Defoe announces Sunderland retirement

James Hunter has been left unhappy with the decision by Sunderland to sign Jermain Defoe after he announced his retirement from professional football.

The Lowdown: Defoe retires

As confirmed by the official website of the Stadium of Light faithful, Defoe has retired from professional football with immediate effect.

The striker returned to the Wearside club in the January transfer window on a short-term deal, but has now called it quits for good after just a couple of months.

The former England international draws the curtain on a glittering career in which he racked up 306 goals for club and country.

The Latest: Hunter reacts

Taking to Twitter, The Chronicle journalist Hunter has now slammed the decision to re-sign Defoe, and claims that he should have seen out the remainder of his contract:

“Safc fans will always have a lot of affection for Defoe following his first spell here, for obvious reasons.

“But club’s decision to re-sign him in January was mystifying – a really bad call.

“Timing of retirement also disappointing, should have honoured contract until end of season.”

The Verdict: Harsh

Hunter’s reaction to the news seems very harsh, given how much Defoe has already given to the club.

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He scored 37 goals in 93 matches over all competitions across three campaigns in his first spell (Transfermarkt), including a memorable winner against rivals Newcastle United in the Premier League in 2015.

Given the long-term injury for Everton loanee Nathan Broadhead, the Black Cats could have done with another forward option, and Defoe seemed like the perfect man to fill in that role at the time, so it’s hard to begrudge either the club or player for agreeing the short-term deal.

In other news, find out what ‘huge boost’ SAFC have now received here!

Boult back at optimum, says Mascarenhas

Trent Boult’s bowling is once again “pretty special”, with the bowler having recovered from the back complaints that plagued him during the Australia tour, New Zealand bowling coach Dimitri Mascarenhas has said. Boult had been rested for much of the ODI series against Sri Lanka, but took 3 for 43 in the fifth one-dayer, then 3 for 21 in the first T20, in his home-province ground of Mount Maunganui. Boult’s performance in Thursday earned him a Man-of-the-Match award.There had been concerns about Boult’s form even during the Tests against Sri Lanka, in which he appeared significantly diminished since New Zealand’s last home summer. Having recently been one of the fittest bowlers in the pace battery, Boult’s speeds had regularly begun to dip into the mid-120kph range.Mascarenhas believes Boult is now back to near his best, following that brief break from the side. “Trent had a tough time in Australia and since then – he’s a world class bowler and he knows what he needs to do to get back to his best, and he has done that,” he said. “He has overcome his injury, he has worked really hard and he’s reaping some really good rewards now, which is great to see.”Boult had delivered a vital 17th over on Thursday, with Sri Lanka threatening to run down New Zealand’s 182 for 4. He conceded only three runs in that over, and also claimed the scalp of Milinda Siriwardana, who had led Sri Lanka’s surge. Mitchell McClenaghan also bowled a six-run penultimate over, and Grant Elliott defended 13 runs from the final over, to complete a three-run win.”It looked as though it could be getting away from us right at the end,” Mascarenhas said. “They only needed 35 off 24 balls. In T20 standards that’s pretty easy, with the size of the boundaries and the size of the bats. But Mitchell McClenaghan and Trent Boult at the end were brilliant in their last couple of overs. And for Grant Elliott to finish off like he did was good.”New Zealand had appeared to be headed for a comfortable victory when they had Sri Lanka 42 for 4, before Siriwardana, with help from Danushka Gunathilaka and Thisara Perera, revived the chase. Mascarenhas suggested New Zealand should be prepared for more such comebacks.”As we saw with the Sri Lankans, they are going to come hard from start to finish and I think that is going to be the theme moving forward going into the World T20,” he said. “All the teams bat deep so we have to be aware that if you have a team five down they are not just going to roll over and die. We are going to have to fight really hard.”

