Fifth ODI, South Africa vs Australia | |
Event: | Australian tour of South Africa, 2005–06 |
Team1: | Australia |
Team1flag: | |
Team1score: | 434/4 |
Team1overs: | 50 overs |
Team2: | South Africa |
Team2flag: | |
Team2score: | 438/9 |
Team2overs: | 49.5 overs |
Date: | 12 March 2006 |
Stadium: | New Wanderers Stadium |
City: | Johannesburg, Gauteng |
Man Of The Match: | Herschelle Gibbs & Ricky Ponting |
The 5th One Day International cricket match between South Africa and Australia, also referred to as the 438 Match or 438 Game [1] [2] was played on 12 March 2006 at New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg. The match broke many cricket records, including both the first and the second team innings score of over 400 runs. Australia won the toss and elected to bat first. They scored 434 for 4 off their 50 overs, breaking the previous record of 398–5 by Sri Lanka against Kenya in 1996. In reply, South Africa scored 438–9, winning by one wicket with one ball to spare. The match has been acclaimed as the greatest One Day International match ever played.[3] [4] [5]
For some years, there had been an intense rivalry between Australia and South Africa in One-Day Internationals, dating from the semi-final of the 1999 Cricket World Cup, where South Africa could only tie against Australia in a match they needed to win to progress to the final. Some followers of cricket considered that to be the greatest game of all time.[6] [7] Earlier in the 2005–06 season, South Africa toured Australia, where they failed to reach the final of the three-team one-day series, including losing three of their four matches against Australia. They also lost the three Test series 2–0. It was also of constant irritation to the South Africans that the Australians were referring to them as "chokers".
This match was the final match of a five-match series in South Africa. South Africa won the first two matches comfortably, but Australia fought back to win the next two, making this the deciding match. Australia had to play the series without their best one-day bowler, Glenn McGrath, whose wife was suffering from cancer. The South African team also missed their best one-day bowler, Shaun Pollock, in the final match due to a back strain.
Australian captain Ricky Ponting chose to bat after winning the toss. Adam Gilchrist and Simon Katich got the side off to a good start, both scoring fifties. A difficult catch by Andrew Hall diving to his left removed Gilchrist in the 16th over while the partnership was on 97. Ponting then scored his fastest century with 100 off 73 balls, and went on to his highest score at the Wanderers ground with 164 from 105 balls, including 9 sixes and 13 fours. Ponting and Katich put on 119 runs for the second wicket, before Katich was caught at third man by Roger Telemachus off Makhaya Ntini. Michael Hussey was promoted up the order and made 81. Ponting was dismissed after his drive shot was caught by Boeta Dippenaar in the 47th over. By the end of the innings, South Africa were under pressure with Telemachus beginning the 48th over with four consecutive no-balls. Australia made 53 runs off its last three overs;[8] Andrew Symonds and Brett Lee helping the side past the world record with 27 and 9 runs respectively and Australia became the first side to ever score 400 runs in a One Day International.
News sites reported how Australia had just smashed the world record.[9] [10] [11] [12]
With the series at two all, South Africa went out batting, giving it their all, requiring 8.7 runs per over from the start. In the interval, Jacques Kallis had broken the ice in a sombre dressing-room with the words "Come on, guys: it's a 450-wicket. They're 15 short!"[13] Such a chase had never been attempted before – at that point, the previous highest first innings score was Sri Lanka's 398 against Kenya. The previous highest second innings score was 344/8, scored by Pakistan against India at Karachi on 13 March 2004 (a game which India eventually won, by only five runs).[14] [15] The early loss of Boeta Dippenaar for 1 made the South African run chase seem more difficult. Herschelle Gibbs batted at number 3 and reached his 16th ODI hundred in 79 balls, beating his own South African record for the fastest score of a hundred that had previously been off 84 balls against Zimbabwe.[16] Gibbs scored the second highest total by a South African with 175 off 111 balls. He and Graeme Smith had a 187 run partnership, bringing the South Africans back into the game. When Smith was out for 90, Gibbs shared another strong partnership, this time with AB de Villiers. Australia kept the pressure on after Gibbs' dismissal with consistent wickets, but big hitting by Johannes van der Wath and Mark Boucher kept the Proteas in the hunt. Nathan Bracken, in contrasting fashion to the rest of the match, bowled particularly well collecting 5 wickets and keeping his economy a respectable 6.7. By the final over of the match, South Africa needed 7 runs off 6 balls, with Boucher on strike. He pushed a single, giving the strike to Andrew Hall who hit a four, leaving 2 required off four balls. However, he was out caught attempting to repeat the shot, leaving the side at 433–9. Ntini, the number 11 batsman, managed to get the bowler, Brett Lee, away for a single to third man and tie the scores. Boucher then hit a four the next ball (getting his 19th fifty in ODI cricket), sealing South Africa's victory.
