Cape Argus

Patient Paarl century from Agathangel­ou gives Titans parity in Sunfoil Series clash

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A PATIENT century by opener Andrea Agathangel­ou proved to be the highlight for the visiting Titans, on a tough opening day of their Sunfoil Series match against the Cape Cobras in Paarl, yesterday.

The two sides were separated by just five points going into the penultimat­e round of matches in the competitio­n, and on what is a notoriousl­y slow pitch and with so much at stake, very little quarter was asked or given on day one at Boland Park.

The Titans’ scoring rate barely touched three runs an over all day, but having won the toss and chosen to bat, the visitors would have been keen to both build a big first innings total, and get the pitch worn to assist their two wrist spinners; Shaun von Berg and Tabraiz Shamsi.

By stumps, they’d reached 280/6 thanks mainly to Agathangel­ou’s 11th first-class century, a patient effort that saw him stay at the crease for over four hours and Farhaan Behardien’s as yet unbeaten 56.

It wasn’t the =best start for the Titans, who strangely left out Chris Morris, who scored a century and claimed four wickets in his last match for the franchise, as they lost the wickets of Tony de Zorzi and Heino Kuhn in the first session with just 58 runs on the board.

Heinrich Klaasen, who is captaining the Titans, then shared a crucial stand of 111 for the third wicket with Agathangel­ou as the pair sought to wrestle control their team’s way. Klaasen was caught behind by Cobras wicketkeep­er Kyle Verreynne for 35, the start of a mini-collapse that saw the Titans lose three wickets for 18 runs in seven overs.

One of those was Agathangel­ou who fell for a battling, but critically important, 105 off 190 balls with 19 fours.

Behardien and Shaun von Berg steadied the Titans ship with a partnershi­p of 70 for the sixth wicket securing the Titans a crucial third batting bonus point in the process. Tshepo Moreki was the most successful of the Cobras bowlers, finishing the first day with 2/60 from 23 overs.

Simon Harmer continued his excellent form for the Warriors in East London, where he picked up his fourth "five-for" of the season as the Knights were bowled out for 188 in 59.4 overs.

The off-spinner, who starred last year for English county side Essex when they won the County Championsh­ip, has continued his wicket-taking form since rejoining the Warriors for the four-day competitio­n, and sits atop the wicket-taking charts.

He stretched his lead further taking 5/36 in 19.4 overs as the Warriors, who came into this round of fixtures in first place, assumed control of their match against the defending champion Knights.

Harmer currently stands on 43 wickets which have been taken at an average of 20.67, putting him 14 ahead the Titans’ leg-spinner Von Berg.

The Knights were in trouble early after being asked to bat, losing their first three wickets with just nine runs on the board – and that was before Harmer got into his work.

Patrick Kruger scored 44 for the Knights but it was veteran all-rounder Ryan McLaren’s 73 – and the partnershi­p of 69 he shared for the eighth wicket with Duanne Olivier (34) – which proved crucial in getting the Knights at least a bonus point for their batting.

It may prove largely insignific­ant however, unless they can make some more breakthrou­ghs on Friday morning when the Warriors resume on 77/2, with Gihahn Cloete not out on 34 and Yaseen Vallie on four.

At the Wanderers the Highveld Lions’ batting woes continued as they slumped to 45/4 in 20 overs before a half-century from Omphile Ramela helped to restore some order against the Dolphins, and they reached 207/7.

The KZN visitors, who came into this match in fifth place, still have an outside chance of creeping back into contention in the competitio­n, but desperatel­y need a win. They were not helped by withdrawal­s due to injuries of Andile Phehlukway­o and Rob Frylinck while veteran Morne van Wyk was also granted leave for family reasons.

But 20-year-old Okuhle Cele, with two wickets and Kerwin Mungroo with one, quickly gave the visitors the ascendancy. Eathan Bosch’s dismissal of Reeza Hendricks for 27 in the 20th over saw the hosts reduced to 45/4 before Ramela’s patient rescue act.

A stand of 37 for fifth wicket with Dwaine Pretorius helped steady the innings before Pretorius edged to Vaughn van Jaarsveld at second slip to give Bosch a second wicket.

The main partnershi­p of the innings featured Ramela and Wiaan Mulder who added 70 for the sixth wicket before Ramela fell to the second ball after tea, well caught at slip by Van Jaarsveld off Senuran Muthusamy. Ramela’s 60 came in just over four hours, in which he faced 171 balls, hitting nine fours. It was the 23rd half-century of his first-class career.

Mulder made 38 before giving his wicket away, caught by Dane Vilas off Muthusamy, and Mangaliso Mosehle (37) and Aaron Phangiso (11) were at the crease when bad light brought an early end. – Cricket Writer

 ??  ?? Andrea Agathangel­ou
Andrea Agathangel­ou

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