South Australia try again with Tait

Adam Crosthwaite lost his Pura Cup spot but has kept his place in Victoria’s one-day team © Getty Images

Shaun Tait is due to make his long-awaited comeback from elbow surgery after being named in South Australia’s FR Cup squad to face Victoria on Friday. The problem forced Tait out of Australia’s tours to South Africa and India and prevented him from playing in South Australia’s humiliating Pura Cup defeat to the Bushrangers this week.While Tait is expected to play, Darren Lehmann is still missing after injuring his hamstring in the pre-season. The Redbacks have chosen Andy Delmont, the uncapped allrounder, in the squad after he posted 134 for University in the Adelaide grade competition.Delmont has been working with the new coach Mark Sorell to make his game more consistent. “I am rapt this has paid off and that I have been given this opportunity,” he said.Victoria’s successful Pura Cup debutant Matthew Wade has been overlooked and Adam Crosthwaite is set to take the gloves. Victoria will also be boosted by the inclusion of the fast bowlers Shane Harwood, Mick Lewis and Clinton McKay, while Aaron Finch and Aiden Blizzard could slot into the batting line-up.Wade, Nick Jewell, Dirk Nannes and Gerard Denton were left out of the one-day squad despite being part of the side that thrashed South Australia. Denton and Nannes each took five wickets in the first-class win, while Wade marked his debut with 83 and six catches.Harwood’s pre-season was hampered by a shoulder injury but he has been included in the 13-man squad after a successful performance for his club side on the weekend. A state debut for Finch, 20, would be a pleasing turnaround after he was suspended from the Centre of Excellence in July for keeping his room continually untidy.Cameron White said the additions would strengthen Victoria’s chances in the 50-over format. “It was a pretty emphatic win this week, but then again the Redbacks’ form in the FR Cup has been stronger than the Pura Cup in recent seasons,” he said. “There’s no doubt we’re hell-bent on leaving Adelaide with points in both matches and the inclusion of guys like Shane Harwood, who’s been our best one-day bowler, gives us a great boost.”South Australia squad Matthew Elliott, Daniel Harris, Cameron Borgas, Mark Cosgrove, Nathan Adcock (capt), Andy Delmont, Graham Manou (wk), Mark Cleary, Dan Cullen, Jason Gillespie, Ryan Harris, Shaun Tait.Victoria squad Michael Klinger, Robert Quiney, David Hussey, Cameron White (capt), Aiden Blizzard, Aaron Finch, Andrew McDonald, Adam Crosthwaite (wk), Shane Harwood, Clinton McKay, Bryce McGain, Peter Siddle, Mick Lewis.

Indian fan taken into custody

Zaheer Khan was allegedly a target for some fans’ ire © Getty Images

An Indian fan was taken into custody in connection with an assault in oneof the hospitality boxes adjoining the Indian dressing-room at SuperSportPark in Centurion. The man, who is also alleged to have thrown a bottle atZaheer Khan, apparently manhandled a woman when she tried to prevent himfrom gaining access to the dressing-room.The Indian players had been subjected to vile abuse throughout the day,with even stalwarts like Rahul Dravid singled out forintensely personal barbs. Towards the end of the Indian innings, some fansasked Munaf Patel and Irfan Pathan to come down and sign autographs. Theplayers are not allowed to do so, and the mood then turned ugly.As South Africa breezed towards the target, the abuse in both Hindi andGujarati became much more strident. And when the players came down for thepresentation ceremony, there was further heckling. According to a sourcewithin the Indian team, the same group had derided the players’ efforts atDurban and Cape Town as well.Following the presentation, Zaheer is said to have asked the securitystaff to bring the man to him. When confronted with him, Zaheer apparentlyasked him why he had thrown the bottle. He then walked away, but theindividual wasn’t prepared to let it go at that.He went around to the hospitality box and tried to force his way into thedressing-room through there. When he started manhandling the lady, herdaughter raised the alarm, and security staff apprehended him and took himinto custody. The authorities are currently trying to locate the womaninvolved in the incident to get her version of events.Corne Meyer, who handles security for the event sponsors, said that a manhad indeed been found trespassing in the dressing-room area, but declinedto comment till he had further investigated the matter.”Nothing untoward happened inside the dressing-room, and the securitypersonnel quickly got the man out of there,” said Rajan Nair, the Indianteam’s media manager when quizzed about the incident. The NorthernsCricket Union is also investigating the matter which, if true, involves aserious security breach.

