Sunday Tribune

Du Plessis does the business again

- LUNGANI ZAMA lungani.zama@inl.co.za ZAAHIER ADAMS zaahier.adams@inl.co.za

DANÉ van Niekerk has won much praise for the style of captaincy that she has brought to the Proteas Women’s side. There has always been an honesty about it, and she again offered a straight bat to adversity.

On Friday in St Lucia, the Proteas fell to a humbling seven-wicket defeat to England in the ICC World T20 to be eliminated before the semi-finals.

It was a shattering loss, especially on the back of a similar collapse against hosts West Indies just days before.

“Sorry South Africa,” Van Niekerk tweeted after the match.

It was short but there was little more to be said about a performanc­e that was depressing­ly sorry.

The batting was terribly limp, as a series of ill-conceived shots saw them hand England the simplest of victories.

Anya Shrubsole sprinkled sea salt into a gaping South African wound when she closed out the Proteas innings with a hat-trick.

Natalie Sciver also helped herself to a scarcely believable three wickets for four runs in four overs, including an almost unbelievab­le 20 dot balls, as England found unexpected ease against opponents they expected to be hard pressed by.

It was simply that kind of day for South Africa, whose entire match fell apart once the skipper won the toss and elected to bat.

Her own dismissal summed up the kind of misery that South Africa met on Friday. A straight drive from the striker’s end got a touch from Kirstie Gordon, and Van Niekerk was found short of her crease.

It was cruel luck, on a day the Proteas were desperate for some fortune.

Chloe Tryon briefly raised hopes of breaching 100, but when she fell for 27, the end was nigh.

South Africa’s last four wickets fell for a dismal six runs, and that pastry of a lower order allowed England to make dessert out of the target of 86.

Van Niekerk’s terse post-match interview with Nasser Hussain also emphasised the depth of her disappoint­ment, as she lamented yet another batting crumble.

It wasn’t nearly good enough, especially from a team that very nearly made it into a World Cup final just last year. AUSTRALIAN­S love to hate Faf du Plessis. From the moment he remained unflustere­d for 376 balls in the sapping heat of Adelaide to keep the mighty Australian attack at bay, Du Plessis has been enemy No1 Down Under.

This enmity towards Du Plessis intensifie­d when he returned four years later and, now at the helm of the Proteas ship, led South Africa to a hat-trick of Test series victories on Australian soil, even while chewing a mint in his mouth.

He was also there in Australia’s darkest hour on that fateful day in Cape Town, looking on with that cheeky smirk that gets under the skin of every Bruce and Sheila.

And now with the country’s premier summer pastime in the midst of its biggest crisis since the Kerry Packer revolution, there stands Du Plessis, again turning the knife into the heart of Australian cricket.

Du Plessis and the Proteas will return home tomorrow with both white-ball trophies packed comfortabl­y away in the luggage compartmen­t.

After the ODI series silverware was collected in Hobart last week, there was just enough time to pick up the T20 title yesterday on the Gold Coast.

Although the weather interrupte­d what was meant to be a special occasion for the seaside town – it was the first time internatio­nal cricket was played on the Gold Coast – the truncated 10-over contest was still enough time for Du Plessis’ Proteas to exert their dominance over the hosts just one final time. The skipper certainly enjoyed the performanc­e, that resulted in a 21-run victory, and the tour as a whole.

“I have said many a time

Australia is a really tough place to come and play cricket.

“It is a really strong team and the crowds are fully behind their national team. So, every time we come here we know it is going to be tough challenge.

“To get a series win in both white-ball formats is always a huge achievemen­t. We will go back to South Africa with our heads high,” Du Plessis said.

The Proteas were dominant in all facets of the game. They powered their way to 108 in the 10 overs, courtesy of openers Quinton de Kock (22 off 16 balls) and Reeza Hendricks (19 off eight balls) demolishin­g the three-over Powerplay period before Du Plessis banged 27 off 15 balls that put the visitors out of reach.

And when it was the bowlers’ turn, they were simply relentless. All-rounder Chris Morris marked his return to internatio­nal cricket with figures of 2/12, while there were also double strikes for Andile Phehlukway­o (2/21) and Lungi Ngidi (2/16).

Left-arm Chinaman bowler Tabraiz Shamsi also chipped in with 1/12, that was enough to earn the Man of the Match award.

“Obviously getting wickets in T20 cricket is vital. Our bowlers stepped up for us, producing the goods.

“We tried to get our field placings right and our executions were good. All in all this has been a good tour for us,” Du Plessis added.

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