Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Malan’s marathon ton puts Cobras in a strong position

- LUNGANI ZAMA

TWO of the three Sunfoil Series match on the go around the country are already closing in on a result, with the Knights maintainin­g their vice-like grip on the Dolphins, and the Lions and the Warriors hurtling towards a hasty conclusion in East London.

In Pretoria, meanwhile, the Cobras and the Titans look set to go deep into Sunday, after a Dane Piedt-dominated day saw the Cobras enjoying an upper hand.

It is in East London, however, where things are happening quickly.

Already, the Lions require just 149 more runs to win – but they have to buck a trend of wickets tumbling every day if they are to pull off a much-needed morale boost.

Having bowled out their hosts for 193 on the opening day, the Lions themselves could only manage 178 in their first dig.

That was down to a patient 69 by Rassie van der Dussen, an innings which may be worth a lot more by the time the considerab­le dust settles.

Simon Harmer and JJ Smuts shared six wickets for the hosts, as spin continued to dominate proceeding­s.

In their second innings, the Warriors were skittled out for 145, with Beuran Hendricks doing the damage this time. It was the left-arm seamer’s most impressive return since joining the Lions from the Western Cape, and he finished with excellent figures of six for 31 in 11.3 overs.

Only Yaseen Vallie’s responsibl­e 40 gave the hosts some sort of chance. By the close, the Lions had limped to 12 for one, in pursuit of 161.

Skipper Stephen Cook confirmed a miserable match with the bat, castled by Anrich Nortje’s opening delivery of the chase.

In Bloemfonte­in, the Knights enforced the follow-on, as they kept up the heat on the Dolphins. Having been bowled out for 478, with Shadley van Schalkwyk’s free-hitting 70 off 67 balls adding the gloss to the work done by the top order, visiting skipper Keshav Maharaj was rewarded with five for 128 from his 41.4 overs of toil.

In reply, the Dolphins were rolled out for 237, thanks to a bruising spell of fast bowling from Marchant de Lange. The former Protea scythed through the top order, and then mopped up the tail, ending with figures of five for 57. Senuran Muthusamy’s 95, and a typically combative 57 from Robbie Frylinck saved some of the Dolphins’ blushes, but Theunis de Bruyn wasted no time in enforcing the follow on.

At day’s end, the Dolphins still had all ten wickets intact, but they have a mountain to climb if they are to avoid defeat to the defending champions.

In Pretoria, things happened at a far more sedate pace, as the Cobras eventually reached 428 before being dismissed by the Titans. Pieter Malan’s marathon knock realised 137 runs, scored from 317 balls, and over seven hours at the crease. Once the opener fell, skipper Dane Piedt took it upon himself to up the ante, clubbing 74 from just 116 balls, before he was last man out.

Piedt then took the ball and inflicted all the damage to the Titans’ top-order, as he helped himself to three for 43 in his 14 overs. He trapped national opener Dean Elgar in front, and the same method was employed to get of young Tony de Zorzi, who was also nabbed by Peidt’s nagging accuracy.

The off-spinner was not done yet, however, as half-centurion Andrea Agathangel­ou became his third victim of the afternoon. The well-travelled number three fell for 51, having added 82 runs with the classy Heino Kuhn.

The experience­d Kuhn ended the day on 57 not out, and his side will look to him to build on that foundation considerab­ly on the third morning. The Titans still trail their visitors by a concerning 260 runs, with seven wickets remaining.

 ?? BACKPAGEPI­X ?? IMPRESSIVE: Beuran Hendricks grabbed six wickets for the Lions in a low-scoring match in East London.
BACKPAGEPI­X IMPRESSIVE: Beuran Hendricks grabbed six wickets for the Lions in a low-scoring match in East London.
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