A history of the World

Rest of the World captain Garry Sobers receives the Rothmans Trophy in 1967 © The Cricketer

Discounting the occasional one-off charity matches which have grown in quantity of late, and which often are not that representative of genuine world sides, games involving Rest of the World teams have taken place surprisingly rarely. Until the 1960s, transport was the major obstacle to assembling the top players in the same place at the same time, but the expansion of accessible air travel, allied to television providing the financial muscle to support such ventures, meant that dreams became reality.Nevertheless, the earliest recorded first-class match featuring a side promoted as a World XI took place at Melbourne in March, 1862, when, rather bizarrely, they took on Surrey. And it was hardly a global side. All but one of the World XI were born in England – John Conway being the exception – and most played regularly in England. It was the only appearance that Thomas Hearne, the captain, ever made outside England.The first genuinely representative matches took place in September 1965 when an England XI took on a Rest of the World XI in three-day games at Scarborough and Lord’s. The Rest of the World side was selected by readers of the BBC’s listing magazine, Radio Times, and 40,000 took part in the poll. There was controversy from the off as Australia’s Norman O’Neill withdrew as a protest against the selection of West Indian Charlie Griffith whose action he considered unfair. Given the lateness in the season, it was unsurprising when rain spoiled an interesting finish in the first game and then prevented any play until the second afternoon at Lord’s. It was then agreed to play a 70-overs-a-side match, which the World won by nine wickets with Garry Sobers taking 5 for 22.The following year, the World Cricket Cup, sponsored by Rothmans, was launched. The format was simple. Three sides – England, the touring West Indies, and an impressive Rest of the World XI – playing each other once in 50-over matches at Lord’s. The public response was good (13,036 paid over the three days), the weather remained fine, and England beat West Indies in the final. This end-of-season festival was repeated in 1967 when Rest of the World beat Pakistan in the final.In the spring of that year, a Rest of the World side played Barbados at Bridgetown in a five-day match which was to mark the island’s independence. The game was something of a disappointment as Barbados were bowled out for 84 and lost by 262 runs with a day to spare.In 1968, Rothmans amended the format of their sponsored event. Instead of a triangular one-day tournament, a Rest of the World side played four first-class matches, against Hampshire, Kent, the Australians at Lord’s, the final match of their long tour which they won by eight wickets, and then an England XI at Scarborough. The tour was beset by problems from the moment Colin Bland arrived only to be immediately deported, and was not considered a great success.

Hanif Mohammad and the Nawab of Pataudi pose ahead of the inaugural Rothmans tourament in 1965 © The Cricketer

In 1969 a World XI by another name – they were actually called an International Cavaliers XI – took on New Zealand at Scarborough and won by 11 runs. But the advent of the John Player County League, the first domestic one-day league, meant that the end-of-season Rest of the World games were considered one-day overkill and the concept was dropped. But the interlude was brief.The cancellation of the South Africa tour to England in 1970 led to the English authorities quickly arranging a five-match series against a Rest of the World side captained by Sobers. The team played only one other match, at the end of the summer, most returning to county commitments in between games. Marketed as Tests, with caps awarded to the England side, only later were they ruled by the authorities not to be. Rest of the World won the series 4-1.Again it was the scrapping of a South Africa tour – this time to Australia in 1971-72 – which led to the biggest campaign by a world side, undertaking, at short notice, a full tour. Again led by Sobers, Rest of the World fulfilled the commitments which any touring side would have, with five unofficial ‘Tests’ and seven other first-class matches. After an uncertain start – somewhat unsurprising given that the squad was assembled at little more than a month’s notice – the crowds caught on and World XI came from behind to win 2-1. The highlights of the summer were Sobers’s brilliant 254 at Melbourne and the emergence of Dennis Lillee as a world-class fast bowler.In the early to mid 1970s, the International Cavaliers, a quasi- Rest of the World side, regularly toured Rhodesia and South Africa before international sanctions began to bite. In 1973-74, a side billed as Rest of the World, but in essence made up of largely second-string English and West Indian players, played two matches in Pakistan.The REST OF THE WORLD concept returned with the advent of Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket in 1977. There were enough Australians and West Indians to cobble together two teams, and a third side – the WSC World XI – was fielded from the remnants, although in the first year there were insufficient of those so a few West Indians had to double up. In the second season, the WSC World XI had a far more global feel although it was still made up from England, Pakistan, South Africa and West Indies.

