Business Day

Bavuma stands tall with debut century

Proteas brush Ireland aside in lopsided win

- KHANYISO TSHWAKU

TEMBA Bavuma may be slight in stature and minimal on talk, but when he lets his bat do the talking, which was the case at Willowmoor­e Park, his runs speak volumes.

His 123-ball 113 underpinne­d SA’s lopsided 206-run over Ireland after the hosts scored an impressive 354/5 in their 50 overs.

Ireland could muster only 148 runs in 30.5 overs as the spin duo of Aaron Phangiso (2/33) and JP Duminy (4/16) applied the brakes impressive­ly.

The fact that Duminy’s serviceabl­e offspinner­s collected easy wickets was an indication of the gulf between the sides. While the total itself looked easy enough, SA’s fast start allowed the middle order to put their feet up and have a platform to work with.

The signs were already ominous for Ireland when debutant Bavuma and Quinton de Kock motored to 69/0 in the first 10 overs.

Whatever advantage Ireland thought they had by winning the toss and bowling first evaporated in the early morning heat.

Bavuma and De Kock, former teammates at the Highveld Lions before the latter moved up the N1 to the Titans, complement­ed each other well. While they matched each other pound for pound when it came to boundary hitting, it was their liberal use of the single that did not allow Ireland to exert any sort of pressure.

De Kock should have converted his seventh one-day fifty into his 11th century but had to settle for a 66-ball 82 after he chopped on a Kevin O’Brien slower ball in the 24th over. Their 159-run opening associatio­n was a ground record, breaking the 158 Graeme Smith and Herschelle Gibbs put together in 2002.

With eyes firmly on the diminutive Bavuma, the impressive batting moved along swimmingly after he received lives on six and 63 to register his ton off 111 balls with 12 fours and one six.

When he holed out to Stuart Poynter at point off Craig Young, there was a feeling that he might have given his innings away, especially with the customary middleorde­r mini collapse that is associated with the Proteas.

Faf du Plessis (21) and David Miller (16) missed out on easy runs before Duminy and Farhaan Behardien plundered 87 runs in 6.4 overs. The latter raced to a 22-ball fifty (3x4, 3x6) while Duminy’s 43ball effort was a more sedate one.

The late-overs pummelling knocked the stuffing out of the visitors and only O’Brien (40) and the chunky Paul Stirling (41) offered any meaningful resistance.

Only three other batsmen passed 10 as the Irish accelerate­d their demise by swiping across the line to the spinners on a surface that slowed by the hour.

A 350-plus chase was never going to be easy and when Ireland lost captain William Porterfiel­d second ball to Kagiso Rabada, the writing was on the wall.

A partnershi­p of substance never developed even though Stirling and O’Brien found time to muscle 11 boundaries between them in their respective innings.

The highest stand was the 36run partnershi­p between Stirling and O’Brien. However, that stand only took root after Gary Wilson Q de Kock b O’Brien ....................... 82 T Bavuma c Poynter b Young ........ 113 F du Plessis c Porterfiel­d b Young ...21 J Duminy not out ............................ 52 D Miller c Wilson b O’Brien .............. 14 F Behardien c Porterfiel­d b Young ..50

(lb9 nb1 w12) ...................... 22 (for five, 50 overs) ............... 354 1-159 (De Kock), 2-221 (Du Plessis), 3-227 (Bavuma), 4-267 (Miller), 5-354 (Behardien)

Young 10-0-81-3 (3w), Chase 10-0-86-0 (1nb, 4w), Murtagh 10-056-0, Dockrell 10-0-55-0 (1w), O’Brien 10-0-66-2 (3w)

D Pretorius, W Parnell, A Phehlukway­o, K Rabada, A Phangiso gifted Dwaine Pretorius his first ODI wicket when he feathered through to De Kock to leave the Irish stranded at 41/3 after 10 overs. There was never going to be a way back from there.

Ireland were without experience­d batsman Niall O’Brien, who slipped in his hotel bathroom on Sunday morning and suffered a head injury.

They will play Australia at the same venue on Tuesday before SA meet Australia in five one-day internatio­nals, starting at Centurion on Friday.

The South African team included three new caps. Bavuma, establishe­d as a middle-order batsman in the Test side, was given his chance as an opener in the absence of Hashim Amla. All-rounders Andile Phehlukway­o and Dwaine Pretorius were newcomers to internatio­nal cricket. With AFP

 ?? Picture: LEE WARREN/GALLO IMAGES ?? LITTLE MAN, BIG RUNS: Temba Bavuma celebrates his century against Ireland on Sunday. It was the South African batsman’s one-day internatio­nal debut.
Picture: LEE WARREN/GALLO IMAGES LITTLE MAN, BIG RUNS: Temba Bavuma celebrates his century against Ireland on Sunday. It was the South African batsman’s one-day internatio­nal debut.

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