KIWIS BAT BRILLIANTLY
New Zealand versus South Africa in the third one day
international
Sunday, 29 October, 2000
Article: Mathew
Loh
AFTER what seemed an eternity of consistent poor performances, the Black Caps top order has finally struck form to set South Africa a formidable target of 288 runs to win the third one day international in Kimberly.
After
winning the toss New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming elected
to bat and the feisty pairing of Wellingtonian Chris Nevin
and Nathan Astle strode to the crease aiming to get the
Black Caps off to a positive start.
And while Astle
was bowled for 5 in the fifth over Nevin more than lived up
to expectations with a scintillating knock which saw him hit
nine boundaries in a wonderful innings of 68 runs in only 69
balls.
With Nevin running roughshod over South African
bowlers, especially world-class paceman Alan Donald who was
basically smashed out of the attack, Fleming was able to
settle in at first drop to build the innings New Zealand
fans have been crying out for him to deliver.
Fleming,
in-form is elegance personified and pundits all agree he has
the talent to be rated among the world's elite batsmen,
however, the tall left-hander has been bedeviled by
inconsistency of such magnitude that some commentators were
beginning to question his worth.
Those questions were
answered in fine fashion with a flashing bat last night as
Fleming gradually upped the tempo, as he supported Nevin,
with some glorious stroke-play.
Then when Nevin was
bowled by the impressive Nicly Boje Fleming assumed the role
of senior partner as he and Roger Twose continued to plunder
a South African attack that rated among the best in world
cricket.
Such was Fleming's dominance that a century
seemed imminent but it was not to be as he run out for 85 in
an effort that as well as ensuring the Black Caps were
powerfully placed, must surely have gone a long way to
silencing his critics.
Twose continued his recent form
and with Fleming gone he maintained the run-rate, - with
Chris Cairns 21 and Chris Harris 11 not-out - and came
agonisingly close to notching his first one day century by
recording a fabulous 90 runs of 91 balls before clubbing a
full toss to Shaun Pollack off the bowling of Jacques
Kallis.
Nevin's wonderful opening spell and the superb
stroke-play of Fleming and Twose vindicated the Kiwi
skippers choice to bat first and South Africa will have to
play to their world-beating best to reach the 288 required
for victory.