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South Africa get last laugh after 'pathetic' move as brutal Aussie sledge backfires
South Africa get last laugh after 'pathetic' move as brutal Aussie sledge backfires

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

South Africa get last laugh after 'pathetic' move as brutal Aussie sledge backfires

South Africa are being hailed around the cricket world after beating Australia to claim a historic World Test Championship title. And Proteas captain Temba Bavuma - who along with centurion Aidan Markram have written themselves into cricketing folklore - revealed after the momentous victory that the Aussies tried to get in South Africa's heads with a sledge about them being 'chokers' on day four at Lord's. Wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne hit the winning runs just before lunch on day four to complete South Africa's chase of 282 and spark emotional scenes at the home of cricket. But it was a majestic century from opener Markram - who finally fell just before then end - and a gritty captain's knock from the hobbled Bavuma (66) that lay the platform for the Proteas to lift their first senior world trophy in the men's game. It saw the South Africans get the last laugh after they were roundly criticised for a controversial Test move in 2023 to field a second-string side on a tour of New Zealand. In a move labelled 'pathetic' at the time, the Proteas sent a heavily depleted squad to New Zealand so their stars could stay home and play in the country's T20 league instead. South Africa were subsequently thrashed 2-0 by the Black Caps, but then went on to complete eight wins in a row to claim an unexpected Test title in a stunning 18-month turnaround. And Bavuma - who played bravely on with a hamstring injury throughout the final - said the landmark WTC victory was extra special as it saw them shed the notorious 'chokers' tag that the Aussies reminded them about at Lord's. 'The tag of us being chokers, that came about this morning,' Bavuma said after the win. 'One of their players threw out the fact we could still get bowled out ... I definitely heard that.' Man of the match Markram added: 'It will be great to not have to hear it again, that's for sure.' Saturday's victory was only South Africa's second ICC title in all, coming 27 years after they won the Champions Trophy back in 1998. Many of their gutwrenching defeats in major tournaments have come at the hands of Australia so this one will feel extra special. Starting day four on the cusp of history at 2-213, this largely unheralded South Africa side took just one session to tick off the 69 runs required. And it saw them achieve greatness that Proteas legends such as Jacques Kallis, Dale Steyn, Shaun Pollock and AB de Villiers never could. RELATED: Cricket world stunned as rival joins Glenn Maxwell in immediate exit Mitchell Starc's sad career call after difficult decision with wife Bavuma's leadership was hailed after the triumph, with the skipper's decision to send Australia in to bat after winning the toss vindicated. He also delivered with the bat despite being hampered by a hamstring injury throughout the match. 'I wasn't at 100 per cent fitness, but I felt that I was good enough to still do the job," Bavuma said afterwards. 'It was a tough decision ... it was very much an egotistical call, but I was happy to deal with whatever consequences came of it.' For the Aussies, captain Pat Cummins admits they'll have to go back to the drawing board and flagged potential changes to their batting lineup for the upcoming West Indies tour. In particular, the top order gamble of Marnus Labuschagne opening with Usman Khawaja and Cameron Green batting at No.3 failed to pay off as they only contributed 49 of Australia's 419 runs across both innings. 'I don't particularly know why, but it does feel like a little bit of a fresh start," Cummins said. "You fast forward, you know, a couple of years (and) you start maybe thinking about who's going to - and hopefully we make the final - but who's going to be in that team and maybe do we want to get some games into them? "Do we feel like now's the right time to change? Or do we hold with the team that got us to the final? I think we'll kind of got a couple of weeks before the first Test in the Windies, so I think we'll sit down and have a bit of a think after we digest this game. But for me, I think a new WTC cycle in some ways, does feel like a bit of a reset.' The Heroes of the game ft. KG, Temba and Aiden Markram. The attitude and character shown by them was so remarkable. Well deserved to win!🏆#WTCFinal — Rushikesh (@whyrushii) June 14, 2025 🚨 𝐇𝐈𝐒𝐓𝐎𝐑𝐘! 🇿🇦South Africa finally wins their first ICC trophy in 2️⃣7️⃣ years. 🏆Captain Bavuma & Co. made it happen! 💥What a thrilling final it was — South Africa conquered the mighty Aussies! 💪A historic moment for the Proteas. ✨#CricVerse | #AUSvSA | #WTCFinal — CricVerse (@CricVerse23) June 14, 2025 For the first time all 3 formats of the cricket world cups are held by 3 different teams. ODI: Aussies. T20I: Ind. & finally the coveted Test: South Africa. #WTCFinal #WtcFinal2025 — aranab (@iAranab) June 14, 2025 Selecting out of form players over and over again is what cost the Aussies this final. Nothing else. Change it up already. This boys club needs to end now please. #WTCFinal — Alex Trovato (@alexdimov8) June 14, 2025 with AAP

Markram backs adaptable South Africa to find a way to win
Markram backs adaptable South Africa to find a way to win

Reuters

time01-03-2025

  • Sport
  • Reuters

Markram backs adaptable South Africa to find a way to win

March 1 (Reuters) - Aidan Markram played down the severity of a hamstring ailment that saw him leave the field in South Africa's comfortable seven-wicket win over England in Karachi on Saturday that booked them a Champions Trophy semi-final place as Group B winners. Markram, who was captaining the side in the absence of an ill Temba Bavuma, is a key part of the middle-order batting unit and the sight of him leaving the field in England's batting innings will have sent flutters through the dressing-room. "I think it's alright, it was mostly precautionary over anything else," Markram said. "It feels okay. Hopefully over the next few days, I can get some good rest and then sort it out and be good to go from there." South Africa join Australia, India and New Zealand in the semi-finals but who their opponents will be, and where they will play next, will be answered on Sunday when the latter two clash in Dubai. Markram feels his side have a squad to play in most conditions, be it against India on the slower pitch in Dubai or New Zealand on the faster track in Lahore. "We have got a big squad with great options and ultimately just pick the best team that we think can get the job done on the day," he said. "So whoever it might be, whatever roles each individual has, we back them as a team." South Africa will go into their semi-final with confidence after brushing aside England in emphatic fashion. "The boys were really good," Markram said. "Obviously, the wicket was slower than we expected, and that changed our initial plans that we had in mind. The boys adapted really well to the conditions out there." Tall fast bowler Marco Jansen (3-39) took wickets up front in the England innings to put them on the back foot as they were bowled out for 179, the lowest completed innings total in the tournament to date. "He's been huge for us," Markram said. "We all know in the power play, especially in conditions like this, you need to be taking wickets up front and he sort of finds different ways of doing it in each game. "He's been peaking at the right time for us as a team, and he's leading the attack along with KG (Kagiso Rabada) really well."

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