De Villiers smashes record for fastest century
South Africa post four runs short of the world’s highest total against West Indies
Dubai: A few days ago, Australian
legend Adam Glichrist had named South African skipper AB De Villiers as
the most ‘valuable cricketer on the planet’ in a TV interview. Little
did Gilchrist, who himself was one of the most destructive batsmen in
world cricket, know that the cricketer he named would play the most
devastating knock in the history of cricket soon.
At the New Wanders Stadium in
Johannesburg yesterday, De Villiers shattered the record for the
fastest century in the history of One Day International cricket by
reaching his ton in just 31 balls against West Indies. His whirlwind
century helped South Africa post 439 for two in 50 overs, their highest
total in One Day International, but missed shattering the highest world
record total by four runs.
A battered West Indies team,
chasing the whopping total, crashed to a 148-run defeat after scoring
291 for seven in the 50 overs.
De Villiers walked in the
39th over after Jerome Taylor had dismissed Rilee Rossouw with the third
ball of the over for 128 off 115 balls with 11 boundaries and two
sixes. Opener Hashim Amla too cracked 153 off 142 balls with 14
boundaries.
The skipper began by cracking
the first ball he faced from Taylor past mid on to the boundary. In the
next over, he hit Andre Russell for two sixes and two boundaries.
In the 41st over, he hit
Taylor for one six over long on and followed up with three sixes and one
boundary in Jason Holder’s next over. With the second six of that over,
he broke the record for the fastest half-century in 16 balls,
shattering Sanath Jayasuriya’s mark (17 balls) against Pakistan at
Singapore in April 1996.
In the 46th
over, De Villiers hit Holder’s third delivery for a four to reach the
nineties and hit the next three balls for sixes. With the second six of
that over, he broke New Zealand Corey Anderson’s fastest century mark in
36 balls that he set against West Indies at Queenstown in January 2014.
In the 49th over, De Villiers
was at his aggressive best — hitting four sixes and one boundary off
Dwayne Smith. His innings ended in the fourth ball of the last over when
Russell had him caught at deep over by Jonathan Carter for 149 off 44
balls with nine boundaries and 16 sixes.
“Have to say AB de Villiers
is the definition of a cricketing genius. Absolutely incredible,”
tweeted former England captain Michael Vaughan as praise rung all round
the cricketing fraternity.
Though South Africa posted
their highest ODI total, they missed out by four runs from breaking the
highest world record total of 443 — set by Sri Lanka against the
Netherland at Amstelveen in July 2006.
The 16 sixes hit by De
Villiers equalled the world record for the most sixes in an ODI innings,
by Rohit Sharma during his innings of 209 against Australia in 2013.
SCORECARD
South AfricaH. Amla not out 153
R. Rossouw c Benn b Taylor 128
A. de Villiers c Carter b Russell 149
D. Miller not out 0
Extras (lb4, nb1, w4) 9
Total (2 wkts, 50 overs) 439
Fall of wickets: 1-247 (Rossouw), 2-439 (De Villiers)
Bowling: Taylor 10-0-95-1 (1w), Holder 9-0-91-0, Benn 10-0-49-0, Russell 10-0-78-1, Sammy 4-0-26-0, Samuels 3-0-28-0, Smith 4-0-68-0 (1nb, 1w)
Did not bat: F. du Plessis, J. Duminy F. Behardien, V. Philander, D. Steyn, M. Morkel, Imran Tahir
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