De Villiers commits to Test cricket after chastising loss

De Villiers, who had been rumoured to be on the verge of retirement from Test cricket amid concerns about his workload, quashed any such rumours in the wake of South Africa's seven-wicket defeat at The Wanderers.
Faced with an inspired spell of bowling from Stuart Broad, who claimed 5 for 1 in ten overs after lunch, South Africa crumbled to 83 all out in their second innings. The result confirmed the end of South Africa's reign as the No.1 Test team, and may just have galvanised South Africa's new Test captain to stick to his guns and lead a side in transition out of their current malaise.
"I was never thinking of leaving Test cricket at all. I was just to find a way to rest a little bit throughout the year," de Villiers said after the match. "Lots of thoughts have been crossing my mind but this [defeat] has got absolutely no influence on that."
"Playing on the cricket pitch has never been an issue for me, it's just a matter of keeping myself fresh. It's really tough to stay on top of your game if you play up to 12 months a year. I just have to try and find a balance to keep my fight going and keep that skill level up."
South Africa's skills may have been lacking in the decisive third Test, and the absence of several key members of their team - Dale Steyn, Vernon Philander, JP Duminy and Quinton de Kock, not to mention a specialist opening batsman - cannot have helped. However, de Villiers believes the team still has plenty raw materials with which to rebuild their fortunes.

Broad's 6-17 sweeps England to series victory

Stuart Broad left England in ecstasy in Johannesburg as he summoned the sort of great Test fast-bowling burst that has become his forte to deliver an unexpectedly rapid victory in the third Test and an unassailable 2-0 lead in the series.
South Africa were routed for 83 in 33.1 overs, leaving England needing only 74 for a victory, a task they undertook calmly, losing three wickets with the match well won. The final Test in Centurion next week will come amid considerable South African soul searching. Whatever the outcome, India will assume their No. 1 Test ranking.
Broad's sequence of 5 for 1 in 36 balls destroyed South Africa's top order in the first hour after lunch as 23 for 0 became 35 for 5. Remarkably, it was the seventh time in his Test career that he has taken five or more wickets in a spell. When he sees an opportunity he does not demur; when he runs hot the opposition are scalded.
He finished with 6 for 17 in 12.1 overs, not to be denied the final wicket when Faf du Plessis swung the ball onto his pad and, eyes lighting up, a sprint and dive claimed a one-handed catch in the middle of the pitch.
South Africa had suffered disturbing collapses in India, but this disintegration in front of their own supporters, and in the Bullring, too, where they have so often been at their most ferocious, will cause the greatest reverberations of all. Expectations that AB de Villiers' elevation to the captaincy would be South Africa's route to salvation have proven overly optimistic. Broad extinguished their guiding light for a fifth-ball duck and the Test turned in a trice.
This was South Africa's lowest total in a home Test since readmission and second lowest of all in that period, beaten only by their 79 against India on a turning surface in Nagpur in November. They have now failed to beat England in their last three home series, losing two of them.
A fluctuating Test, compelling from the outset, had been tantalisingly poised after the first innings, with England holding an insignificant 10-run advantage, but it was commandeered by Broad as South Africa lost eight wickets in the afternoon session. A big weekend crowd were stunned as the No 1-ranked side in the world were picked apart.
A muggy day had provided perfect conditions for swing bowling, the floodlights blazed, the pitch offered pace, bounce and increasing seam movement, and Broad responded to his opportunity voraciously. A great bowler or a bowler of great spells? Bowl enough of the latter and you begin to lay claim to the former. What was undeniable was that he passed Bob Willis's record of 325 Test wickets to go third on England's all-time list behind James Anderson and Ian Botham.
In the first innings, he was enervated by the stomach bug that had raged through the England camp, leaving the field on at least one occasion to be sick. Now his health had returned - his hair, stragglier than usual, the only reminder that he had been too unwell to attend to some of the niceties of life. He bowled with great intensity, hit an excellent length from a great height with resolve, his pace up to maximum.
Broad's first wicket, three overs into the afternoon, needed Dean Elgar to fend at a wide one, but that was enough to heighten his recognition of the opportunities on offer. Even the solitary single he conceded in his five-wicket burst came from a dropped catch offered by Stiaan van Zyl as Anderson failed to hang on at second slip. Van Zyl soon pushed a fullish ball to Ben Stokes at gully.
South Africa had banked upon setting loose a ferocious pace quartet on a Wanderers pitch possessing more grass than normal. Their inexperience meant they conceded to somebody better. Instead, it was Broad who was roused, reviving memories of his 8 for 15 to dismiss Australia for 60 in one spectacular session at Trent Bridge in August, or his five wickets in 16 balls against India on the same ground four years earlier.

