Tuesday, July 23, 2013

From the Desk: Personal Favorite ODIs relived!


 

Cricketing sport has got its own charm. Three different formats: three different styles: three different forms of excitement. Its always interesting to watch the 50-over format. ODI is being an ideal form of cricket whereas, test format is longer and T20 is way shorter; ODIs provide the perfect blend of orthodox sensible batting and insane slogging when required. The format has produced one of the most valuable players, moments and matches of the sport we all love. There are some contests that remain in fresh in our long lasting memory. So, here is my personal favorite collection, reliving the legacy of classic one day battles in the cricketing circle.

   

'Langeveldt stuns the Caribbean'


Date: May 11, 2005

Match: West Indies v South Africa, 3rd ODI, South Africa tour to West Indies 2004/05

Venue: Barbados
 
Result: South Africa 284 for 6 (Dippenaar 123, Kallis 87) beat West Indies 283 (Gayle 132, Langeveldt 5-62) by 1 run

Synopsis: Charl Langeveldt produced one of the most sensational finales in one-day international history, as he plucked a hat-trick out of thin air to steal a one-run victory over West Indies. His performance secured an unassailable 3-0 lead for South Africa, who now travel to Trinidad with both the Test and one-day trophies tucked into their hand-luggage. 

They will be laughing about this victory all the way to Port-of-Spain, because with two overs of the match remaining, West Indies had seemed home and hosed. A brilliantly measured century from Chris Gayle had carried them to within 27 runs of victory, and by the time Courtney Browne and Dwayne Bravo had reduced that requirement to just 10 runs from 12 deliveries with four wickets in hand, they seemed to have the match in the bag. 

But, as the tempers on both sides began to fray, so too did West Indies' resolve. Browne was caught off the leading edge to give Makhaya Ntini a wicket with the final ball of his spell, meaning that Langeveldt began the final over with four runs to defend and three wickets still standing.
Ian Bradshaw and Bravo traded singles off the first two balls, although Bravo's was so rash that he might have been run out by a mile had Ashwell Prince's shy from midwicket been more accurate. If that was an indicator of West Indies' nerves, then they were set jangling one ball later, when Bradshaw was bowled all ends up, aiming a rash swing at a perfect top-of-off-stump delivery.

Daren Powell, helmetless but visibly nervous, strode to the crease with two runs needed from three balls, and was swiftly sent on his way in an identical fashion, as Langeveldt soaked up the pressure and turned it all on his opponents. The equation had been reduced to two runs from two balls, but there was no longer any doubt who was in control, and when the hat-trick delivery curved wickedly late to thud into Corey Collymore's pads, Langeveldt didn't even bother to turn around and appeal.



'Irish luck topples the English crown'



Date: March 2, 2011

Match: England v Ireland, Group B, ICC World Cup 2011

Venue: Bangalore
 
Result: Ireland 329 for 7 (K O'Brien 113, Cusack 47, Swann 3-47) beat England 327 for 8 (Trott 92, Bell 81, Pietersen 59, Mooney 4-63) by three wickets

Synopsis: Kevin O'Brien stunned England with the fastest hundred in World Cup history as Ireland secured their greatest victory with a monumental three-wicket triumph in Bangalore. O'Brien clubbed a magnificent 113 off 63 deliveries as Ireland earned the highest World Cup run-chase with four balls to spare. After he'd added a match-changing 162 with Alex Cusack, John Mooney joined him to play the innings of his life and help write another famous chapter in Irish sport.

When the partnership was broken with 55 still needed Ireland could have lost their way, especially when O'Brien couldn't get the strike back. However, after struggling to get the ball away Mooney suddenly started locating the boundary, firstly off the outside edge but then with two nerveless drives through the covers, each coming after England had strung together a few dot balls to build pressure. He was the dominant partner in the seven-wicket stand.

Still, though, there was a final twist when O'Brien was run out in the penultimate over. Trent Johnston, however, drove his first ball, a full toss from Stuart Broad, for four as the equation came down to below a run-a-ball for the first time in the entire chase. The final over started with just three needed and off the second ball Mooney clipped Anderson through midwicket to set off epic celebrations that will take over any available Bangalore bar tonight. 



