Date-stamped : 23 Aug2000 - 10:23
16 February 1996
2nd ODI: South Africa v UAE, Match Report
Peter Deeley
World Cup: Kirsten`s record haul an illustration of gulf between
the teams
South Africa (321-2) beat UAE (152-8) by 169 runs
Gary Kirsten blazed his way into the World Cup record book here
yesterday, courtesy of a feeble attack. He overtook Viv Richards`s
record competition innings but failed, by one run, to equal the West
Indian`s other milestone, the highest individual international total.
Kirsten, batting through South Africa`s innings, was 188 not out at
the end, off 159 balls, hitting four sixes and 13 boundaries -
sufficient to see off United Arab Emirates single-handed.
The Gulf side reached 152 for eight, losing by 169, but the game was
so one-sided that, when UAE reached 72 for eight after 28 overs, the
contest was already dead.
Richards hit 181 against Sri Lanka in the 1987 World Cup in Kara- chi
and his 189 against England at Old Trafford in 1984 remained
tantalisingly out of reach of the South African left- hander.Kirsten`s
first fifty took 51 balls, the second 54 and the third 29. He overtook
Richards`s competition high off the first ball of the final over but
then only managed two twos, with the field spread, off the final two
deliveries. Kirsten said he knew nothing about the World Cup record
until he heard his partner, Daryll Cullinan, talking about it with an
umpire. "Then, when I came off, I discovered I had missed Viv`s other
record by one run." Kirsten gave one chance - on 118 - when he skied
to square leg - but UAE captain Sultan Zarawani was slow off the mark
and did not get under the ball. The only real threat to Kirsten`s
progress was fatigue and, as the South African is the fleetest man in
the side and a long distance runner, his three-and-a- half-hour
innings was probably the equivalent of only a half marathon. If
England do not beat UAE by something approaching the length of Oxford
Street tomorrow in Peshawar, they should seri- ously consider packing
their bags and returning home.
Extending the competition to 12 countries may broaden cricket`s
horizons but it is going to throw up some terribly unequal con- tests:
apart from the medium-fast Johanne Samarasekera, who bowled steadily,
forcing Andrew Hudson to play on and conceding only 39 runs in his
nine overs, the rest of the attack was scarcely club standard. The
four slow bowlers persisted in trying to flight the ball but their
length was awry and each went for around six an over. Zarawani did
lure Hansie Cronje down the pitch for a stumping but the South African
captain admitted he had played "a cow of a shot". Allan Donald`s pace
and Brian McMillan`s accuracy destroyed the UAE batting and their
naivety was illustrated when Zarawani came in wearing a sun hat with
Donald at his fastest. The fast bowler immediately bounced the UAE
captain. Zarawani was struck on the temple and staggered away, the
hat almost falling on the stumps, but he gathered him- self and
carried on as if nothing had happened.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (http.//www.telegraph.co.uk)
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