Sunil Gavaskar on his way to 188 for Rest of the World against MCC at Lord’s in 1987 © Getty Images

In 1987, MCC celebrated its bicentenary with a five-day match between it and a Rest of the World side which was probably the strongest – and certainly the most representative – up to that point. In front of capacity crowds, bat dominated ball for four days, and a thrilling finale was only scuppered by rain which washed out the final day. The Rest of the World had warmed up with two three-day games at Gloucester and Old Trafford, but the Lancashire match was abandoned without a ball being bowled.That was the last first-class match involving a genuine Rest of the World side, although there have been an increasing number of one-day matches, almost all for charity, since then. Between 1988 and 1995 various sides labelled as Rest of the World did appear in festival matches in England, but they were rarely representative nor did they feature anything like the best players, more the best who happened not to be doing anything else at the time and were in the country.The most high-profile matches between 1987 and the advent of the ICC Super Series have been the ones for the Diana Memorial in 1998 and the various Tsunami relief matches in 2005.

Bazid and Misbah lead Pakistan A to the finals

Pakistan A 262 for 3 (Bazid 74, Misbah 65*) beat Kenya 260 for 8 (Tikolo 121, Modi 55) by 7 wickets with 7.2 overs to spare
Scorecard

Steve Tikolo: a glorious hundred in a losing cause© Getty Images

A 97-run third-wicket stand between Bazid Khan and Misbah-ul-Haq ensured that Pakistan A nailed down a competitive target and qualified for the finals – against India A – in the triangular one-day series in Nairobi. Kenya may have felt they had enough runs on the board after Steve Tikolo hit a magnificent 121 to guide them to 260, but Bazid (74) and Misbah (65 not out) led the run-chase as Pakistan A eventually won comfortably, by seven wickets with more than seven overs to spare.In a match which both teams needed to win to qualify for the finals, Kenya won the toss and, after a wobbly start, got back on track when Tikolo and Hitesh Modi added 130 for the fourth wicket. They came together after Kenya had slumped to 59 for 3, losing Kennedy Otieno, Ravindu Shah and Malhar Patel. Both were eventually run out, and Kenya lost their way somewhat thereafter.Pakistan’s top-order batsmen all got starts. Kamran Akmal (36) and Naved Ashraf (41) got the team off to a fluent start, and while both failed to convert their starts into something more substantial, they had at least ensured against early hiccups. Bazid and Misbah then built on that with a vital partnership in the middle overs, while Faisal Iqbal provided the finishing touches with an unbeaten 32, to ensure a fourth encounter against India A, against whom they have lost all three matches in this tournament.

