18/01/2015
“Life is all about taking the right decision, seeing Gayle
bat today I think I took the right decision of being wicket-keeper”. Recall the message tweeted by MS Dhoni when
Chris Gayle massacred the Pune Warriors with his record-breaking 175 in the IPL-T-20-2013
edition. Similar sentiments would be echoed
by many more teams and players on seeing
the AB de Villier’s holocaust today, while most international bowlers must be
sighing, “Thank God, we are not at its receiving end”.
What unfolded at Johannesburg can only be described as
absolute carnage. The West Indian bowlers were annihilated by the Proteas
batsmen, dominated by the captain Abraham Benjamin de Villiers. The South African skipper shredded the record
books at the New Wanderers Stadium with his sensational 44-ball 149 that is
registered as the fastest century in the cricket history.
Records galore
Studded with 16 sixes (sharing the record number of sixes
with Rohit Sharma) and nine fours during his devastating knock, AB broke the
record of New Zealand Corey Anderson’s 36-ball ton (2014). AB’s
16-ball fifty followed by 31-ball 100, in today's One-Day International against the West Indies, kept the scorers and statisticians
busy. The strike-rate flashed a whopping
338.63, whereas he stepped in to the wicket only after the fall of first wicket
at 38.3 overs. From the start of his
innings, it was evident that AB was going to make it a special day, but little
did anyone, including his own team mates– who were spellbound by his blitzkrieg.
In the fierce contest between fours and sixes from AB’s bat,
the boundaries ultimately gave way for the big ones, and the calypsos left to
be mere spectators.
A genius of batting
innovations
As many as seven bowlers tried their luck, but … not today!
The decimation inflicted on the bowlers, instead of making the rivals numb,
turned them into AB’s fans, on the field. The helplessness of the bowlers was
writ large on their faces, ball after ball sailing over the boundary ropes. The
odd dot-balls, far and few, reflected
disbelief in the fielding side and the spectators alike.
Though the openers Hashim Amla (153 n.o.) and Rilee Rossow (128)
posted an opening partnership of 247 runs, the captain’s domination was loud
and clear to finally post a record total of 439/2 in 50 overs. What stood out more than how much he scored
or how much he spurred the team to an almost surreal total, was the way in
which he dominated the rival bowling attack.
He took on every bowler and sent each one of them on a leather hunt,
producing the big shots at will, and reached his century at frenetic 31 balls
in an exhibition of ceaseless, remorseless hitting.
Colourful stadium, colourful spectators, colourful South African team. AB De Villiers richly added
content to the colour. The picturesque record appears to be safe and stay with the
ever-entertaining AB for a long time to
come.
While it should send jitters to Indian cricket fans with the
World Cup around the corner, AB deserves sport-hearted salute. And if you are an RCB (Royal Challengers Bangalore) fan, add
your extra quota.
You might ask what was the reply by the West Indies. The flip side to these type of matches is
that it makes the second half of the game a mere formality.
A magic indeed!
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