West Indies 266 for 9 (Samuels 68, Russell 64*, Sammy 51, Behardien 2-21) beat South Africa 262 for 8 (Miller 130*, Holder 4-53) by one wicket
At last it was competitive. After three one-sided matches in a series
that was decided before this game began, there was a thriller in Port
Elizabeth as Andre Russell carried West Indies over the line for a one-wicket victory.
It provided Jason Holder his first victory in charge of West Indies' and
it came in a manner he will not forget. His attack restricted South
Africa to a reasonable score by getting into their middle-order early
and then cancelled out David Miller's maiden ODI century with fifties from Marlon Samuels, Darren Sammy and Russell, who held his nerve when the pressure could have reached breaking point at the end.
Russell scored 64 off 40 deliveries, including three sixes off his last
eight balls with No. 11 Sheldon Cottrell for company, and settled nerves
which would have started to jangled from the third ball of the innings
when Dwayne Smith was bowled by a full, fast Morne Morkel delivery. He
needed a touch of fortune, though, when he was dropped at slip on 40 by
AB de Villiers in the 47th over and five balls later he was saved by the
DRS after being given caught behind when Snicko confirmed there was no
edge.
That West Indies found themselves on the brink of victory was thanks to
Samuels' patience, Sammy's determination and South Africa's slew of
freebies after they had slipped to 73 for 5. With three-quarters of
their frontline atrack rested, they sent down 14 wides and a no-ball
which left de Villiers baffled over their ill-discipline.
What de Villiers was more sure about was how to manage his bowlers. He
used them in short spells and made some inspired bowing changes,
including bringing on JP Duminy on in the Powerplay, which resulted in
the wicket of Chris Gayle first ball, and Farhaan Behardien in the 16th
over. Behardien found a hint of movement and trapped Denesh Ramdin lbw
to leave West Indies teetering on 48 for 4.
Samuels watched the early carnage with a patience he had not shown
earlier in the series. Instead of attacking the spinner, this time Aaron
Phangiso not Imran Tahir, immediately, he hung back. That proved a wise
decision as he witnessed the run-outs of both Leon Johnson and Jonathan
Carter while he was at the crease and only really began to chip away at
the target once joined by Sammy.
The pair seemed to understand each other better, rotated strike without
risk and took boundaries when Kyle Abbott and Wayne Parnell missed their
lines. Their 93-run sixth-wicket stand saw Samuels reach fifty off 70
balls and Sammy off 47. The former captain was the more aggressive and
it cost him when he tried to send Parnell over cover but was caught by a
backpedalling de Villiers.
Sammy was replaced by the equally forceful Russell, who picked up where
Sammy left off albeit in slightly more difficult circumstances. Although
South Africa's bowling made run scoring easier, especially as Morkel's
later spell were expensive, West Indies lost Samuels, Jason Holder and
Carlos Brathwaite as Russell seemed destined to run out of partners.
However, he just kept hitting though and took West Indies from needing
43 off the last six overs to seven off the last two and victory with
nine balls to spare.
South Africa may have known their total was slightly below par when they
needed Miller to smack 30 runs off the last 11 deliveries he faced to
propel them over 250, after he fought out a century in 122 balls. Miller
had support from Duminy through the early part of his innings and the
pair shared a fifth-wicket partnership of 90 but he lacked any other
significant partner. Parnell contributed 12 runs in a seventh-wicket
stand of 63 but South Africa needed more after their top order -
missing Hashim Amla - was removed relatively cheaply.
Cottrell and Holder had South Africa stuttering at 32 for 3 thanks to a
trio of sharp catches behind the batsmen to leave de Villiers with a big
job. He was out for just 19, after being dropped on 6 by Sammy in his
follow through, which meant South Africa were tested in one of the areas
of their game which remains a concern ahead of the World Cup.
While Miller has proved he has both the temperament and technique to be
more than just a big-hitting finisher, the underbelly remains fairly
soft, especially against a disciplined attack. Holder, Sammy, Russell
and Brathwaite stuck to tight lines and gave South Africa very little -
just 86 runs in the 20 overs between 15 and 35 and only 22 runs in the
Powerplay, which frustrated them.
South Africa were unable to cause a similar squeeze, despite Phangiso's
best efforts. Abbott, Parnell and Phangiso do not inspire the same
confidence as Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander and Tahir, especially on
surfaces which require more subtle skills and were batsmen are willing
to apply themselves, but that is what South Africa need to find out
before the World Cup. West Indies just needed a morale-boosting win and
that is exactly what they got.
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