Ramprakash completes the set with century against Middlesex

Yesterday’s Championship reviewFrizzell County Championship Division OneMiddlesex 370 and 74 for 0 v Surrey 568 at Lord’s
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Mark Ramprakash made history today, becoming the first man to score centuries against all the 18 first-class counties. Fittingly, his 110 against his old club Middlesex came at the ground where it all began for him – Lord’s. It was a typically classy ton from Ramprakash, which only added salt to Middlesex’s wounds, who spent most of the day chasing leather as Surrey amassed yet another Championship total of over 500. Even Saqlain Mushtaq, the nightwatchman, filled his boots with 69 before the returning duo of Alec Stewart (87) and Alex Tudor (30) further frustrated Middlesex. Andy Strauss (42*) and Sven Koenig (29*) then played out till the end, but they will have to show some more of the same fight to prevent a third consecutive win for Surrey tomorrow.Essex 514 v Kent 381 and 278 for 5 at Chelmsford
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Mark Ealham (85*) and Matthew Walker (65) kept Kent in the hunt atChelmsford with a healthy stand of 127 just when Kent needed it. NasserHussain had earlier crashed 206, one short of his career-best, against Australia in 1997, as Essex stamped their authority with an imposing514, and a lead of 133. James Middlebrook put Kent further on the backfoot when he removed both openers, both caught at slip by Andy Flower,while in between the unfortunate Ed Smith departed for a pair. However,Andrew Symonds put some spark back in the innings with 39 from 47 balls, before Ealham and Walker dug in to haul the game back into the balance.Leicestershire 243 for 5 for 1 v Nottinghamshire 326 and 318 for 6dec at Leicester
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Nottinghamshire put in an efficient team performance to end the dayfirmly on top of their midlands rivals Leicestershire. Virender Sehwagadded 17 to his overnight score, and when he was caught, Leicestershirelost their way. Greg Smith (4 for 40) and Stuart MacGill (3 for 44) blew away the middle order as Leicestershire collapsed from 188 for 3 to 243 all out. Kevin Pietersen then crashed 95 from 89 while Guy Welton dropped anchor with 86 as Notts stretched their lead to over 400. David Masters was trapped lbw at the end of play, to leave Leicestershire deep in trouble.Sussex 545 beat Warwickshire 201 and 285 by an innings and 59 runsat Hove
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At the end of last season, Chris Adams said that all his Sussex side now needed was a match-winning spinner, and boy have they got one. Mushtaq Ahmed is streets ahead at the top of the Championship wicket-takers, and another bagful of wickets in Sussex’s crushing win over Warwickshire has put him even further ahead. Mushtaq took 7 for 85 in Warwickshire’s meek follow-on, which crumbled from 135 for 1 to 285 all out. Mike Powell (80) and Nick Knight (64) put on 135, but once they were both one of Mushtaq’s magnificent seven, wickets continued to tumble regularly as Sussex cruised home.

Frizzell County Championship Division Two
Northamptonshire 203 and 243 beat Derbyshire 160 and 106 by 180 runsat Northampton
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An early finish at Northampton as Graeme Swann glid through theDerbyshire second innings with a career-best 7 for 33. Northants won by180 runs, but their victory was tainted by the controversial state ofthe pitch, which Adrian Pierson, the Derbyshire coach, called a complete joke. The tracks at the County Ground are renown for being turners, but this one would have been more suited to the Wankede Stadium rather than Wantage Road. However, Northants escaped any punishment from the ECB. Chasing 287, Michael Di Venuto and Andrew Gait made a steady start with 57 for the first wicket. But once they both fell for 29 to Jason Brown, Derbyshire, like the pitch, began to fall apart. Swann ran riot as Derbyshire lost their last nine wickets for only 48 runs. Swann’s seven wickets came in a hurry in one spell of 15.1 overs, six of which were caught as Derbyshire crashed to 106 all out.

Glamorgan 270 and 311 for 8 v Worcestershire 328 at Cardiff
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Mike Powell became the first Glamorgan player to have scored a century in each innings against Worcestershire after he followed his 125 in the first innings with 142 in the second. And his little piece of history also gave Glamorgan the edge in this close match. With help from Jon Hughes (41) and David Hemp (63), Powell guided Glamorgan to 311 for 8. Justin Kemp took 4 for 46 for Worcestershire, who earlier made 238 with contributions from all down the order, with the game set up for an interesting finish.Hampshire 330 v Gloucestershire 185 and 382 for 9 atSouthampton
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Phil Weston and Jonty Rhodes both scored hundreds to pullGloucestershire back into contention against Hampshire at the RoseBowl. Resuming the day on 50 for 2 and still some way behind, Weston led the way with a solid 100 before he was caught off Ed Giddins. Despite three wickets from Dimitri Mascarenhas (3 for 57), no-one could get the better of Rhodes who ended the day unbeaten on 134 as Gloucestershire lead by 237 with one wicket left.