'Inzamam vs Team India'




Date: April 12, 2005

Match: India v Pakistan, 4th ODI, Pakistan tour to India

Venue: Ahmedabad
 
Result: Pakistan 319 for 7 (Malik 65, Inzamam 60*) beat India 315 for 6 (Tendulkar 124, Dhoni 47) by 3 wickets, to level series 2-2

Synopsis: In the end, it came down to a clash of the titans, and Inzamam-ul-Haq's batting prowess overcame Sachin Tendulkar's bowling nous to give Pakistan a priceless final-ball victory that evened the six-match series at 2-2. With three needed off the last over, Tendulkar, already a centurion, bowled four dot-balls, but needing one off the last ball, Inzamam pierced the five-man off-side cordon with a gentle, precise dab past point. It was the fitting end to a magnificent match which Pakistan retrieved in a rousing manner after chasing leather all morning. 

Tendulkar had been India's batting hero, thrilling the crowds with a splendid 123 as India piled up a massive 315 for 6, but each of Pakistan's top four contributed significantly to set up a fascinating denouement. Though India battled back magnificently through Murali Kartik, Zaheer Khan and Ashish Nehra - who also stunned everyone with two breathtaking throws that produced run-outs - Inzamam's class and composure was to prove the difference in a frenetic finale. 

Often the butt of crass jokes for his running between the wickets, Inzamam was superb today, scampering ones and twos as the pressure mounted. And each time the run-rate threatened to get out of hand, he would delve into his immense repertoire and produce a sublime stroke to pierce the field.


'The Jury - a single run'




Date: January 15, 2011

Match: South Africa v India, 2nd ODI, India tour to South Africa

Venue: Johannesberg
 
Result: India 190 (Yuvraj 53, Dhoni 38, Tsotsobe 4-22) beat South Africa 189 (Smith 77, Munaf 4-29) by one run

Synopsis: Low-scoring matches are often the most exciting, and this was an edge-of-your-seat thriller. It didn't look that way when South Africa were 119 for three after 24 overs, seemingly cruising to their target of 191. It took a couple of dreadful shots to start the rot, and once the innings had become infected, it was incurable.

Duminy slogged the part-time off-spinner Rohit Sharma to long-on, and Smith had his off stump knocked back eight overs later for what had been a stabilising 77, during which he passed 6,000 runs in one-day internationals.

Nonetheless, South Africa were still favourites with 39 required, five wickets in hand and far more overs than were necessary. Even after Zaheer Khan removed Miller and Botha in the space of five balls, only 14 runs were eventually needed to win with three wickets left. But Steyn ran himself out, and Morkel and Parnell were both caught at point cutting Munaf Patel, who was mobbed by his team-mates and picked up the match award.

 His final two wicket-taking deliveries were both nervous military-medium long-hops: such is the margin between success and failure. Tendulkar tweaked a hamstring during his innings, and returned home as a precautionary measure ahead of the World Cup.


'The birth of the chokers'



Date: May 17, 1999

Match: Australia v South Africa, 2nd semi final, ICC World Cup 1999

Venue: Edgbaston, Birmingham
 
Result: Match Tied- Australia 213 all out (Bevan 65, Donald 4-32) South Africa 213 all out (Kallis 53, Warne 4-29), Australia qualifies to the final on better net run-rate

Synopsis: This was not merely the match of the tournament: it must have been the best one-day international of the 1,483 so far played. The essence of the one-day game is a close finish, and this was by far the most significant to finish in the closest way of all - with both teams all out for the same score. But it was a compressed epic all the way through, and it ended in a savage twist. The tie meant that South Africa, for the third World Cup in a row, failed to reach the final despite making much of the early running. The crucial fact was that Australia finished higher than them in the Super Six table, and that was determined by the obscurity of net run-rate. Many spectators were left baffled.

