England back on track after South Africa drama

CHENNAI, (Reuters) – England’s much-maligned bowlers  conjured up a lion-hearted effort to pull off a remarkable  six-run victory against South Africa as their wildly fluctuating  World Cup adventure took another dramatic turn yesterday.

JP Duminy is bolwed all ends up by James Anderson.

The team that has contributed much of the excitement that  has brought alive the tournament dished out yet another Group B  heart-stopper when their chastised bowlers redeemed themselves  by defending a total as insubstantial as 171 to eke out a narrow  victory.

“A cliffhanger of a game, we’re keeping people interested at  the moment… we have been involved in three very tight games of  cricket so far in this World Cup. I think we are definitely  doing our bit to advertise the 50-overs format,” England captain  Andrew Strauss quipped after the match.

It was no vainglory from the leader of a team which  jeopardised their quarter-final prospects by barely avoiding an  upset against the Netherlands, sharing a dramatic tie against  India and sensationally going down to Ireland in their first  three outings.

There was no dearth of drama yesterday either.   For once, the batsmen, including Strauss (0), let the team  down and it was left to Jonathan Trott (52) and Ravi Bopara  (60), drafted in place of injured Paul Collingwood for a  man-of-the-match award winning performance, to lend some  respectability to the score.

At the innings break, the potential Sunday blockbuster  featuring two of the best teams never to have won an ODI World  Cup had all the looks of being South Africa’s third straight  victory in the tournament.

But if Strauss watched a horror story unfolding before his  eyes when his side batted, what his bowlers came up with was  sheer magic.

Stuart Broad (4-15) struck just when it mattered most, like  in the 48th over when he claimed the last two wickets in four  balls to seal the win.

Terrorised batsmen

Pace colleague James Anderson (2-16), who had been England’s  most expensive bowler at the tournament until Sunday, terrorised  the batsmen with his grasp over reverse swing while Graeme Swann  (1-29) tormented with sharp turns to suddenly lay bare South  Africa’s unsuspected batting frailties.

This was a dramatic turnaround by the bowlers who bled so  heavily against the Netherlands (292), India (338) and Ireland  (329).

“It was a huge game for us. After the match against Ireland,  we needed to show some character… the bowlers have been under  the pump, for them to come up and show what they can do bodes  well for us in the tournament,” a relieved Strauss said.

His counterpart Smith rued the “inconsistent surface”,  regretted he could not voice his opinion about the umpire  decision review system and denied his team choked again but was  gracious enough to praise the English bowlers.

“All credit to the England players, the way they played in  the last 15 overs… credit to them for the skill they showed  today.”

There was more drama in the match than a Bollywood  pot-boiler and Smith featured in one episode when the game was  suspended for a while as TV umpire reviewed whether he had  actually gloved a ball.

Smith’s team mate Jacques Kallis was his usual sportsmanlike  self, taking England wicketkeeper Matt Prior’s word that the  ball he edged had carried and left the field without waiting for  the umpire’s decision.

South Africa still were cruising merrily towards a victory  when losing five quick wickets unhinged the side and tilted the  match in England’s favour.

Before England could rejoice, Dale Steyn (20) suddenly  decided to prove he was no dud with the bat and wielded it with  uncharacteristic maturity.

By the time Broad came to send down the 48th over, South  Africa needed eight runs from three overs with two wickets in  hand.

Broad trapped Steyn lbw with his first delivery and removed  Morne Morkel with the fourth to cap a memorable day for the  side.