Cape Argus

Kiwis grab extra-time win

- OCKERT DE VILLIERS

A TENACIOUS Proteas side was unlucky to bow the knee to New Zealand 62-60 with the match decided on golden goals at the end of extra-time in the Netball Quad Series in London yesterday evening.

The South Africans were close to causing a stunning upset over New Zealand which would have been their first victory over the Silver Ferns in 24 years.

The contest was forced into extratime after the two teams were level on 45-all after regulation time.

The stalemate remained at the end of extra-time with a two-goal advantage deciding the winners in the golden goal period.

The Proteas, ranked fifth in the world, last beat New Zealand at the 1995 World Championsh­ips in Birmingham where they booked a place in the final, losing to Australia for the silver medal.

The Proteas clawed their way back from an eight-point deficit in the first quarter to take the lead for the first time in the match early in the final period.

They had some nervous moments in the first quarter with the New Zealanders opening a five-point gap.

South African coach Norma Plummer started with Lenize Potgieter at goal attack and IneMari Venter at goal shooter but the combinatio­n did not quite click in the opening minutes of the match.

The result was South Africa trailing by eight points at one stage before Plummer replaced Venter with stalwart Maryka Hotzhausen.

The tried and tested combinatio­n and a superb defensive effort saw the South Africans claw their way back into the match.

They played with greater aggression in the second period to reduce the deficit to two points (2220) going into the half-time break.

With just seconds to go to the end of the third quarter, Potgieter slotted the goal to draw the scores level on 34-all.

The sides went goal for goal before the first hour of netball finished with the scores level resulting in a dramatic end.

The Proteas made history on Saturday beating England in their own backyard for the first time in 19 years with their 48-45 victory.

The three-point success also equalled their biggest winning margin over the England Roses from 1997.

The South African team bounced back from a 17-point defeat in their first match against world champions Australia.

While the scoreline may not reflect it but the Proteas showed glimpses of what they were capable of in the match.

They dominated the Aussies in the first half but ran out of steam as the match progressed to ultimately go down 62-45.

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