Somerset 275 and 213 for 6 v Yorkshire 512 at Taunton
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Steve Kirby added to his five first-innings wickets with four more inSomerset’s second to put Yorkshire on the brink of much-needed victoryat Taunton. Kirby picked up the important wickets of Peter Bowler (58),Jamie Cox and Michael Burns (both 39) as Somerset ended the day sixwickets down and trailing by 24. Andy Gray earlier hit the firstChampionship hundred of his career as Yorkshire added 103 from the lastfour wickets.

Essex announce three-year sponsorship deal

Essex County Cricket Club has revealed their new main Sponsor for 2002-2004.Panacea Services Limited are a Technological Solutions company based in London and their six-figure sponsorship of the County has been agreed after several weeks of negotiations.Commercial Manager Dave Comley said: "We are delighted to welcome Panacea Services Limited on board to Essex County Cricket Club. It has been a pleasure negotiating and working with them and particularly with one of the partners, Anthony Bright. His love of cricket in general and Essex in particular bodes well for a good working relationship on both sides. The deal is a beneficial one for Essex and will mean `Panacea’ branding displayed on the County Championship shirt and the County sweater for at least the next two years with an option for extension after that time. They will be known as the Official Main Sponsor of Essex County Cricket Club."Dave Comley also acknowledged the previous Main Sponsor, Tiptree: – "Tiptree were exemplary sponsors and sincere thanks must go to them for their support of Essex for the past two seasons. I hope that we will continue to see Tiptree here in 2002 and beyond."

West Ham had a nightmare with Anderson

West Ham have been fairly consistent when it comes to spending big money on new players during the transfer windows over the past few years such as Kurt Zouma, Nikola Vlasic and Sebastien Haller among others.

However, as tends to be the case with most clubs, not every transfer deal ends up being worth the time, effort or money it took to complete.

One prime example of this at the east London club is the deal West Ham secured for Brazilian winger Felipe Anderson.

Signed in the 2018 summer transfer window from Italian club Lazio for a then club-record fee of £36m, the attacker made 73 appearances for the Hammers across all competitions but could only score 12 times and provide 13 assists, meaning he cost the club £3m-per-goal from the transfer fee they shelled out for him.

In October 2020, the 28-year-old joined Porto on loan but only made ten appearances with no goals scored before returning to the London Stadium in June last year.

Not long after that, the east London club decided to bring Anderson’s time as a West Ham player to an end by selling him back to Lazio for a reported fee of just €3m (£2.52m).

With 38 appearances under his belt across all competitions this season, the winger, who’s picking up a weekly wage of £85k-per-week according to Salary Sport, has scored six goals and provided seven assists in the process, meaning he could realistically equal the goal contributions tally he had for West Ham in just one season back with Lazio.

In December 2019, Transfermarkt rated the Brazilian’s market value at £40.5m, the highest it has ever been throughout his career, whereas it now stands at just £9m, presumably as a result of his disappointing spell in England and on loan with Porto.

Having been slammed by former Sky Sports pundit Phil Thompson for his “really poor” performances in a Hammers shirt, Anderson “couldn’t cut it” at the club according to Ben Foster, which is hard to dispute.

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Taking all of this into account, it’s safe to say that GSB had a nightmare when they gave the green light on what was then a club-record transfer deal for their club.

In other news: Moyes can finally axe £61k-p/w WHU dud with swoop for “outstanding” 25 y/o “leader” – opinion

Inspired India evict South Africa

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

RP Singh was sensational and provided India the much-needed cutting edge against a formidable South African batting line-up © Getty Images

