Cape Argus

Proteas aim for whitewash

It’s a series in which we are trying to get the whole squad playing, says De Villiers

- Stuart Hess

APACKED Wanderers came for AB de Villiers on Saturday night, but then got a ton of bees instead.

Fortunatel­y no-one got stung, except the Sri Lankans, for whom this tour of South Africa can’t end quickly enough. Unfortunat­ely for them there’s still two more ODI’s left and with South Africa motivated to chase a second consecutiv­e ODI series whitewash, there’ll be no letting up from the hosts.

Niroshan Dickwella, Sri Lanka’s confident opener, who top scored with 74 at the weekend, tried to put a brave face on their troubles, saying they’ve learned a lot. But they also have the look of a punch-drunk group at the moment, and the confidence of some of their young talented batsmen, like Kusal Mendis and Dhananjaya de Silva, not to mention the experience­d Dinesh Chandimal, have taken a hit.

South Africa played well on Saturday night on a pitch De Villiers said was slightly more challengin­g than he had assumed when sending the tourists into bat. Neverthele­ss a patient approach with the new ball and some magnificen­t catching ensured the home side’s batsmen didn’t need to break a sweat in the pursuit.

The Proteas overhauled the Sri Lankan target of 164 with 18 overs still to spare. “I would have batted first if I could have it all over again,” said De Villiers, who finished unbeaten on 60. “I thought the wicket was quite tough. Thank goodness we bowled them out before 40 overs ... 250 would have been a very difficult total to chase. It’s a series win and we’re all very happy.”

Saturday’s victory stretched the Proteas’ unbeaten record in ODIs on home soil to 12, a remarkable show of consistenc­y for a side that was without De Villiers in October when it thrashed Australia and has been experiment­ing with personnel with an eye on the Champions Trophy later in the year. One such test was calling up Dwaine Pretorius to the starting side on Saturday for Wayne Parnell.

“It’s a series in which we are trying to get the whole squad playing. I thought Wayne did a fantastic job in the first two ODIs … (but) it’s Dwaine’s hometown. We just wanted to give him a go, build some confidence and it worked out really well. Hopefully we’ll see more in Cape Town and Centurion,” De Villiers said.

Pretorius walked away with the manof-the-match award for his figures of 3/19 and two catches and relished the experience of playing in front a packed “Bullring”. The key to his success was not to offer the Sri Lankan batsmen any width: “I just tried to keep it tight and tried to hit the top of the stumps,” Pretorius said.

De Villiers praised Pretorius’ discipline and willingnes­s to listen.

“He’s pretty accurate, he’s consistent with his areas and he’s open to advice from some of the senior guys and I like to work with bowlers like that, who want to chat. He’s happy to use the short ball when the time is right. He’s got this knack of picking up wickets at the right time. He’s done that the last few seasons domestical­ly and today was the same, hopefully that trend continues internatio­nally,” he said.

If South Africa are to continue with the player rotation then left-arm wrist spinner Tabriaz Shamsi will get some game time.

Whoever plays, De Villiers wants them to continue striving to improve the team. “I don’t want to make it the main thing, that we play for whitewashe­s, because that can backfire quickly,” he remarked.

“There’ve been so many 3-2 series’ in the past when we had opportunit­ies to win it 4-1 or 5-0. We try to be clinical in every single game we play to put the emphasis on every game not just trying to win a series.”

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 ??  ?? NO FEAR: Man-of-the-match Dwaine Pretorius relished the experience of playing in front a packed ‘Bullring’ on Saturday.
NO FEAR: Man-of-the-match Dwaine Pretorius relished the experience of playing in front a packed ‘Bullring’ on Saturday.

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