Daily Dispatch

Phehlukway­o cuts loose, AB finishes off Kiwis in first ODI

- By TELFORD VICE

AB DE Villiers and Andile Phehlukway­o held their nerve through a tense final over to earn the Proteas victory in the first one-day internatio­nal against New Zealand in Hamilton yesterday.

South Africa won by four wickets with a ball to spare in a match shortened to 34 overs-a-side by rain. That earned South Africa a 12th consecutiv­e win in ODIs.

Another success in the second match of the series in Christchur­ch on Wednesday and they will break the national record they set in 2005.

With 12 runs required off the last over‚ Tim Southee – bowling fast off-spin rather than his usual convention­al pace – beat Phehlukway­o’s big swing with his first delivery.

But the batsmen scampered a bye to give the strike to De Villiers, who also heaved – and missed – at a ball that bounced high over his head and was called wide even as a second run was scrambled from it.

Then Southee steamed in with a slower ball‚ which the supercool Phehlukway­o lofted down the ground with a mighty swing for an arching six to narrow the equation to three runs required off four deliveries.

Phehlukway­o couldn’t do much with the yorker Southee served up next‚ but a precious leg-bye was garnered off the fourth legal delivery.

Southee attempted another yorker but missed his mark and presented a half-volley insisted – which De Villiers lashed down the ground for four to seal the win. De Villiers‚ who was marooned at the non-striker’s end for the six deliveries it took for Trent Boult and Southee to dismiss Quinton de Kock‚ JP Duminy and Farhaan Behardien and reduce South Africa to 126/4 in the 23rd over‚ marshalled the rest of the innings superbly and finished not out on 37.

Phehlukway­o‚ who also hammered Boult for six in the penultimat­e over‚ scored an unbeaten 29. The unbroken stand realised 54 runs off 43 balls‚ and took South Africa to 210/6 in reply to New Zealand’s 207/7.

De Kock‚ who hit nine fours and a six in his 69‚ the top score in the match‚ and Hashim Amla put on 88 for South Africa’s first wicket.

But the rest of the top six‚ with the exception of De Villiers‚ struggled to come to terms with a slow‚ sticky‚ spinning surface.

Chris Morris felt both sides of cricket’s double-edged sword in New Zealand’s innings.

He trapped Tom Latham in front before dismissing Doug Brownlie and Ross Taylor in one over and Neil Broom in his next.

But Morris’s figures‚ which read 4/24 when he had Broom caught at square leg with the last ball of his fifth over‚ ballooned to 4/62 when his last two overs bled 38 runs.

Two sixes and three fours flew off the final over of the innings‚ bowled by Morris‚ that went for 25.

The late blast was delivered by Colin de Grandhomme and Southee‚ who shared 51-runs off 23 balls for the unbroken stand.

That was the only partnershi­p of 30 or more aside from a secondwick­et effort of 50 by Brownlie and Kane Williamson.

New Zealand’s captain stood firm while Morris removed Brownlie‚ Taylor and Broom for the addition on the scoreboard of only 13 runs‚ and scored 59.

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