Sowetan

Captain De Kock raises hand

Hendricks scores century in debut

- By Telford Vice

Arise Quinton de Kock‚ South Africa’s captain. Of the many remarkable things that happened in Kandy, Sri Lanka, yesterday, nothing could top that.

Not that De Kock’s elevation was anything like planned. It happened in the 10th over of Sri Lanka’s innings after Faf du Plessis left the field having added the injury of a jarred shoulder to the insult of dropping a difficult chance at midwicket.

Surely Hashim Amla would take the wheel … Or JP Duminy … Or someone who hasn’t given the world the impression that he does first and thinks later‚ if at all …

None of the above. Team management confirmed the unthought and‚ for some‚ the unthinkabl­e: De Kock was the stand-in skipper.

Maybe that view of him should be reviewed – which was what De Kock did only nine balls into his tenure when Thisara Perera fiddled down the leg side and Nigel Llong decided the edge had not been found. Snicko said it had and De Kock had his first strike.

In the 42nd over, Dhananjaya de Silva threw his bat at a delivery from Andile Phehlukway­o‚ and Llong – not helped by a raucous crowd – again said no after De Kock took‚ low down‚ what he was convinced was a catch.

Again the captain went upstairs. And again he was proved right.

Like he had been eight balls earlier when Tabraiz Shamsi was adamant he had Suranga Lakmal leg-before and implored De Kock to involve the third umpire after Raveendra Wimalasiri turned down the appeal. De Kock shook his head at the excited spinner – and replays showed the ball would have missed leg stump.

About the only thing captain Quinton got wrong was not to call for the catch when Lakmal skied a delivery from Lungi Ngidi‚ who also didn’t make a sound as he advanced towards where the ball was descending.

Both De Kock and Ngidi kept their eye firmly on that prize and a collision seemed certain. Happily, Ngidi is 23 centimetre­s taller than De Kock‚ whose gloves thudded into the fast bowler’s chest at the instant the latter took the catch.

“He ran into a brick wall there‚” Ngidi said in his television interview with Shaun Pollock‚ who had surmised that “there was only one winner” in that contest.

And with that South Africa had won the third one-day internatio­nal by 78 runs to clinch the five-game series three-zip.

Six members of the Proteas’ team – who scored 363/7 and dismissed the home side for 285 in 45.2 overs yesterday – were in the squad who couldn’t bat their way out of a stale samoosa in the Test series.

The difference was the pitch.

“It seemed pretty flat but you don’t want to think like that as a bowler‚” Ngidi said.

“It was pretty similar to a South African wicket.”

That‚ strange as it may seem‚ was part of Sri Lanka’s plan.

Aside from preparing a pitch that favoured their opponents‚ another reason the Lankans lost yesterday was Reeza Hendricks – who scored the fastest century among all 2 453 men who have taken guard as debutants in an ODI.

Hendricks reached his hundred off 88 balls of magnificen­t mayhem.

His 102 made him the third South African to celebrate a century in his first ODI and the only one to do so away.

He replaced Aiden Markram‚ who scored three and nought in the first two games of the series‚ in the only change to South Africa’s XI.

“To play so freely on debut was remarkable to see‚” Du Plessis said of Hendricks’s performanc­e. It was. But not as remarkable as De Kock captaining South Africa. Who’d have thunk it.

 ?? / AFP ?? South Africa’s Reeza Hendricks plays a shot during the third One Day Internatio­nal (ODI) cricket match between Sri Lanka and South Africa at the Pallekele Internatio­nal Cricket Stadium in Kandy yesterday.
/ AFP South Africa’s Reeza Hendricks plays a shot during the third One Day Internatio­nal (ODI) cricket match between Sri Lanka and South Africa at the Pallekele Internatio­nal Cricket Stadium in Kandy yesterday.

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