Weekend Herald

Black Caps aiming to knock over another No 1

One- day internatio­nal series against well- balanced South Africa promises mouthwater­ing action this summer

- Cricket David Leggat Limited- overs squad: Feb 17: Feb 19: Feb 22: March 25- 29:

First New Zealand topple the world’s No 1 ODI team — now they can do it again.

Confused? Don’t be. Australia are cricket’s top- ranked one- day team and New Zealand beat them 2- 1 in the return Chappell- Hadlee series last weekend.

When South Africa arrive for the marquee event of the New Zealand summer they will have taken over the top spot, providing they have beaten Sri Lanka overnight at Centurion to complete a 5- 0 sweep.

New Zealand are ranked third, so talk about a mouth- watering prospect in the first segment of the seven- week tour which starts at Eden Park with a solitary T20 game.

While New Zealand have a home ODI record to chirp about — 26 wins, four losses in their last 30 completed matches — South Africa are no slugs either. A win overnight would give them 11 successive victories at home.

They are a formidable ODI team, a blend of powerful batting and lively, varied bowling. For both teams this tour will be about advancing their preparatio­ns for the Champions Trophy, which starts in England on June 1.

South Africa’s memories of their last game in New Zealand will be the sort you’d love to forget, but can’t.

The World Cup semifinal at Eden Park, March 24, 2015 in case you’d forgotten, is the greatest ODI win in New Zealand’s short- form history.

Grant Elliott’s thumping six off the penultimat­e ball from pace kingpin Dale Steyn, the whoops of delight from one side; tears of despair from the other played out to the most sustained roar of approval from the packed house you could imagine.

No player took the outcome harder than South Africa’s batting champion AB de Villiers. He was a shattered man.

De Villiers opted out of the test game for much of this year — his last three test innings were ducks against England last January — but he leads the one- day operation, averages 53.93 with 24 centuries and i s ranked second in ODI cricket.

“Playing three different formats, with the schedule the way it is, all of a sudden felt like the world is on top of my shoulders,” de Villiers said.

“And that’s when I felt like I need to start prioritisi­ng what I want to

ABde Villiers ( c), Faf du Plessis, Hashim Amla, Farhaan Behardien, Quinton de Kock, JP Duminy, Imran Tahir, David Miller, Chris Morris, Wayne Parnell, Dane Paterson, Andile Phehlukway­o, Dwaine Pretorius, Kagiso Rabada, Tabraiz Shamsi T20 warm- up game, Eden Park, 2pm Only T20 , Eden Park, 7pm First ODI, Hamilton, 2pm Second ODI, Christchur­ch, Third ODI, Wellington, 2pm Fourth ODI, Napier, 2pm Fifth ODI, Eden Park, 2pm First test, Dunedin Second test, achieve in my career, where I want to go and what I feel motivated about.”

Throw in the vastly experience­d and high class Hashim Amla ( world No 7), hard- headed test captain Faf du Plessis ( No 11), explosive lefthand wicketkeep­er Quinton de Kock ( No 4), thunderous hitter David Miller and versatile JP Duminy, and South Africa have batting talent in abundance. The bowling is a different story. No Steyn, who broke a shoulder in Australia before Christmas; no Morne Morkel, also getting fully fit again, no Vernon Philander for the one- day leg of the tour, and South Africa are lean in one of their traditiona­l areas of strength. But in Kagiso Rabada they have a young man who touches 150km/ h, and has a mean streak to his bowling. Ageless legspinner Imran Tahir — 120 wickets at 22.92 — i s a bouncy livewire.

There are high hopes for new faces Andile Phehlukway­o and Dwaine Pretorius but if New Zealand are drilling deep into the South African squad, they may figure there i s an opening if their batsmen are good enough to take advantage.

The overriding impression, though, is that this shapes as a ripping ODI contest between two teams in decent form.

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