1999 Cricket World Cup 2nd semi-final

The second semi-final of the 1999 ICC Cricket World Cup was a famous cricket match played between South Africa and Australia on 17 June 1999 at Edgbaston, England. Australia went on to beat Pakistan in the final on 20 June. The match is most remembered for the disastrous run out involving Allan Donald and Lance Klusener which ended the game.


Background

13 June 1999
Scorecard
South Africa 
271/7 (50 overs)
v
 Australia
272/5 (49.4 overs)
Herschelle Gibbs 101 (134)
Damien Fleming 3/57 (10 overs)
Steve Waugh 120* (110)
Steve Elworthy 2/46 (10 overs)
Australia won by 5 wickets with 2 balls remaining
Headingley, Leeds, England
Umpires: Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan (IND) and Peter Willey (ENG)
Player of the match: Steve Waugh (AUS)

The two teams had faced each other in a Super six match, which would eventually prove to be the deciding factor in determining which of the two teams would qualify for the final. South Africa batted first and put up a competitive total, with Herschelle Gibbs scoring 101. In reply, Australia began losing wickets at regular intervals. The turning point of the match occurred when captain Steve Waugh was dropped by Gibbs at short mid-wicket, as Gibbs attempted to throw the ball up into the air in celebration, only for the ball to slip through his fingers. After the dropped chance, Waugh was reported to have famously said to Gibbs "You've just dropped the World Cup". Waugh denied saying this, but the quote has lived on in cricketing folklore. [1] Waugh went on to score an unbeaten 120 and guided Australia home by 5 wickets. Had Australia not won the game, they would have been knocked out of the World Cup. As it happened, the victory allowed them to finish in second place in the Super Six stage, and qualify to play South Africa in the semi-final.

The match


Details

17 June 1999
Scorecard
Australia 
213 (49.2 overs)
v
 South Africa
213 (49.4 overs)
Michael Bevan 65 (110)
Shaun Pollock 5/36 (9.2 overs)
Jacques Kallis 53 (92)
Shane Warne 4/29 (10 overs)
Match Tied
Edgbaston, Birmingham, England
Umpires: David Shepherd and Srinivas Venkataraghavan
Player of the match: Shane Warne


South Africa won the toss and elected to field. In seaming conditions, Australia managed to put up a total of 213 with Michael Bevan and Steve Waugh scoring vital half-centuries. Shaun Pollock and Allan Donald tore through the middle and lower order picking up 9 of the ten wickets between them. South Africa began their chase steadily with Kirsten and Gibbs putting on a good opening partnership. Wickets then fell at regular intervals as South Africa collapsed to 61-4. Jonty Rhodes and Jacques Kallis then put together a vital partnership taking South Africa within 40 runs of victory. Through some valuable runs from Mark Boucher and Pollock, and some big hitting from Lance Klusener, South Africa moved closer to the target

Final Over

South Africa entered the final over at 205/9, needing a further nine runs to win. The two men at the crease were Lance Klusener who was on strike and Allan Donald at the other end. Damien Fleming was the bowler.

At that point, the Australian captain, Steve Waugh, brought his field up inside the circle to prevent a single being taken.

Australia tied the match and went into the final against Pakistan because they finished higher in the Super Sixes.

Legacy

Australia went on to win the final at Lord's, beating Pakistan by eight wickets after bowling them out cheaply. They would then go on to win the 2003 and 2007 World Cups, and achieve a run of 34 World Cup matches without losing (which finally ended when they lost to Pakistan in the group stage of the 2011 World Cup). South Africa, on the other hand, maintained their trend of choking at the World Cup: in 1992 they had lost to England in the semi-finals when rain forced them to score 22 runs off the final ball, and in 1996 they had won all their group matches before losing to West Indies in the quarter-finals.

South African coach Bob Woolmer resigned after this match. In 2007, shortly before his death, he revealed that Donald and most of his team-mates were in tears after the result and put towels over their heads so no-one could see them.[2]

The Wisden Cricketers' Almanack opened its report of the match with: "This was not merely the match of the tournament: it must have been the best one-day international of the 1,483 so far played. The essence of the one-day game is a close finish, and this was by far the most significant to finish in the closest way of all - with both teams all out for the same score. But it was a compressed epic all the way through, and it ended in a savage twist."[3] In 2000, the match featured among CricInfo's 100 great matches of the 20th century.[4] Steve Waugh called it "the best game of cricket I've played", while in 2004 The Sydney Morning Herald ranked it the 20th-biggest moment in Australian cricket.[5] In 2010, The Times rated South Africa's choke in the final over as the second-biggest sporting choke of all time.[6] In 2009, Shaun Pollock revealed that when betting at the Durban July horse race shortly after the match, he was told "Whatever you do, don't bet on number 10, he doesn't run", a reference to Donald not running (although Donald had actually been the number 11 batsman).[7]

The twists, turns and close finish resulted in many observers regarding the match as the perfect One Day International from an entertainment perspective. The record-breaking ODI between Australia and South Africa seven years later, in 2006, continued the close rivalry between the two teams.

References

  1. You've just dropped the world cup. ESPNCricinfo.com. Retrieved on 21-01-2012
  2. "World Cup Memories: 'Ninety per cent of the team were in tears'". ESPNcricinfo. 3 March 2011. Retrieved 21 January 2012.
  3. "Wisden - Australia v South Africa". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 21 January 2012.
  4. "CricInfo's 100 great matches of the century". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 21 January 2012.
  5. "The day SA ran out of luck". The Sydney Morning Herald. 4 February 2004. Retrieved 21 January 2012.
  6. "Rugby: All Blacks rated biggest chokers of all time". The New Zealand Herald. 29 September 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2011.
  7. "The No. 10 who ran". ESPNcricinfo. 29 December 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2012.
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