Unbeaten Guptill ton levels ODI series for New Zealand

POTCHEFSTROOM, South Africa, (Reuters) – An unbeaten century from opener Martin Guptill eased New Zealand to an emphatic eight-wicket victory over South Africa in the second One-Day International at Senwes Park yesterday.

Set a modest 205 for victory, New Zealand cruised to their target with 33 balls to spare on the back of Guptill’s 103 not out as they finished on 207 for two.

The victory levels the three match series at 1-1, with the deciding match to be played in Durban on Wednesday.

After winning the toss and electing to bat, South Africa never got momentum in their innings and were bowled out in the final over for 204, not helped by losing their last three wickets to run outs.

Martin Guptill
Martin Guptill

New Zealand bowled with accuracy on a slow wicket as the Proteas batsmen reached the boundary rope on just 15 occasions.

Only middle-order batsman Farhaan Behardien found any sort of fluency as he accumulated a neat 70 from 87 balls to give the home side some sort of target to defend.

Rilee Rossouw (39) and AB de Villiers (31) both got starts in the top-order, but could not kick-on.

The innings ended in farce when Aaron Phangiso, Dale Steyn and Imran Tahir were all run out, with Vernon Philander (30 not out) the common denominator at the other end. Credit must go to the way the New Zealand bowlers stifled the run rate though, with seamer Doug Bracewell the pick as he recorded figures of three for 31 in his 10 overs.

The tourists never looked troubled in their reply as a 126 run opening stand between Guptill and Tom Latham (64) laid the platform for the emphatic win. Guptill’s ninth ODI century took 134 balls and while it lacked the brutality of some of his other international hundreds, was skilful batting on a pitch most other batsmen found difficult.

Debutant George Worker finished on 20 not out as he put on 67 with Guptill for the third wicket.

Scoreboard

South Africa Innings
H. Amla c Elliott b Milne                             8
M. van Wyk b Milne                                    2
R. Rossouw c Williamson b Bracewell    39
A. de Villiers c Guptill b Elliott                 31
D. Miller c Munro b Bracewell                   5
F. Behardien c Williamson b Bracewell  70
D. Wiese lbw b Sodhi                                  8
V. Philander not out                                 30
A. Phangiso run out (Guptill, Ronchi)      1
D. Steyn run out (Latham)                       2
I. Tahir run out (Guptill)                          4
Extras (lb-3 w-1)                                       4
Total (all out, 49.3 overs)                      204
Fall of wickets: 1-9 H. Amla,2-20 M. van Wyk,3-68 R. Rossouw,4-76 D. Miller,5-107 A. de Villiers,6-134 D. Wiese,7-188 F. Behardien,8-192 A. Phangiso,9-195 D. Steyn,10-204 I. Tahir
Bowling B. Wheeler 9.3 – 1 – 39 – 0(w-1) A. Milne 10 – 0 – 39 – 2 D. Bracewell 10 – 0 – 31 – 3 I. Sodhi 10 – 0 – 59 – 1 G. Elliott 7 – 0 – 25 – 1 G. Worker 1 – 0 – 5 – 0 C. Munro 2 – 0 – 3 – 0

New Zealand Innings
M. Guptill not out                                   103
T. Latham c Rossouw b Tahir                64
K. Williamson b Phangiso                         7
G. Worker not out                                   20
Extras (lb-3 w-10)                                  13
Total (for 2 wickets, 44.3 overs)          207
Fall of wickets: 1-126 T. Latham,2-140 K. Williamson
Did not bat: G. Elliott, L. Ronchi, C. Munro, D. Bracewell, B. Wheeler, A. Milne, I. Sodhi Bowling V. Philander 6 – 0 – 21 – 0 A. Phangiso 10 – 1 – 37 – 1(w-2) D. Steyn 8 – 1 – 38 – 0(w-4) D. Wiese 4 – 0 – 23 – 0(w-1) I. Tahir 10 – 1 – 42 – 1(w-1) F. Behardien 2 – 0 – 18 – 0(w-1) R. Rossouw 2.3 – 0 – 14 – 0(w-1) A. de Villiers 2 – 0 – 11 – 0 Referees Umpire: Shaun George
Umpire: Ian Gould
TV umpire: Johan Cloete
Match referee: Roshan Mahanama
Result: New Zealand won by 8 wickets