Both Ponting and Gibbs were awarded the Man of the Match, but Ponting declined it, saying that it belonged to Gibbs. Shaun Pollock was named Man of the Series, although he was resting for a back injury during this game.
innings | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Batsman | Method of dismissal | Runs | Balls | 4s | 6s | ||
A.C. Gilchrist | c Hall | b Telemachus | 55 | 44 | 9 | 0 | |
S. Katich | c Telemachus | b Ntini | 79 | 90 | 9 | 1 | |
R. Ponting(c) | c Dippenaar | b Telemachus | 164 | 105 | 13 | 9 | |
M. Hussey | c Ntini | b Hall | 81 | 51 | 9 | 3 | |
A. Symonds | 27 | 13 | 3 | 1 | |||
B. Lee | 9 | 7 | 0 | 0 | |||
Did not bat: D. R. Martyn, M. J. Clarke, N. W. Bracken, S. R. Clark, M. L. Lewis | |||||||
Fall of wickets: 1–97 (Gilchrist, 15.2 ov), 2–216 (Katich, 30.3 ov), 3–374 (Hussey, 46.1 ov), 4–407 (Ponting, 47.4 ov) | |||||||
Extras | (lb 4, w 5, nb 10) | 19 | |||||
Total | (for 4 wickets, 50 overs) | 434 |
bowling statistics | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bowler | Overs | Maidens | Runs | Wickets | |
9 | 0 | 80 | 1 | ||
10 | 0 | 80 | 1 | ||
10 | 0 | 76 | 0 | ||
10 | 1 | 87 | 2 | ||
4 | 0 | 29 | 0 | ||
6 | 0 | 70 | 0 | ||
1 | 0 | 8 | 0 |
innings | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Batsman | Method of dismissal | Runs | Balls | 4s | 6s | ||
G. C. Smith(c) | c Hussey | b Clarke | 90 | 55 | 13 | 2 | |
b Bracken | 1 | 7 | 0 | 0 | |||
c Lee | b Symonds | 175 | 111 | 21 | 7 | ||
c Clarke | b Bracken | 14 | 20 | 1 | 0 | ||
20 | 21 | 1 | 0 | ||||
M. V. Boucher(wk) | 50 | 43 | 4 | 0 | |||
c Martyn | b Bracken | 13 | 17 | 1 | 0 | ||
c Ponting | b Bracken | 35 | 18 | 1 | 3 | ||
c Hussey | b Bracken | 12 | 6 | 2 | 0 | ||
c Clarke | b Lee | 7 | 4 | 1 | 0 | ||
1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Fall of wickets: 1–3 (Dippenaar, 1.2 ov), 2–190 (Smith, 22.1 ov), 3–284 (de Villiers, 30.5 ov), 4–299 (Gibbs, 31.5 ov), 5–327 (Kallis, 37.4 ov), 6–355 (Kemp, 42.1 ov), 7–399 (van der Wath, 46.3 ov), 8–423 (Telemachus, 48.2 ov), 9–433 (Hall, 49.3 ov) | |||||||
Extras | (b 4, lb 8, w 4, nb 4) | 20 | |||||
Total | (for 9 wickets, 49.5 overs) | 438 |
bowling statistics | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bowler | Overs | Maidens | Runs | Wickets | |
7.5 | 0 | 68 | 1 | ||
10 | 0 | 67 | 5 | ||
6 | 0 | 54 | 0 | ||
10 | 0 | 113 | 0 | ||
9 | 0 | 75 | 2 | ||
7 | 0 | 49 | 1 |
872, beating the previous record of 693 (India v Pakistan in 2004).
The huge score led Steve Waugh to say that 500 in an innings is the next possibility. Others have said that scores like this are bad for the sport, with Barry Richards saying, "There is such a propensity for hitting boundaries that bowlers have been taken out of game".[20]
Cricinfo's headline for the match was "South Africa win the greatest game", while The Sydney Morning Herald called the match "The greatest the world has seen";[21] The Advertiser called it the "Greatest of all time";[22] The Age "The best one dayer";[23] IAfrica called it "The greatest match ever"[24] and IOL "the greatest match ever played."[25]
The victory was also seen as redemption for the South Africans for the infamous 1999 World Cup semi-final, also against Australia. That match ended in a tie following a disastrous run-out in the final over involving Lance Klusener and Allan Donald and was called the "definitive one-day choke" by ESPNcricinfo.com. This victory buried the ghosts of 1999, and South Africa's "choker" tag was temporarily gone as in the ICC Champions Trophy 2013, the South Africans played the English in the first semi-final and the tag "chokers" was again used by the South African coach Gary Kirsten who admitted that the team "choked" that day.[26]
The Wanderers has since branded itself "home of the greatest ODI ever played". A few years after the match, they released limited edition T-shirts with the scorecard of the match printed on the front. There is a newly renovated "438 Bar", at the back of the Unity stand. Decorated with the wooden seats from the old open stand (it remains an open stand with new seating) and with "438" emblazoned onto the entrance, it is the most popular watering hole at the stadium, and a tribute to the legacy of a match.