Guptill, Williamson smash Pakistan with record stand

Kane Williamson and Martin Guptill - New Zealand's two form batsmen - combined in a clinical display of poise and timing, to gun down Pakistan's 168 for 7 inside eighteen overs in Hamilton. Their 171-run stand was the highest ever for T20Is, let alone for opening pairs. The ten-wicket victory evened the series in emphatic fashion. Guptill left the field with 87 to his name, and Williamson with a personal best of 72 - both striking at 150.
Williamson had been the early aggressor, flitting about his crease to make use of errant lines from the Pakistan bowlers. He slapped Mohammad Amir through the leg side for four in the second over, then cracked three fours through point off Imad Wasim soon after. With the positioning of the pitch making the eastern square boundary only 52 metres, Williamson continued to move around his crease to target that - most memorably lap-scooping Amir to the fine-leg fence in the fifth over. Williamson had New Zealand's run rate hurtling at 10 an over inside the Powerplay, and it did not dip too far below that thereafter.
Guptill was more still at the crease, hitting a flat six off Umar Gul in the first over of the chase, but largely batting in Williamson's slipstream before taking flight through the middle overs. He struck consecutive fours, either side of the wicket, off Amir in the 13th over, and successive sixes off Shahid Afridi in the 15th. He struck four sixes and nine fours in his 58-ball innings. Williamson didn't clear the rope, but hit 11 fours.
Pakistan had lost early wickets and made a stalling start before Shoaib Malik's measured 39 and Umar Akmal's violent 56 not out from 27 balls seemed to have revived their chances in the match. New Zealand's batting was excellent, but Pakistan's bowlers perhaps had their thoughts scrambled by the asymmetrical dimensions of the field - one square boundary more than 20 metres shorter than the other.
Amir had a particularly poor outing, leaking 34 from his 3 overs, but no one in the Pakistan attack fared well. Wahab Riaz went at 10 an over, and the usually-miserly Imad Wasim at 8. Such was the adaptability of New Zealand's batting, that they were not slowed by Shahid Afridi's rifling through the attack, nor the several different fields he employed through the innings.
Mitchell McClenaghan was the best of New Zealand's bowlers, delivering a tight line, largely on off stump, and mixing up his pace and lengths intelligently. He had conceded only eight runs from his first three overs, but those figures were soured somewhat by Akmal's late charge, during which the batsman struck two fours and a six in three balls. McClenaghan did take valuable wickets however, having bowled Malik with a yorker in his third over, then having Wasim top-edging a bouncer to fine leg in the penultimate over of the innings.
Earlier, Pakistan had been 34 for 2 after 6.1 overs before Malik arrived to ease the innings into motion, beginning with singles to third man, then a spate of fours to that short boundary. His 63-run fourth-wicket stand with Umar Akmal was the most substantial of the innings.
Akmal blasted consecutive sixes off Mitchell Santner to the short leg-side boundary early in his innings, but he wasn't shy of taking on the longer boundary either. He batted busily through the middle overs, and memorably launched Grant Elliott into the adjacent road in the 16th over, with a 103-metre hit over cow corner. Clean striking in McClenaghan's final over moved him to 50 off 22 balls - the second fastest T20 half-century for Pakistan just one ball behind his own record. He lost partners in quick succession through those late overs, but appeared to have seen Pakistan through to a good score, given their successful defence of 171 two evenings prior.

BRILLIANT BROAD FIRES ENGLAND TO SERIES WIN






When Stuart Broad is on a roll he is unstoppable. He became England's third highest Test wicket-taker, with South Africa's batsmen made to feel like avalanche victims by him. The paceman powered England to a dramatic seven-wicket victory in the third Test at the Wanderers, the tourists taking the series by making the scoreline 2-0 with just one Test to play.
The famous intimidating wall of noise of 'the Bullring' in Johannesburg was reduced to rubble as England clinched their second Test series triumph in the Republic since South Africa's readmission to international cricket in 1992.
The hosts had enjoyed a pretty good third morning, however. Joe Root did not add many to his majestic hundred, Steve Finn fell for a duck and although Jonny Bairstow made a decent 45, a lead of 10 for England was negligible. Kagiso Ramada secured his first Test five-wicket haul for the hosts to provide additional cheer.
Broad took five of the eight wickets in the afternoon session to deliver the type of unexpected knockout punch that dramatically curtails a previously even boxing bout. Two days of the Test not needed. The 29-year-old, now on 329 Test wickets, sped past Bob Willis (325) in the process.
He has done this sort of thing before, looking fairly benign in a few Tests, then wham! Most recently it was his lethal spell of 8 for 15 at Trent Bridge in last summer's Ashes Test.
There is usually about one incredible spell a year. There was 6 for 25 against India at Old Trafford in 2014, 7 for 73 against v West Indies at Lord's in 2012 and 6 for 46 (including a hat-trick and 5 for 0 in 16 balls) against India once more in Nottingham in 2011. The exception was 2013, when Australia and New Zealand (twice each) found themselves cut down by the Broad sword. He has taken more Test wickets (230) than anyone in the last five years.
Dean Elgar fell to a sharp lifter, while Stiaan van Zyl was pouched superbly by Ben Stokes. But the key wicket was AB de Villiers, caught behind off an inside edge.
Broad had accomplices. James Taylor brilliantly caught Hashim Amla at short-leg. Temba Bavuma ducked into a hostile delivery that nipped back and fell on the stumps. Faf du Plessis was last out, caught and bowled by Broad.
Stokes also did very well in tandem. He bowled Chris Morris with a booming inducker and had Ramada caught at the wicket. James Anderson then had Hardus Viljoen lbw, leaving England with 74 to win.
Alastair Cook found some form after a disappointing series with 43 to help England home. He had support from Alex Hales, who fell lbw for 18. Nick Compton carelessly gave his wicket away for a duck, Morne Morkel taking a fine catch, and Cook was caught behind. A target of 150, on this evidence, could really have tested the tourists.
South Africa have not looked like the No.1 Test side in the series. England do appear to have the potential to return to top spot, however, but ultimately that may depend on a final hurdle in Australia in 2017/18. Doesn't it always come down to the Ashes in the end?
- See more at: http://www.thecricketer.com/default.aspx?pageid=1223&catid=70&topicid=42373#sthash.kEyVtZEM.dpuf

