The line that divides aggression and desperation is a fine one, and it was in full view when
Bowlers like McGrath always have a scheme for different batsmen. Kallis and Prince were the two batsmen who should have played the anchor role. Smith left early - falling to adventurism against someone who has seen it all and is a master at varying the length subtlety to set a batsman to a false shot.
Shaun Tait might have ended with more wickets in his kitty, but to McGrath should go the greater credit for strangulating the batsmen and instilling the early pressure from which the South Africans never recovered. The fall of wickets at regular intervals never allowed the South Africans to get to a run rate of any meaning. And having posted only 149 on the board, even the die-hard South African supporters would not have envisaged a win.
With a mere three runs per over to chase,
It was pleasure to see the Aussie dressing room, a bunch of confident players who thoroughly know what their job is, much like the West Indian dressing room of the 80’s.
3 comments:
Well Krish - You hit the nail on the head - and hard too! South Africans once again proved that they were a Bunch of Jokers - They never deserved to go all the way after their humiliating defeat to minnows Bangladesh, hope I not branded 'politically incorrect' after their improved performance in this World cup.
Good piece; please see my match report as well.
http://www.oracleofdelhi.blogspot.
com/
How to beat Australia?
Ans. Play only cricket! Then you have a chance of beating them.
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Do not get bogged down by their reputation.
Play the ball on merit and not on bowlers or teams reputation.
Bowl to take wickets. Do not focus on trying to choke them for runs.
Finally play the game on the field and not in the mind.
Enjoy every moment on the field.
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