India beat SA, storm into U19 WC final
India will face either Australia or Pakistan in the summit clash to be played at this venue on Sunday, searching for their sixth trophy in the marquee event.
PTI
Benoni (South Africa), 6 Feb
Fuelled by splendid fifties by Sachin Dhas and captain Uday
Saharan, defending champions India battled past South Africa by two wickets to
storm into the final, their fifth consecutive, of the ICC Under-19 World Cup
here on Tuesday.
Dhas (96, 95 balls, 11x4, 1x6) and Saharan (81, 124, 6x4),
who were India's guiding forces in the last match against Nepal with a hundred
each, garnered 171 runs for the fifth wicket as India hunted down the target of
245 with just 7 balls to spare.
India will face either Australia or Pakistan in the summit
clash to be played at this venue on Sunday, searching for their sixth trophy in
the marquee event.
But the beginning of India's chase resembled a debris yard,
losing four wickets for just 32 runs in the 12th over. The South African
new-ball bowler Kwena Maphaka jolted India in the first ball of their innings,
dismissing Adarsh Singh with a nasty climbing delivery that the batter had no
choice other than snicking to wicket-keeper Lhuan-dre Pretorious. His partner
Tristan Luus soon joined the fun with the wickets of Musheer Khan, Arshin
Kulkarni and Priyanshu Moliya as all three India batters were indecisive
outside the off-stump while hanging their bats to dry.
But the Indians found their saviours in Dhas and Saharan,
who dished out innings of vastly contrasting nature and tempo. Dhas was
aggressive despite the situation his team was in, but Saharan was happy to keep
his end going. Dhas' knock was a treatise on playing cross-batted shots as he
cracked a six, pulled fours besides those well-placed nudges through the vacant
spots on the on-side.
Saharan, on the other hand, was more traditional but was not
entirely hesitant to bring out an exquisite drive or rasping cut whenever an
opportunity was there for him to do so. Dhas reached his fifty in 47 balls,
fittingly, with a pull off pacer Riley Norton and Saharan reached his
half-century in 88 balls with a cover drive off off-spinner Juan James. In the
process, Saharan also became the highest run-getter in this World Cup with 389
runs.
But these two youngsters showed immense maturity not to
squander the start they got; piling runs to keep the pressure squarely on the
hosts. A second hundred in this event was there for his taking, but Maphaka,
the tournament's highest wicket-taker so far, deceived him with a slower ball
that Dhas just managed to scoop to David Teeger at covers.
But the breakthrough came a wee bit late as India hung on to
squeeze past the line notwithstanding the run out of Saharan when the scores
were level. Earlier, bowlers played a significant part in shaping India's
victory, limiting 2014 champions South Africa to 244 for 7 on a pitch that
offered them considerable assistance.
SA found fight through wicketkeeper batter Lhuan-dre
Pretorious (76, 102 balls) and Richard Seletswane (64, 100 balls) after early
blows, but those efforts were not enough to rattle the visitors. Pretorious and
Seletswane milked 72 runs for the third wicket but they took nearly 22 overs
for that.
The South African top-order just could not get going against
India pacers Naman Tiwari (1/52) and Raj Limbani (3/60) who found appreciable
pace, bounce and carry from the Willowmoore track. Even when Seletswane and
Pretorious were reconstructing the SA innings, they failed to score at a brisk
pace, as the run-rate for a large part remained under four.
Left-arm spinners Saumey Pandey and Musheer Khan (2/43)
along with off-spinner Priyanshu Moliya shackled the host batters' progress in
this phase, bowling a tidy line and length. Pretorious, who tried to bring in
some momentum hammering Moliya for a six over mid-wicket, departed just as the
alliance began to blossom.
The left-hander, who made his third successive fifty in this
event, wanted to cart Musheer over mid-wicket but a leaping Murugan Abhishek
held on to a stunner to end his stay. Seletswane also could not build on the
platform as he soon fell to Tiwari, as his hoick ended in the hands of a
running-in Moliya in the deep.
James (24 off 19 balls) and Luus (23 off 12 balls) helped
South Africa amass 81 runs off the last 10 overs but that was not enough to
stop the Indians.
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