A sensational spell of 4 for 13 from Rudra Pratap Singh dumped South Africa out of the Twenty20 party as India romped to a comprehensive 37-run victory that sealed a place in the semi-final against Australia. South Africa, previously unbeaten in the competition, again proved masters ofthe choke, falling 10 short of the 126 that would have taken them to the last four and eliminated New Zealand.India, rocked by the withdrawal of Yuvraj Singh before the game with tendonitis of the left elbow, had struggled with the bat themselves, slipping to 33 for 3, but a tremendous 85-run partnership between Rohit Sharma and Mahendra Singh Dhoni propelled them to 153 for 5 on awell-grassed pitch of variable bounce.Rohit Sharma, in his first innings in the tournament, struck some sumptuous strokes through the cover region, making room and lofting the ball cleanly over the infield. He also targetted themidwicket region, finishing the innings with a glorious six over square leg off a Johan van der Wath full-toss. At the halfway stage India had only 57 on the board, but Rohit Sharma and Dhoni amassed 56 in the last five overs as a frown started to crease Graeme Smith’s brow.India’s defence of 153 started in appalling fashion with Sreesanth pushing the first ball down the leg side for four wides, and when Smith clipped one off his pads for four, South Africa had 11 from the first over. That, though, was as good as it would get. RP Singh made the perfect start, trapping Herschelle Gibbs leg before, before a stupendous Jonty Rhodes-like dive from Dinesh Karthik at wide second slip sent Smith on his way.Enter Sreesanth. AB de Villiers survived one vociferous appeal for leg before, but the second one was so plumb that he might as well have walked. And though both Justin Kemp and Mark Boucher started with fours, the runs dried up as a hint of swing led to more flails at air than solidconnections.Kemp was always going to be dangerous, and the manner of his dismissal once again illustrated the value of youth in the side. Boucher tapped and ran, but Rohit Sharma raced in from cover to pick up and throw in a fluid motion that caught Kemp marginally short of the crease.The home support was in shock, and that quickly turned to despondency when RP Singh came round the wicket to deliver a peach that cleaned up Shaun Pollock’s leg stump. At 31 for 5, it seemed like game over. But Albie Morkel had been in magnificent hitting form all tournament, and Boucher held down one end as South Africa watched the asking-rate spiral beyond 10an over.When Joginder Sharma, who bowled fairly tidily, came on, Morkel drove him through cover – the same fate that met Irfan Pathan when he gave a little too much width. Generally, though, the bowling was impeccable, forcing both batsmen to settle for singles and the odd two into the outfield.The momentum shifted slightly when Harbhajan Singh was introduced. Boucher tucked a full-toss off his pads for four, cut one late to third man and then clipped one beautifully between the leg-side fielders; 15 came from the over. But even when Morkel swung Joginder Sharma for a massive six straight down the ground, the asking-rate remained 12 an over.That pressure eventually told when Sreesanth was brought back for his final over and the 17th of the innings. Boucher chopped one back on, and as he walked off, it was apparent that the limit of South Africa’s ambition would be the 126 needed to qualify for the last four.Vernon Philander and van der Wath both went down swinging, stumped by Karthik – who had taken over the gloves once Dhoni felt some back pain early in the innings – off Harbhajan, but the final nail was hammered in when RP Singh produced a magnificent yorker to end Morkel’s defiance at 36.

Earning his spurs: Rohit Sharma performed superbly under intense pressure to provide India with a competitive total © Getty Images

It left Smith to ponder just what had gone wrong, after miserly bowling from Pollock had reined in the Indian openers. Gautam Gambhir was the aggressor early on, and he enjoyed a reprieve as well, when Philander made only a half-hearted attempt to catch a miscued pull.On his home patch it was Pollock who made the breakthrough, having Gambhir mishit one to Smith at mid-off. And it soon got worse for India as Karthik chipped the first ball he faced to Albie Morkel at square leg.It then became three wickets in four balls when Virender Sehwag’s attempt to guide the ball down to third man ended up in Boucher’s gloves. With the run-rate going nowhere, and two new men at the crease, India were in disarray.Robin Uthappa walloped one mighty six off van der Wath, and was then put down by Philander at mid-on. With Rohit Sharma starting to play his strokes, the mood in the dug-out was starting to lift a little, but then Uthappa drove Morne Morkel on the up to Smith at mid-off.Despite the blip, Rohit Sharma started to time the ball beautifully and the South Africans began to get flustered about errors in the field. Dhoni clouted Albie Morkel over long-on with a tennis forehand, and also benefited from a top edge over the keeper. There was a massive six over midwicket as Morne Morkel overstepped, and it was all India thereafter as a match that they began in a bullock cart ended in a magic carpet ride. For South Africa, another major tournament, and the Chuck Palahniuk novel….

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