Cape Times

Brace yourselves for a first-class finale

- Lungani Zama

DURBAN: As we head into the final weekend of an enthrallin­g Sunfoil Series, every franchise in the country still has a full part to play in determinin­g where the four-day title ends up on Sunday evening.

Over the past month, the flagship domestic tournament has well and truly come to life with bold declaratio­ns, positive intent and an apparent lack of fear in the consequenc­es enveloping just about every side.

So much for those who insist that the domestic game is stale and predictabl­e.

The result of this shift in mindset has been some exciting finishes and a title race that has all the ingredient­s of an English Premiershi­p run-in, except for the dreaded relegation battle.

The current basement dwellers, the Warriors, will not be going through the motions this week as they visit the log-leading Titans at Willowmoor­e Park in Benoni.

Should they deny the Titans an outright victory, they will open the door for the Knights and the Highveld Lions, who will lock horns at the Wanderers. A draw or loss for the Titans will interest the Knights in particular, although Nicky Boje’s men have lost their way at the worst time possible.

January was unkind to them and a title that looked destined for Bloemfonte­in is now looking like the Titans’ to lose, as they lead the Knights by just over two points. First innings bonus points, given up to 100 overs, could be decisive if both the Knights and Titans win, given the small margin – 94.62 for the Titans and 92.24 the Knights – between them.

There are four bowling points up for grabs, but positive intent with the bat may be the way to go, especially on run-rich tracks like Willowmoor­e Park and the Wanderers. A team scoring 350, for example, will earn five batting points, with one for reaching 150 and then 0.02 points for each run after that.

Ultimately, though, the full house of 10 points for a win is the main banker.

The top two sides will not have it their own way, though, and they have both lost to the fast-finishing Cobras in recent weeks.

The Cape side may have left their resurgence a bit late, but they will fancy toppling the Dolphins at Kingsmead and then seeing if the temperamen­tal Jukskei weather throws them the mother of all bones.

Bank on plenty of drama and much like in the penultimat­e round, many calls between grounds to monitor the state of affairs. It is terrifical­ly set up and all six teams could still have a say on who is crowned champions come Sunday.

Common sense says Mark Boucher’s Titans won’t let it slip, but there has been nothing common about the 2016-17 Sunfoil Series. Perhaps there is one final twist to come before the dust settles on Sunday.

Brace yourselves.

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