Klusener's brawn had powered South Africa to the brink of the final but, when he got there, his brain short-circuited. Only he could have smashed and grabbed 31 runs off 14 balls, cutting a daunting target down to a doddle: one needed off four balls, Klusener himself on strike, and a decent, experienced tailender at the other end in Donald. The bowler, Fleming, had only one thing going for him: he had bowled the final over that beat West Indies in the 1996 World Cup semi-final. Having let Klusener pummel consecutive fours to level the scores, he tightened up. Steve Waugh, knowing a tie would be enough, set a field that gave new meaning to the phrase a ring saving one. 

Klusener thumped the ball straight, and Donald, backing up too far, would have been run out if Lehmann had hit the stumps. The scare should have been a warning. But Klusener then repeated his straight biff and charged. Donald grounded his bat, dropped it, and finally set off, while the Australians were demonstrating the benefits of a recent visit to a bowling alley: Mark Waugh, at mid-on, flicked the ball to Fleming, who rolled it to Gilchrist, who broke the wicket, and South African hearts. 

The rest of the match was studded with outstanding performances. When Australia batted, Pollock, finally finding the edge, was magnificently incisive. Donald twice took two wickets in an over. Steve Waugh and Bevan performed a repair job which showed first self-control, then controlled aggression. Kallis, carrying a stomach injury, bowled fast and tight, and held the batting together with a cool fifty. Above all, there was Shane Warne. The ball that bowled Gibbs was a miraculous replay of his most famous delivery, to Mike Gatting six years earlier. His first spell of eight overs went for only 12 runs. He pocketed three more wickets, and the match award. The game was the last as South Africa's coach for Bob Woolmer, whose blend of science and imagination had produced a 73 per cent success rate in one-day internationals. He deserved better than to go out on a technicality.


'4 on 4 - Malinga strikes!'



Date: March 28, 2007

Match: South Africa v Sri Lanka, Super Eights, ICC World Cup 2007

Venue: Guyana
 
Result: 48.2 overs South Africa 212 for 9 (Kallis 86, Smith 59, Malinga 4-54) beat Sri Lanka 209 (Dilshan 58, Arnold 50, Langeveldt 5-39) by one wicket

Synopsis: An extraordinary spell of fast bowling from Lasith Malinga, where he strung together a devastating sequence of four wickets in four balls, threatened to produce the greatest one-day heist before South Africa scrambled to a dramatic one-wicket victory in a heart-stopping Super Eights clash in Guyana.
South Africa needed a meagre four runs to win with five wickets in hand when Malinga finished batsmen as if swatting flies. He fooled Shaun Pollock with a beauty of a slower ball before hurrying Andrew Hall with a juddering yorker that looped up to cover. The first ball of the next over produced the hat-trick, the fifth in World Cups, when the set Jacques Kallis nicked to the wicketkeeper before a brute of a yorker zoomed past Makhaya Ntini.

No bowler in one-day history has managed four in four - Saqlain Mushtaq has managed four in five - and Malinga took Sri Lanka to the brink of an outrageous day-light robbery. Robin Peterson and Charl Langeveldt survived a nervy 11 deliveries before a thick outside edge flew off Peterson's bat to seal the deal. South Africa have laughed off the tag of 'chokers' but they were a hairsbreadth away from out-doing their previous stumblings. Sri Lanka made far too many mistakes but the fact that they got so close was a testament to their depth and variety.

Malinga's burst overshadowed the first five-wicket haul of the tournament - Langeveldt's 5 for 39 which restricted Sri Lanka. South Africa had adjusted smartly to the slow, spongy pitch at the brand new Providence Stadium. The conditions were far removed from St Kitts, where South Africa were based during the first round. At Providence, the ground was much larger, the pitch slower, and batsmen relied on nudges rather than lofts. The conditions should have suited Sri Lanka but poor shot selection from the top order and reckless slogs from the tail pegged them back. South Africa's seamers, led by the skiddy Langeveldt, turned in an efficient performance under gloomy skies before Graeme Smith and Kallis steered the run-chase with contrasting half-centuries.

