Duminy anchors South Africa into last eight

KOLKATA, (Reuters) – JP Duminy agonisingly missed  out on his first World Cup hundred by a run but his sparkling  effort propelled South Africa into the quarter-finals with a  crushing 131-run win over Ireland today.
The 273-run target proved a bit too steep for the Irish as  they never recovered from a couple of early jolts, and were  ultimately shot out for a paltry 141. South Africa became the  first team from Group B to reach the last eight.

J P Duminy
J P Duminy

“We wanted to qualify … and have three good matches in the  knockout phase. We’ve done the first part of that and we’re  excited to be there,” captain Graeme Smith said during the  presentation ceremony.
Speedster Morne Morkel and spinner Robin Peterson picked up  three wickets apiece as South Africa made regular inroads to  block Irish hopes of an upset.
Duminy also chipped in with a wicket with his part-time  off-spin but it was definitely not enough to compensate his  missing a deserved hundred while unselfishly trying to gather  more runs for his team.
In the last over of the South African innings, the  left-hander, on 99, skied the ball as Ireland’s John Mooney ran  back to complete a stunning catch to deny him the century.
Although he looked dejected to fall so close to the three  figure milestone, Duminy had no regrets about his tactics.
“Definitely happy to try to hit it out of the ground (just  before ton),” the 26-year-old said.
“In this sort of games, one or two runs can make a  difference whether you win or lose so my goal was to try to hit  it out of the ground.”
On a cloudy day at Eden Gardens, the Proteas were struggling  on 117 for five before the left-handed duo of Duminy and World  Cup debutant Colin Ingram steadied the ship with a 87-run  partnership off 79 deliveries.
Duminy (99 off 103 balls) then combined with Johan Botha and  added 65 runs for the seventh wicket to take South Africa to a  competitive 272 for seven.
Ireland, who have impressed all in the World Cup with their  dogged performance, picked up regular wickets with some smart  bowling and electric ground fielding, after opting to bowl  first.
The run-outs of Smith (7) and Jacques Kallis (19) and the  early dismissal of Hashim Amla (18) put the South African  middle-order, without the injured AB de Villiers, under stern  test.
Wicketkeeper Morne van Wyk, who was promoted to number  three, survived two dropped chances for a 41-ball 42 and took  good advantage of the fielding restrictions to hit seven  boundaries and one six.
The Irish spinners — George Dockrell and Paul Stirling —  were the most impressive as they stifled South Africa, giving  away just 82 runs between their 20 overs, while picking up two  wickets.