SA’s Rassie and Andile seize day

SA's Andile Phehlukwayo during the 2nd momentum One Day International match against Pakistan at the Sahara Stadium Kingsmead in Durban on Tuesday.
SA's Andile Phehlukwayo during the 2nd momentum One Day International match against Pakistan at the Sahara Stadium Kingsmead in Durban on Tuesday.
Image: Anesh Debik/ Gallo Images

In the end, South Africa’s fivewicket win against Pakistan in the second ODI at Kingsmead looked comfortable, and indeed it was. However, it was anything but that.

Chasing 204 should have been easy, but when SA were reduced to 80/5, it looked like Pakistan would collect another win at one of their favourite grounds.

Rassie van der Dussen (80*) and Andile Phehlukwayo (69*) would have none of it, though.

Their cool, calm and collected Kingsmead record sixthwicket unbeaten stand of 127 kept the hosts alive in the fivematch series.

After all, they had Pakistan back in the game to score 203 in 45.5 overs after they had them pinned down at 112/8 after 32 overs.

When Hashim Amla (eight) punched two boundaries off two Shaheen Afridi (3/44) deliveries, it looked like the hosts would have the measure of a modest chase.

But the 18-year-old left-arm seamer had the last laugh with a wicked inswinger that disturbed Amla’s stumps.

That wicket saw Afridi go on a spell where he took a wicket in each of his first three overs.

In his next over, he had Reeza Hendricks (five) chasing a wide one into Sarfraz Ahmed’s gloves and in Afridi’s next over, captain Faf du Plessis (eight) fell to the Afridi/Ahmed combination.

SA were 29/3 after six overs and in danger of bottling the chase but the threat posed by Afridi was unique.

While SA bowled well, Afridi was the only bowler who got the ball to move in the air.

It was a challenge that was too great for the other batters but not for Van der Dussen and David Miller (31), who staged an admirable repair job with a fourth-wicket stand of 51 off 53 balls.

Shadab Khan’s (2/46) first over ended Miller’s budding innings when he coaxed the southpaw into a chip that was well caught by Imam-ulHaq at short mid-wicket.

Heinrich Klaasen was out the very next ball when he misread a Khan googly and 80/3 suddenly became 80/5.

Van der Dussen batted with the maturity of a seasoned veteran and, with the level-headed Phehlukwayo, weathered an excellent bowling storm.

Their steady stand drew the sting from Pakistan’s bowling but their bowlers also gave them a chance.

Van der Dussen collected a second successive 50 off 81 balls while Phehlukwayo’s came off just 54 deliveries.

They displayed the necessary patience that took a difficult surface out of the equation.

The variable nature of South Africa’s international coastal surfaces again came to the fore as Pakistan struggled to adapt to a two-paced and slow pitch.

Chasing the series after the deflating first ODI loss in Port Elizabeth, Du Plessis won the toss and gave Pakistan first use of the pitch.

While there was the general slowness that is part and parcel of latter-day Kingsmead surfaces, the spongy bounce has not disappeared.

It accounted for the top three of Imam (five), Fakhar Zaman (26) and Babar Azam (12).

Imam and Babar were snared by two different Kagiso Rabada (2/35) bouncers that were caught by Phehlukwayo (4/22) at varying square-leg positions.

Imam was beaten for pace by a surprise steepler while Babar was deceived by a lack of pace on a slower bumper.

Zaman reined in his attacking instincts but was defeated by a Duanne Olivier (1/51) bouncer that cramped him for room and he could only fend the fierce delivery to David at gully.

Mohammad Hafeez (nine) was snared in a well-set short mid-wicket trap by Du Plessis off Phehlukwayo as the third and fourth wickets fell on 58.

Khan (18) and Hussain Talat (two) tried to inch the score along to 100 but they fell to Tabraiz Shamsi (3/56) within four overs of each other to leave Pakistan tottering at 92/6 at the halfway mark.

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