Cardiff: Opener Shikhar Dhawan bludgeoned his way to a maiden ODI
century as a rejuvenated India kicked off their campaign in the ICC
Champions Trophy with a comfortable 26-run victory over South Africa
here on Thursday.
Chasing an imposing target of 332, South Africa were all out for
305. The Proteas lost three top wickets for six runs in the group B
match.
The star of the show was Dhawan, who made 114 of a mere 94 balls to
set the tone for India. The left-hander had scored 185 on his Test
debut against Australia in March.
South Africa, who ran neck-and-neck in terms of runs with India
till at least the 35th over, paid the price for losing far too many
wickets after at least three middle-order batsmen frittered good starts.
India, on the other hand, profited after their openers Dhawan and
Rohit Sharma (65) laid a solid foundation with an opening stand of 127.
This was the biggest difference between victory and defeat. Dhawan was
adjudged Man of the Match.
Robin Peterson`s departure in the 25th over opened the floodgates
as South Africa lost three quick wickets, including the man who had the
calibre to take the game to the wire, skipper A B De Villiers.
Two horrible mix-ups ruined the South African run chase. Peterson,
who survived a run out chance when he was on 29, was not lucky the
second time as a diving Ravindra Jadeja caught him well short after De
Villiers refused to run.
The left-handed Peterson was out for 68 (72 balls, 6 x 4s) and his
124-run third-wicket partnership with De Villiers kept South Africa in
the running even after the Proteas lost openers Hashim Amla (22) and
Colin Ingram (6) to Indian pacers Umesh Yadav (2/75) and Bhuvneshwar
Kumar (2/49), respectively.
Peterson, struck in the elbow by a Yadav delivery when he was on
17, battled pain and stitched a confident stand with his captain till
disaster struck. J P Duminy (LBW to Jadeja for 14) followed Peterson and
then a rush of blood saw De Villiers throw his wicket away after a
polished 70 off 71 balls, his 33rd ODI half-century.
At a time when South Africa needed to protect their wickets, De
Villiers' exit gave India a great advantage. He charged out to Yadav,
tried to slap a short of length ball to mid-wicket but ended up
top-edging to square leg, where Jadeja held an easy catch.
From 182 for four, South Africa collapsed to 188 for six in the
33rd over when David Miller was run out without facing a ball. Faf Du
Plessis flicked Suresh Raina and turned back for a second run but Miller
refused. Ishant had all the time in the world to do the needful from
mid-wicket.
A 50-run seventh wicket stand between Du Plessis and Ryan McLaren
(71 not out off 61 balls, maiden ODI half-century) raised some hopes for
the South Africans but that was not to be. Du Plessis (30 off 23 balls)
holed out to Raina at mid-off off Ishant Sharma (2/66), once again a
reliable batsman paying for indiscretion.
South Africa thus became the first team to lose a match while
chasing a score at Cardiff. All previous seven (completed) ODIs saw the
team batting second emerge victorious. With their third victory in as
many Champions Trophy games, India thus keep their all-win record intact
against the South Africans.
Earlier, Dhawan's century and his opening stand with Sharma helped
India score a commanding 331 for seven. India were put into bat after
skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni lost the toss in an overcast and chilly
morning.
The morning session belonged to Dhawan. He was third out in the
38th over after scoring a well-paced 114, studded with 12 fours and a
six. The only 'life' in his 94-ball innings came immediately after he
scored his century. A B De Villiers missed a stumping chance after the
left-hander stepped out to off-spinner J P Duminy and missed the line.
That blemish apart, Dhawan was the toast of the Indian crowd, almost 70 per cent of the 16000-strong turnout here.
After he got his eye in, the Delhi batsman batted with gay abandon,
often stepping out to find the little gaps in a tight off-side field.
When he was on 45, Dhawan was struck on his helmet after failing to shy
away from a McLaren bouncer.
A cut behind his right ear didn't deter the gutsy batsman, who raced to his second ODI 50 in 44 balls.
Dhawan also featured in a 83-run second wicket partnership with
Virat Kohli (31 off 41 balls) as he held the innings together till he
perished in the 38th over trying to sweep Duminy but only managing to
find substitute Aaron fielder Phangiso at square leg.
Interestingly, in the last six years only two left-handers have
made ODI hundreds against the South Africans. Kumar Sangakkara did it in
Johannesburg in January 2012 and it was Dhawan's turn today.
After a cautious start, Dhawan and Sharma put the South African
pacers to the sword on a Swalec Stadium wicket that had plenty of runs
in it. At the toss, De Villiers said his pace quartet would make up for
the absence of an unfit Dale Steyn. The script did not quite unfold that
way.
India opted to play Sharma as an opener in place of Murali Vijay.
Both batsmen had failed to score in the two warm-up games, but Sharma's
experience and potential as an opener prevailed when it came to picking
the playing XI. Sharma aptly vindicated his skipper's faith.
It was important to respect the South African pacers in the initial
overs. Morne Morkel, who left the field after a groin strain in the
34th over, was the more probing of the two new ball bowlers beating the
edge of the bat a few times. But there was little support from the other
end as left-arm seamer Lonwabo Tsotsobe neither bowled the right line
or length.
Dhawan was the first to open up, stepping out to Tsotsobe and
slamming the first boundary of the innings after being patient for 16
balls. Sharma then fed off the burly left-armer with a four and a six as
India shifted gears to end the first powerplay at 53 for no loss.
With Morkel and Tsotsobe failing to make a dent, De Villiers
unleashed Rory Kleinveldt and McLaren. But the Indian openers were just
too good for them. The skipper's disgust saw a spinner in operation in
the 13th over. Left-arm spinner Peterson was introduced to the attack.
Peterson's first two overs cost 19 runs.
Trying to flick McLaren, Sharma was out caught at the deep
mid-wicket after scoring 65 off 81 balls. The knock contained a six and
eight boundaries. Sharma's 14th ODI half-century will help skipper Dhoni
breathe a little easy as India travel to The Oval in London to play
West Indies next.
McLaren greeted Kohli with a bouncer that struck his visor. But
confidence has been his middle name as the in-form Indian vice-captain
wisely rotated the strike with Dhawan and was happy to play second
fiddle. The first of his two boundaries came after 36 balls, but then he
was out trying to go for a big stroke.
Dhawan's exit saw a mini collapse of sorts as Dinesh Karthik,
promoted to No. 4 was out for 14 and Raina (9) flattered to deceive
after slamming McLaren for a six at mid-wicket. Both Karthik and Raina
fell to McLaren, who was South Africa's best bowler on the day with
figures of 10-0-70-3.
Dhoni, caught at long-on for 27 off 26 balls, and Jadeja (47 off 29
balls) made crucial contributions at the end as India went for
T20-style quick runs in the slog overs. India produced 82 runs in the
last 10 overs with Jadeja the aggressor with seven fours and a six.
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