NZ: South Africa’s AB de Villiers must go early for NZ to win ODI series decider

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Tim Southee knows there are two main solutions to limiting the damage caused by the broad bat of AB de Villiers in the dying stages of a one-day cricket international.

And, for experienced New Zealand seamer Southee, one clearly stands out over the other when it comes to South Africa’s masterful limited-overs skipper

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Tim Southee says New Zealand will channel their World Cup heroics as they try to snatch a series win against the best side in the world.

Removing de Villiers, who has fashioned a remarkable average of almost 55 during a 215-match ODI career, early in his innings would appeal to any bowler when compared to trying to keep him quiet at the death.

Where the problems come in is the high level of difficulty associated with successfully implementing either strategy, as the hosts may very well need to if they are to prevail in the fifth and deciding ODI at Eden Park on Saturday.

That goes up a notch when you talk about de Villiers’ record on Kiwi soil.

AB de Villiers has been destructive late in the innings for South AFrica during the ODI series against New Zealand

After scoring 239 and being dismissed just twice across the first four matches of this series, he has 609 runs at the eye-popping average of 103 in 11 ODIs in New Zealand.

Not surprisingly, then, Southee indicated they had placed particular focus on de Villiers in their preparations for the series decider.

“We’ve had a mixed bag when [it] comes to death bowling in series,” he said on Friday.

“When you’ve got a player like de Villiers who can hit the ball 360 degrees at will, at the end, it is difficult. Coming to a ground with different dimensions, we’ll work on a few things today at training.

 

“We’ve seen throughout the series when we haven’t got him [early] he has been able to really make the most of those last five or six overs.”

Southee is bang on, and you could even add four or five to those numbers.

With a set de Villiers at the crease, the last 10 overs of the Proteas innings has reaped 77 in their game one win, 88 in their game three triumph and a massive 106 in a game four they lost at the hands of a belligerent Martin Guptill.

Tim Southee has his sights set on South Africa’s AB de Villiers.

Although the ideal scenario was to remove the South African skipper early, Southee said they wouldn’t shy away from the challenge of bowling to him at the death.

“That is something you really enjoy as a bowler. You do have days when it doesn’t go so well but you learn from that and move on.

“There is no better feeling than when you can close out a game. That is what keeps you going back for more.”

South Africa were in a similar frame of mind, if the words of Faf du Plessis were anything do go by.

 

The test skipper said bouncing back from a seven-wicket thumping in game four and another return to the scene of their devastating loss in the semifinals of the 2015 World Cup were sizeable tasks they were embracing.

Reclaiming the No 1 ODI ranking, relinquished to Australia after the Guptill demolition in Hamilton, also added to the Proteas motivation.

“It’s a nice challenge for us as a team,” du Plessis said.

“I don’t think this series has seen the best cricket we are capable of. Tomorrow is an opportunity to play in a big pressure game, and New Zealand are a team who play the big moments really well.

“There is pressure on both. For us playing in a big moment  and for New Zealand as the home team with a very good record of [winning] home series.”

New Zealand have not lost an ODI series at home since October 2014, when they were beaten 2-0 by South Africa.

The hosts are expected to make just one change for the match, with the addition of Matt Henry or fellow seamer Lockie Ferguson in place of spinner Jeetan Patel at a more seam-friendly Eden Park.

All-rounder Andile Phehlukwayo is fit again and likely to be the only addition South Africa would make to their 11.

AT A GLANCE

What: New Zealand vs South Africa, fifth ODI

Where: Eden Park, Auckland

When: Saturday, 2pm start

Likely teams

New Zealand: Martin Guptill, Dean Brownlie, Kane Williamson (c), Ross Taylor, Luke Ronchi, James Neesham, Mitchell Santner, Colin de Grandhomme, Tim Southee, Matt Henry, Trent Boult

South Africa: Quinton de Kock, Hashim Amla, Faf du Plessis, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, David Miller, Chris Morris, Wayne Parnell, Andile Phehlukwayo, Kagiso Rabada, Imran Tahir

-Stuff

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