Australia 5 for 329 (Finch 109, Smith 73*, Warner 53) beat South Africa 256 (Amla 102, de Villiers 52, Starc 4-32, Hazlewood 3-51) by 73 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Finch steers Australia to 2-1 lead
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Centurion Aaron Finch, Steven Smith, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc
were central figures in Australia's commanding 73-run victory over
South Africa in Canberra, despite a pair of sparkling innings by Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers.
In front of a crowd of 10,583 at Manuka Oval, Finch set the platform and
Smith capitalised fully upon it against a South African bowling attack
that found less assistance than they enjoyed in Perth but also did not
help their cause with a quartet of no-balls.
Dale Steyn was the lone exemplar of parsimony for the visitors, but even
his 10 overs ultimately yielded 53 runs, and he was unable to take the
wickets he had yearned for when describing a new attack role for himself on match eve.
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A target of 330 was always going to be difficult for the visitors given
Australia's selection of a deep and varied bowling attack that in Starc
and Hazlewood had relevant experience of Canberra climes. Hazlewood and
Starc both bowled piercingly with the old ball, the latter gaining sharp
reverse swing to bring a swift conclusion to the match. Six wickets
went down for 32 following de Villiers' exit, and last man Imran Tahir
did not emerge due to a knee strain picked up while bowling.
For a while, the cultured Amla and impudent de Villiers seemed capable
of threatening, but the otherwise expensive Kane Richardson struck the
critical blow by pinning de Villiers lbw just when South Africa's
equation had started to become realistic.
Hazlewood found the right line and length to spread-eagle Amla's stumps
soon after, and Starc followed up with verve. Australia's performance
was the equal of anything they have produced in ODI matches over the
past 12 months, indicating that the team is warming up nicely in a World
Cup season - albeit minus their hamstrung captain Michael Clarke.
Having not passed 50 for state or country since the final of the ODI
triangular series in Zimbabwe in September, some 13 innings ago, Finch
played within himself to begin with, allowing Warner to make the swifter
start while occasionally unleashing with shots such as his pulled six
off Vernon Philander.
He would have been conscious of the selectors' decision to drop Glenn
Maxwell following his somewhat ordinary start to the home season, a
highest score of 29 in four limited overs innings across the Twenty20
and ODI series. As T20 captain and Warner's preferred ODI opening
partner, Finch has enjoyed a stronger expression of faith from the
national selector Rod Marsh and the coach Darren Lehmann.
Manuka's warm weather and a pristine pitch allowed Finch to play the
ball more or less where he wanted, and he gathered pace steadily through
the innings. Unable to gain the desired economy from Tahir, de Villiers
leaned on the modest offerings of Farheen Behardien and himself, with
mixed results.
Behardien at least enjoyed the pleasure of dismissing Shane Watson once
more, this time drawing a miscued pull shot to end an innings from
Australia's No. 3 batsman that, at 40 from 38 balls, looked ready to
grow wings. De Villiers was more expensive, but was rewarded for
attacking the stumps when Finch swung a little too zealously for the
midwicket fence.
Smith batted busily as ever, running hard and picking gaps on the ground
where his century as captain of New South Wales had secured the Blues'
Sheffield Shield title last summer. Morne Morkel added a final no-ball
in the 50th over, and Smith flicked a jaunty boundary behind square leg
from the resultant free hit.
Australia's final tally was about 30 more than South Africa would have
preferred to concede, and Hazlewood and Starc made sure it would prove
far too many.
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