Daily News

Ngidi crackles on his return to the middle

- STUART HESS @shockerhes­s

WHEN Lungi Ngidi made his return from a stress fracture of his lower back, which had kept him off the playing field for four months, in October 2017, it was explosive.

He took three wickets in 10 balls on a lively Wanderers track against the Lions, within half an hour of the match starting. Yesterday’s return after three months out with a knee injury wasn’t as combustibl­e, but it crackled. For now, that is good enough.

Ngidi got through nine overs – broken up into four spells – without any outward discomfort from the knee injury picked up in that one-off T20 Internatio­nal against Australia last November. Second, his bowling, for someone given such an extended period on the sidelines, was excellent. He lacked rhythm and pace, but that will improve as he gets more game time under his belt, something the national selectors want. They’ve chosen to keep him out of the internatio­nal spotlight for now by not including him in the Test squad for Sri Lanka. South Africa has sufficient fast bowling resources for that assignment and Ngidi can get on with getting bowling fit, while playing for his domestic franchise. Should he get through the next few weeks, he should be included for the OneDayers against the Sri Lankans, which start on March 3.

His opening overs were understand­ably loose and, in fact, his first wicket, that of Grant Mokoena, was with a wretched delivery, short and wide, which the Knights opener did well to reach. Ngidi tightened his lines thereafter, bowled closer to the stumps, with his natural in-ducker cramping the batsmen for room.

His second wicket came as a result of an error from the batsman too, with the Knights’ other opener Andries Gous trying to pull one that bounced steeply and which he gloved behind to Heinrich Klaasen.

Ngidi’s last spell came at the “death”, where he mixed up his pace effectivel­y, controlled his length properly too and conceded just 11 runs in his last two overs.

Before that period, the Knights’ innings was dominated by two batsmen. Keegan Petersen made an excellent maiden limited overs century.

He was striking the ball crisply from the moment he arrived at the crease, but had to reign himself in, as wickets fell quickly at the other end. The Knights were in deep trouble at 88/5 in the 21st over when Petersen was joined by veteran all-rounder Ryan McLaren. Together the pair added 174 runs for the sixth wicket, a new record for this competitio­n. Petersen finished on 107 not out off 139 balls with 12 fours. McLaren, playing his 202nd limited overs match, was not out on 80, pacing his innings superbly, facing 83 balls and hitting seven fours and a six.

The Titans made mincemeat of the chase against a very poor Knights attack as they won with 68 balls to spare, earning a bonus point.

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