Sachin Tendulkar

There are so many things that Sachin Tendulkar is to so many people, that it is sometimes forgotten that he is first and foremost a batsman of unparalleled ability, dedication and mind. If he had taken to some other sport in early childhood, his persona would have been invented -- by coaches who want to teach their wards the virtues a tight technique that allows attacking shots, by film-makers who want to create celluloid fantasy by depicting the perfect batsman and superstar, by marketing men who want to appeal to the broadest strata of public imaginable and by cricket fanatics who want to see batting perfection embodied in one person. 

Tendulkar has been in the spotlight since before he made his international debut, and has conducted himself in exemplary fashion, even though he has been India's biggest news-worthy item for two decades. His debut in 1989 was a fiery introduction to international cricket, when as a 16 year old he had to face up to the might of Wasim Akram, Imran Khan and Waqar Younis in their backyard. 

Since then he has gone on to amass records by the dozens, a few of which are unlikely to be surpassed during his lifetime. He has the most number of runs in Test matches as well as One Day Internationals, and the most number of centuries in both forms as well. His tally of more than 30,000 international runs is not likely to be overtaken by anyone, as is his list of international centuries. He has become the only man in history to get to 100 international centuries, a mind boggling achievement comparable to Don Bradman's career average of 99.94. In his career that has spanned over two decades, he has achieved almost everything as an individual and has also been part of innumerable team successes, including a World Cup win in 2011. 

Tendulkar, who did not play many One Dayers since the World Cup triumph, featuring only in the CB series and the Asia Cup, pulled the plug on a glorious career in the 50-over format when he announced his retirement from ODIs on 23 December 2012. His record in ODIs - 463 ODIs, 18,426 runs and 49 centuries - is an unmatchable feat. 

More than numbers though, it is what Tendulkar brings to the arena every time he sets foot on the field that touches fans, cutting across boundaries and nationalities. He has been hailed by Sir Donald Bradman as the man most resembling the Don in batting style, and he has lived up to that by scoring runs consistently against all comers and on all surfaces for a time-frame and a number of matches that has been unmatched by anyone in the history of cricket. 

Tendulkar has also been the single biggest factor behind the explosion of popularity that cricket enjoys in India which led to the Indian board becoming the richest and most powerful in world cricket. In a country already predisposed to cricket, Tendulkar gave the people a hero they could look upto regardless of age, colour, creed or sect -- and catapulted cricket from a sport to a religion in the subcontinent. 

Tendulkar retired from the IPL after Mumbai won the title in 2013 before stepping away completely from the T20 format after Mumbai lifted the CLT20 for a record second time. The Master Blaster announced his retirement from Test cricket on October 10, 2013, a month before a two-Test series against the West Indies which would see him play his historic 200th Test in front of his home crowd in Mumbai. He did not disappoint the fans as he compiled a gritty 74 in his final Test on November 16, 2013. On the same day, the Indian government announced the Bharat Ratna award for him - the highest civilian award given in India. Soon after, he took some time off the game and returned to mentor Mumbai Indians for IPL 2014. 

Little known facts: 

* Tendulkar holds the unique distinction of scoring a century on debut in Ranji Trophy, Irani Trophy and Duleep Trophy. 
* Tendulkar was the first player to be given out by the third umpire in an international game. 
* Tendulkar was a ball boy during the 1987 semi-final between India and England. 

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