The Herald (South Africa)

SA didn’t fight, says Dané

- Telford Vice

YOU would not want to be in the dressingro­om as part of a team that has played below themselves if that side is captained by Dané van Niekerk.

That is going on what she said in public in the wake of South Africa’s thumping in Brighton on Tuesday.

Given the chance to blame at least part of England’s 69-run victory to level the one-day series on bad fortune‚ Van Niekerk said: “It wasn’t hard luck. It was bad execution as a bowling unit and as a batting unit.

“I think we just expected it to happen‚ like it did in the first game [in Worcester on Saturday‚ when South Africa won by seven wickets]. That was the frustratin­g thing for me. We didn’t fight for wickets, we just expected something to happen.”

Van Niekerk put England in to bat on what turned out to be a belter‚ and the home side racked up 331/6, their sixth-highest total and the second-highest against South Africa.

The visitors had a chance of staying in the mix in the first half of their innings before losing 9/103 to dwindle to a reply of 262/9. “For only two batters to score above 40 was disappoint­ing,” Van Niekerk said.

Those two were Lizelle Lee‚ whose 117 off 120 balls with 13 fours and five sixes‚ and Chloe Tryon‚ who hammered 44 off 31.

That Tammy Beaumont and Sarah Taylor had scored 101 and 118 made this the first game in the 1 118 ODIs played by women that the scoreboard groaned under the weight of three centuries.

On Friday the series will be decided in Canterbury‚ where South Africa won by one wicket in June 2000 and lost by 121 runs in August 2008.

That does not matter now. What does is how South Africa might right themselves to clinch what would be their first series win in England in all formats in nine attempts.

How might that be achieved? “We need to do stuff better than them‚” Van Niekerk said. – TimesLIVE

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