Sri Lanka came desperately close and will no doubt rue the missed half-chances: two tough catches off Kallis went to ground, once when he was on six and another on 75, when Malinga fluffed a low return catch. Strange as it may sound, Malinga was the most erratic bowler on the day, conceding close to six an over, and missed two direct hits as well. Mahela Jayawardene's decision at the toss probably backfired - the sun was out later in the afternoon and the pitch somewhat eased up - but his decision to hold back Muralitharan, and then not keep more fielders in the ring during the final stages, were critical to the outcome. His decision to delay the third Powerplay till the 44th over nearly came off but that was only owing to Malinga's unexpected spell.



'Sharjah turns green!'




Date: March 15, 1999

Match: Pakistan v Sri Lanka, 3rd match, Coca-Cola Champions Trophy

Venue: Sharjah
 
Result: Match Tied- Pakistan 196 all out (Youhana 48, Muralitharan 2-22) Sri Lanka 196 all out (Kaluwitharna 75, Razzaq 5-31)

Synopsis: In an astonishing nine-ball spell, Abdur Razzaq took four for nought to snatch a tie from what seemed a certain Sri Lankan victory. At one stage, they needed just 24 from ten overs with eight wickets remaining. 

But when Razzaq returned to bowl three of the last five overs, the Sri Lankan collapse had already started. Even so, with 14 required from 30 balls and five wickets left, they still looked safe. Razzaq, whose previous seven overs had gone for 28, conceded three runs (two were overthrows) to tilt matters further Sri Lanka's way. 

Then he sliced through the lower order with unplayable reverse swing, hitting the stumps three times to complete a career-best five for 31. Earlier, the Pakistan batsmen never fully coped with a turning ball, though at 131 for two they would have hoped for a larger total. 

For Sri Lanka, Kaluwitharana and Arnold put on 115 for the second wicket to manoeuvre them into an ostensibly impregnable position. It was the 16th tie in 1,514 one-day internationals.




'A cricketing classic in Oceania'



Date: February 27, 2007

Match: New Zealand v Australia, 3rd ODI, Chappell-Hadlee Trophy

Venue: Hamilton
 
Result: New Zealand 350 for 9 (McMillan 117, McCullum 86*, Fulton 51) beat Australia 346 for 5 (Hayden 181*, Watson 68) by 1 wicket

Synopsis: Craig McMillan and Brendon McCullum blasted New Zealand to another massive run-chase as they negated Matthew Hayden's 181 and inflicted a cleansweep on Australia at Hamilton. The home team flew to 350 with only one wicket to spare on the back of McMillan's 117 and his 165-run partnership with McCullum. 

Their second-innings 340 at Auckland on Sunday - which was the second-highest chase in ODI history - was bettered again as McMillan showed contempt for the Australia attack despite coming to the crease at 4 for 41. He brought up his first limited-overs century since 2002 with two consecutive sixes off Adam Voges' left-arm orthodox spin, reaching the milestone from only 67 balls, which was the fastest by a New Zealander. 

It was the first three-game whitewash Australia had suffered since their tour of England in 1997 and continued Michael Hussey's poor record - four losses from four games - as stand-in captain.




'Fight back of the decade'



Date: November 3, 2010

Match: Australia v Sri Lanka, 1st ODI, Sri Lanka tour to Australia

Venue: Melbourne
 
Result: Sri Lanka 9 for 243 (Mathews 77*, Malinga 56, Doherty 4-46) beat Australia 8 for 239 (Hussey 71*, Perera 5-46) by 1 wicket

Synopsis: Angelo Mathews and Lasith Malinga produced one of the great one-day international fightbacks to clinch an improbable victory for Sri Lanka, extending Australia's losing streak to six international games since July. The visitors seemed destined for a humiliating loss when they crashed to 8 for 107 chasing 240, but Mathews and Malinga kept fighting, spurred on by noisy support from a crowd dominated by Sri Lankan fans.

They compiled the highest ninth-wicket partnership in ODI history, beating a 27-year-old record set by Kapil Dev and Syed Kirmani at the 1983 World Cup, and the 132-run stand left Australia's confidence in tatters. Malinga belted his way to his first one-day half-century and Mathews played the guiding hand with a wonderful unbeaten 77 as the pair raced towards their target with plenty of time to spare.

