AB De Villiers and Virat Kohli went head to head in a memorable display of batsmanship at Chennai on Thursday before India triumphed by 35 runs in the fourth ODI of the Freedom Series to square matters at 2-2. The decider will be played at Mumbai’s Wankede Stadium on Sunday.
De Villiers contributed 112 off 107 balls (10 fours and 2 sixes) and Kohli 138 off 140 balls (6 fours and 5 sixes). It was De Villiers 22nd ODI century and he thus claimed the SA record, going ahead of Herschelle Gibbs and Hashim Amla. It was also his fifth against India which is also a South African record, taking him ahead of Gary Kirsten and Quinton de Kock.
India won what turned out to be an important toss as the pitch got slower and more responsive to spin as the match progressed. It was the fourth time in a row that the match was won by the side batting first which suggests that Sunday’s toss could again be important.
That South Africa got so close to victory was a tribute to the genius of the South African captain on a surface on which all the other visiting batsmen struggled. The key moments in South Africa’s defeat were in the first place their inability to take wickets in the middle of the innings and this was where the injured Morne Morkel was particularly missed and in the second a crucial spell of 40 balls in the South African innings when the Proteas lost the wickets of De Kock, Faf du Plessis and David Miller in quick succession to the spin of Harbhajan Singh and Axar Patel.
With the Proteas being a batsmen light with Chris Morris and Aaron Phangiso coming in as the replacements for Morkel and JP Duminy they could not afford to lose so many wickets so early. At the fall of the fifth wicket De Villiers no longer had the support of a specialist batsman to rotate the strike.
When De Villiers was dismissed, the target had been reduced to 67 off 33 balls and it says a lot about his status as a batsman that nobody was going to write off South Africa’s chances until he was dismissed.
Remarkably out of De Villiers 22 centuries, 18 have been in winning causes and another in a washed out match.
Kohli set up India’s total of 299/8 with his partnerships of 104 for the third wicket with Ajinkya Rahane and 127 for the fourth with back-in-form Suresh Raina. By contrast the highest South African partnership was only 56 between De Villiers and Farhaan Behardien.
The South African bowlers did an excellent job up front keeping India to 43/2 in the opening power play and then excelling at the back end when they restricted India to 69/5 in the last 10 with Dale Steyn and Kagiso Rabada (3 wickets apiece) being outstanding in the last five when India scored 29/4.
But the damage was done in the middle overs when India scored 197 in the middle 30 overs for the loss of only wicket.
The Man of the Match award went to Kohli who, like De Villiers, suffered severely from cramp in the extremely testing climatic conditions and was not able to field in the South African innings.