Cape Times

From 2008 to 2013: Dale’s top five performanc­es ...

- STUART HESS stuart.hess@inl.co.za

There are two parts to this careerbest bowling performanc­e from Steyn; the first was the way he got the new ball swinging convention­ally away from the right-hander, dismissing Tendulkar as part of a wonderful set up; the second came when (after the umpires had changed the ball) Steyn got it to reverse and ran through the Indian middle and lower order.

On a flat and slow pitch, that display ranks as one of the great fast bowling performanc­es on the sub-continent.

If Nagpur was Steyn’s greatest innings performanc­e, then the MCG was arguably his best match performanc­e – it included a game changing 76 with the bat.

There was a lot of hype around Steyn in that historic series and he lived up to it at the game’s biggest arena. Pace, control and swing were all to the fore as he tore the Australian­s apart and helped set up South Africa’s first series win Down Under.

This was terrific theatre played out on a Sunday afternoon at the country’s oldest cricket stadium, with its famous band providing an intoxicati­ng back drop as Steyn tore in from the Duck Pond End and laid waste to the Australian middle order; Clarke, Smith and most memorably Haddin, were ripped out in an awe-inspiring spell, that made for riveting viewing.

Watching it now still makes the hairs on the back of your neck stand up.

Amla made his historic triple century following which there were whispers from the England dressing room about the pitch being too flat and ‘sub-continenta­l’.

Feeling that his mate’s achievemen­ts had been undermined, Steyn showed how a proper fast bowler operates by tearing through the English in their second innings, setting up a series leading innings victory against the then no.1 team in the world.

A spell made famous by the images of Steyn angrily holding up his left hand and screaming ‘Five!’ in the direction of the home team’s dressing room.

A single spell of high quality fast bowling from the Golf Course End saw Pakistan shot out for 49 in 29 overs.

Steyn’s pace wasn’t ferocious – it needn’t have been, such was the movement on offer for him that morning - but his accuracy and control were mesmerisin­g.

He scented the merest hint of fear among the Pakistanis and rolled right through them, causing many late comers to the ‘Bullring’ to miss an enthrallin­g spell.

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