants To Solve Royal Crisis -
Royal Family Warned To ‘have Answers’ Amid Weak Standing -
Marc Anthony On Why Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Show Mattered -
Kid Rock Gets Honest About Bad Bunny’s Performance At Super Bowl -
Kylie Jenner Reveals Real Story Behind Her 'The Moment' Casting -
Eva Mendes Reveals One Costar She Envied Ryan Gosling Over -
Halsey Marks Fiancé Avan Jogia's Birthday With Emotional Note -
China: Stunning Drone Show Lights Up Night Sky Ahead Of Spring Festival 2026 -
Andrew's Epstein Scandal: Will King Charles Abdicate Following King Edward's Footsteps? -
Billy Joel Leaves Loved Ones Worried With His 'dangerous' Comeback -
Prince William Dodges Humiliating Question In Saudi Arabia -
Dax Shepard Describes 'peaceful' Feeling During Near-fatal Crash -
Steve Martin Says THIS Film Has His Most Funny Scene -
Kensington Palace Shares Update As Prince William Continues Saudi Arabia Visit -
Fugitive Crypto Scammer Jailed For 20 Years In $73m Global Fraud -
Will Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor Finally Go To Jail Now That King Charles Has Spoken Out? Expert Answers