Cape Times

This loss won’t hurt as much, but ...

- Stuart Hess

SOUTH AFRICA would rather this final one-day internatio­nal be expunged from the record books, such was the calamitous nature of their play at the Premadasa Stadium yesterday. Starting with the team selection, which was then compounded by poor execution of the ball and concluded with another dizzying collapse against spin, the Proteas re-lived so much about what had been bad about this tour to Sri Lanka.

The series was already won, so this loss won’t hurt as much, but it was such a bad display that it must be hoped it doesn’t linger too long with any of the players. On a slow-paced surface the SA seam bowlers got the implementa­tion of their plans badly wrong after Angelo Mathews chose to bat when winning the toss.

Employing a “bouncer” strategy is one thing, but it really is a plan that is best utilised when the bouncer is used as a “set-up” ball. The South Africans didn’t do that yesterday and to make matters worse their bouncers were so poorly directed that it allowed the Sri Lankans enough room to free their arms, peppering the point area, square leg and midwicket regions with more than half the boundaries in their innings.

The Proteas’ ill-discipline was further illustrate­d by the concession of 25 extras, including seven wides and three no balls. It was a bad bowling performanc­e from everyone with the exception of left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj.

Mathews top scored for the hosts in their total of 299/8, with an unbeaten 97 taking advantage of the gifts served up by the South Africans, while marshallin­g the innings through the pressure that Maharaj had briefly helped to create. The next best score was Niroshan Dickwella’s 43, while Kusal Mendis (38) and Dhananjaya de Silva (30) weighed in with useful contributi­ons.

SA found no momentum in pursuit of their target losing Hashim Amla to a ball from Suranga Lakmal that hit the top of off-stump.

Amla should probably have been given a break from this match having played all the games on tour so far, but in the one change to the batting unit, the selectors chose to “rest” David Miller to accommodat­e Aiden Markram, a bizarre call given that Miller is supposedly a limited-overs specialist. In addition if the argument that “they don’t have anything to prove,” is applied to Vernon Philander and Dale Steyn who haven’t been picked for this series, then why can’t it apply to Amla, who is also a senior player?

Markram could have opened along with Quinton de Kock, to assess that combinatio­n, while retaining Miller’s explosiven­ess in the middle and giving him an extra opportunit­y to build confidence and form ahead of the SA season.

As it turned out no one had an answer for Akila Dananjaya’s bag of tricks; Markram who struck five brilliant boundaries against the pace of Lakmal, fell to the third ball he faced from the leg-spinner, Reeza Hendricks was beaten by a beautiful googly, as was Heinrich Klaasen and later De Kock too. SA’s stand-in captain had stood out amidst the carnage making a fine 54, but got no support from anyone else.

Dananjaya produced careerbest figures of 6/29 in nine overs as SA crumbled to 121 all out in less than half their allotted overs. Quinton de Kock congratula­tes Angelo Mathews after Sri Lanka beat SA by 178 runs in the final ODI in Colombo yesterday.

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