In Potchefstroom on Tuesday, who was the man batting at No. 4 for South Africa? What had he done to Aiden Markram, specifically? You know, Markram, who bats like a dream before losing his wicket because to yet another badly planned, poorly executed, and excessively ambitious stroke that looked nothing like what he had done up until that moment.
Markram had reached 50 in 32 innings across all formats before to the third ODI, but only seven of those efforts resulted in hundreds. The conversion rate is 21.88% in this case. Marnus Labuschagne, his opponent, had a rate of 36.13% heading into the game. Virat Kohli’s was 37.02%, and David Warner’s was 34.59%. Jacques Kallis and Graeme Smith both took more opportunities than Markram has: their rates were 29.38% and 29.13%, respectively. 30.13% for AB de Villiers.
Markram did not awaken this time. He didn’t hit the snooze button and pounded out an unblemished 102 off 74 balls. It was an innings of strength, grace, and purpose that rocked and rolled with scything drives, booming pulls, and the appearance of a batter who had come to leave their imprint. It demonstrated the contrast between Markram’s painfully polite public persona and the hard-headed bastard he occasionally reveals himself to be. I wish he did it more frequently. That is what prevails in games.
And win South Africa did, upending an Australian-led five-match series with a score of 111 runs. That came after their 3-0 victory in the T20I match. How did it feel to see the strategy work out after five convincing losses in a row?
There is a lot of relief, according to Markram. We take great pride in being a fiercely competitive nation, and when you don’t perform at that level, it hurts both you and the cricket player. To let your country’s citizens down is not nice. It’s gratifying to know that, despite what has occurred on this tour thus far, we have the character to turn things around in a game that must be won because good results matter a lot to us.
Markram and Quinton de Kock shared 146 off 137, the first century opening stand for South Africa in 21 ODIs. Markram also shared 76 off 70 with Reeza Hendricks and 63 off 31 with Marco Jansen. All of which appeared destined to fail as Warner, Travis Head, Mitchell Marsh, and Labuschagne reeled in nearly half of Australia’s target in only 40% of the deliveries they were allocated. The visitors’ top four scored 160 of the steep 339 off 122 balls. Then a few odd things started to happen.
Warner is one of the most competent and well-prepared athletes on the planet. It was strange how he lost a boot, slipped as a result, and was run out by Keshav Maharaj’s direct hit from midwicket when he was only 22 runs away from adding another century to the 106 he had made on Saturday in Bloemfontein.
Then, after Tabraiz Shamsi successfully stumped Labuschagne with a ripping googly, De Kock launched into a wild celebration reminiscent of Shamsi’s animated conversation with Labuschagne on Saturday.
De Kock then removed the bails with liquid seamlessness at the same Marcus Stoinis’ foot rose as he lunged for a finely tuned delivery from Maharaj in a glittering flash of talent and belief.
Australians were stumbling at 178/5 after sitting nicely at 157/2 in the 19th. They fell flat on their faces as Gerald Coetzee ripped 4/22 in 20 balls, giving him 4/50 in his fourth ODI, the greatest figures of his career.
The quantity of Australia’s downfall was 9/87. The first time South Africa had dismissed them in nine innings, regardless of format, they were knocked out in just 35 overs. Did they believe they could afford to relax on Tuesday with games remaining at Centurion on Friday and the Wanderers on Sunday, and with just one more victory needed to seal the series?
It most definitely wasn’t us lifting our foot off the gas, according to Mitchell Marsh. “South Africa played really well and are a very good team. They outperformed us.