Paceman Lonwabo Tsotsobe took four wickets and Jacques Kallis hit an unbeaten half-century to help a disciplined South Africa down Pakistan by eight wickets in the first one-day international on Friday.
Tsotsobe took a career-best 4-27 off his 10 tight overs to trigger a middle-order collapse and helped South Africa dismiss Pakistan for 203, before Kallis (66 retired hurt) saw off the target with 9.3 overs to spare.
The modest target was never beyond South Africa’s reach after Pakistan’s batsmen once again failed to take advantage of a good start on a flat Abu Dhabi Stadium pitch, much to the disappointment of a 10,000 holiday crowd.
Photo: AFP
The 35-year-old Kallis, back after missing the limited over series against Zimbabwe at home and South Africa’s 2-0 win in the Twenty20 series which finished on Wednesday because of injury, was at his usual best.
He steadied the South Africa innings through a solid 77-run stand with A.B. de Villiers, who also hit an attractive 51, after Graeme Smith (18) retired because of a finger injury and Hashim Amla was dismissed for a well-made 35.
Kallis, who hit five boundaries and a six off paceman Abdul Razzaq, added another 41 runs with J.P. Duminy (10 not out) to give South Africa a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.
With just 16 needed for win, Kallis suffered cramps and retired.
The second match will be played today.
Johan Botha praised South Africa’s bowlers.
“At one point, Pakistan was well set at 140-1, but the bowlers stuck to their task and got us nine wickets for 63 runs and that proved decisive,” said Botha, who singled out man-of-the-match Tsotsobe.
Pakistan coach Waqar Younis was critical of his batsmen.
“We had just one good partnership and then a middle-order collapse, like we had in the Twenty-20s, so we need to lift our batting because South Africa will get tougher and tougher,” he said.
Earlier, 26-year-old Tsotsobe took 4-27 to put the brakes on Pakistan, who lost their last eight wickets for a mere 46 runs after winning the toss and deciding to bat.
Tsotsobe, who took five wickets in the two Twenty20 matches, rocked the Pakistan middle-order with a burst of three wickets off just nine balls during his second four-over spell.
Tsotsobe’s effort, backed by disciplined spin bowling by Johan Botha (2-40), derailed Pakistan after Mohammad Hafeez (68) and the returning Younis Khan (54) put on 114 for the second wicket.
Tsotsobe removed opener Asad Shafiq (19) in the eighth over before Younis — returning to the side after being cleared by the Pakistan Cricket Board last month following a ban for a discipline violation — joined Hafeez in a damage-repair act.
Hafeez hit seven boundaries during his 84-ball sixth one-day half-century, before cutting Botha straight into the hands of Charl Langeveldt. Four overs later, Younis was trapped leg before wicket by Botha.
Younis hit two boundaries during his 75-ball knock.
Tsotsobe’s triple strike followed as he removed Misbah-ul-Haq (14), Shahid Afridi (1) and Abdul Razzaq (2) to complete Pakistan’s slide in a similar pattern to the Twenty20 matches in which they were restricted to 119 and 120-9.
Tsotsobe’s previous best bowling figures were 4-50 against Australia on his one-day debut in Perth last year.
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