They had a scare when Malinga was run out with the scores level, trying for the winning single to cover, but Muttiah Muralitharan finished the job with a flick off his pads for four to fine leg off Shane Watson. It will be Muralitharan's final international act at the MCG, where he was called for throwing 15 years ago, but this time there was nothing but roaring applause. 



'The Greatest match of all times'



Date: March 12, 2006

Match: South Africa v Australia, 5th ODI, Australia tour to South Africa

Venue: Johannesburg
 
Result: 49.5 overs South Africa 438 for 9 (Gibbs 175, Smith 90, Boucher 50*) beat Australia 434 for 4 (Ponting 164, Hussey 81, Katich 79) by one wicket

Synopsis: Seven years ago, in the semi-final of the 1999 World Cup, South Africa and Australia contested what has widely come to be regarded as the definitive one-day international. A total of 426 runs in two innings, twenty wickets in the day and world-class performances across the board - a match that built to a pulsating finale in which South Africa threw away their place in the World Cup final with what also came to be regarded as the definitive one-day choke. 

The 2,349th one-day international was, quite simply, a match that surpassed all the other 2,348. On perhaps the best batting surface ever prepared in South Africa, Australia became the first team to sail past 400. And lost. With a ball to spare, Mark Boucher hit Brett Lee to the long-on boundary, giving South Africa the match and the series. This took the match aggregate to 872, increasing the old record of 693 by a quarter. 

There were extraordinary innings from both No. 3s, Ponting and Gibbs. In a blur of outrageous shots, neither needed more than 100 balls to reach 150. Records cascaded almost as fast as runs: highest (and second-highest) total; fastest (and second-fastest) international 150; most expensive bowling figures; most runs in boundaries... and many more. 

It was no day to be a bowler, though Bracken produced some very good deliveries and managed to take five wickets. Tales of disaster were more common. After eight overs, Telemachus had the respectable figures of one for 47 (and the game's only maiden). But brought back at the end, he bowled four consecutive no-balls in a ten-ball over costing 28 - though it did contain Ponting's wicket. His figures ultimately read 10-1-87-2. Yet Telemachus had a good day compared to Lewis, whose journey from Durban hero to Johannesburg zero could not have been starker. Less than 48 hours after hitting the winning runs at Kingsmead, he became the first person to concede 100 runs in a 50-over one-day international. (Martin Snedden conceded 105 in 12 overs for New Zealand against England in the 1983 World Cup.) Lewis's reputation for bowling yorkers at the death was left in tatters.

The barrage of runs was incessant from the start. Gilchrist walloped 55 from 44 balls, and Katich, in theory Australia's anchor, hit 79 from 90. And even when Ponting and Hussey were together and the score a meteoric 301 for two after 40 overs, they kept on pushing into the unknown, refusing to back off though they must have believed the game won. Oddly, the scale of the South Africans' task set them free. In the interval, Kallis had broken the ice in a sombre dressing-room with the words "Come on, guys: it's a 450-wicket. They're 15 short!" As Smith and Gibbs admitted afterwards, it allowed the team to have a "little chuckle" before the reply, and the pair played with an abandon inspired by their sense of the absurd. The coach, Mickey Arthur, remained pragmatic, setting an initial target of 185 from 25 overs. The score was actually 229 for two.

Swinging his bat like a battleaxe, Smith zoomed to 90 from only 55 balls, including 13 fours and two sixes, even outscoring the flying Gibbs. South Africa's most serious wobble came in the 43rd over when, still needing 80, they lost their sixth wicket. But van der Wath launched three sixes in five balls to keep the fantasy alive. 

With the last pair in and two needed from three balls, Lee bowled a near-perfect yorker to Ntini. However, instead of his usual swish, he calmly steered the ball to third man for a single. Scores level. And then Boucher hit the next ball for four, completing one of his finest fifties - and the most phenomenal of games. South Africa had won the series. And how.


No comments:

Post a Comment