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Confident Australia meet pressured South Africa

Match facts

Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Start time 1300 local (1700GMT)

Big Picture

Australia performed to expectations in their opening match with a crushing six-wicket win over West Indies; South Africa most certainly did not, as they were bundled out for 188 in their four-wicket loss to the hosts. The deflating nature of the loss to West Indies can only compound the pressure South Africa are feeling as they try to right the wrongs of their poorest domestic summer in recent memory, and in Steven Smith's team they are not likely to be gifted many opportunities to regain their equilibrium. AB de Villiers' men are going to have to lift their game substantially.

It is doubtlessly true that the Australians learned a lot from being able to watch the opening match rather than participate in it. They bowled first as West Indies did in the first match, and found in the afternoon air a little early assistance for the pacers before the spin bowlers ripped through the hosts. Nathan Lyon and Adam Zampa proved a potent slow-bowling duo with a little help from Glenn Maxwell, and a few of the shots played by West Indies' batsmen were redolent of nothing so much as those offered by South Africa when Sunil Narine spun a similar web.

While this is undoubtedly a South African side in decline, they still possess enough players of class to challenge Australia. One of these men may be Morne Morkel, curiously omitted from game one, but now fresh for the task of cutting through the Australian top order - a strength that can be undermined by exposing the less consistent operators batting beneath them. Similarly, de Villiers and Hashim Amla are players of a standard capable of taking the fight to Lyon and Zampa, even if the pitch will be in the bowlers' favour.

Form guide

(last five completed games, most recent first)
Australia WLWLL
South Africa LWWWL

In the spotlight

Australia's top four is very strong, but on recent evidence Glenn Maxwell is battling to justify his position at No. 5, particularly when he is followed by a similarly jumpy Mitchell Marsh and the bowlers. A duck against West Indies will not help Maxwell's confidence, and he needs to demonstrate for the captain Smith, the interim coach Justin Langer and the selector on duty Trevor Hohns that he is capable of multi-dimensional innings, rather than simply indulging in explosive but brief stays at the crease. On turning pitches he can expect to be needed at a critical moment sooner or later.

Having struck 92 in South Africa's warm-up match, Hashim Amla was purring along nicely enough against West Indies before misreading Narine and providing the start of a batting trough that cost South Africa the match. Amla's touch and concentration seem ideally suited to the slow and challenging Guyana surface; de Villiers and coach Russell Domingo will be hopeful of something more substantial against Australia.

Team news

A strong display by the bowlers should mean an unchanged XI for Australia, though George Bailey is waiting in the wings should the selectors choose to bolster their batting in testing conditions.

Australia (probable): 1 David Warner, 2 Aaron Finch, 3 Usman Khawaja, 4 Steven Smith (capt), 5 Glenn Maxwell, 6 Mitchell Marsh, 7 Matthew Wade (wk), 8 Mitchell Starc, 9 Adam Zampa, 10 Josh Hazlewood, 11 Nathan Lyon

Morkel and Wayne Parnell are pressing for recalls after South Africa's opening defeat, while Rilee Rossouw is the man set to make way whenever Faf du Plessis recovers from a finger injury.

South Africa (probable): 1 Hashim Amla, 2 Quinton de Kock (wk), 3 Rilee Rossouw, 4 AB de Villiers (capt), 5 JP Duminy, 6 Farhaan Behardien, 7 Chris Morris, 8 Kagiso Rabada, 9 Morne Morkel/Kyle Abbott, 10 Aaron Phangiso, 11 Imran Tahir

Pitch and conditions

The same Providence Stadium pitch as used for Sunday's match between Australia and West Indies should only be slower and lower this time around. Forecast weather is clear and humid.

Stats and trivia

  • Australia and South Africa have met twice in ODIs in the Caribbean before, both matches won by Ricky Ponting's side on their way to victory at the 2007 World Cup.

  • South Africa, however, were victorious the last time the two sides met in a tri-series, winning the final of a tournament that also featured Zimbabwe, in Harare in 2014.

Quotes

"As a bowling unit I think we pride ourselves on limiting extras. I think we let ourselves down [giving up 14], there was a bit of rust floating around."
Nathan Lyon thinks Australia's bowling attack can improve on their opening effort

"Our assessment [of the pitch] was good. Unfortunately the execution wasn't spot on in the last 10 overs with the bat in hand. We knew that it would be a turning track, very slow. That's why we played the extra spinner."
AB de Villiers wants South Africa's planning to be matched by execution in game two

  • Rossouw out of tri-series with shoulder injury

    Rilee Rossouw is set to return to South Africa from the Caribbean, to have surgery on the shoulder he injured during the tri-series match against Australia on June 7

  • 'We knew 190 would be tough' - Behardien

    South Africa batsman Farhaan Behardien has said they were confident at the halfway mark of their match on Tuesday that their total of 189 would be "tough" to surpass for Australia

  • South Africa's execution in first 10 overs 'excellent' - Finch

    Opener Aaron Finch, who scored 72 out of Australia's total of 142, has said that South Africa's "excellent" execution of plans in the first 10 overs of the chase set up their 47-run win in Guyana

  • Warner passes the Langer test

    Australia's stand-in coach Justin Langer was full of praise for David Warner's newfound professionalism and focus, after he steered Australia home against West Indies with an unbeaten fifty

  • South Africa defend 189 for bonus-point win

    South Africa posted only one run more than the 188 they had managed in their triangular series opener against West Indies but it was enough to give them a first win in three meetings against Australia in the Caribbean

Economical Hazlewood

2005

Last time an Australian opening bowler had a better economy than Hazlewood's (2.00) in this match, bowling all 10 overs - McGrath 2/18 vs Pak, SCG, Jan 2005.

Behardien's show

0

No. of boundaries hit by SA batsmen apart from Farhan Behardien in the last 36.4 overs of the innings (220 balls). Behardien hit 4 fours and a six.

Bowlers in control

53

Runs conceded by Aus bowlers in the second set of 20 overs, 21st to 40th. In the first 20 overs, they had conceded 90 runs,

Some resistance

65+

Balls played by the pair of Behardien and Phangiso for the 7th wicket, which is more than the last 3 wickets combined.

Another collapse on cards?

3

No. of wickets SA lost in the last 7 overs - 19th to 25th. They scored just 23 runs in those 7 overs including a maiden over bowled by Coulter-Nile.

Different ABD

0

No. of boundaries hit by AB de Villiers in the 2 innings of this series facing 87 balls. He scored 31 (49) vs WI and 22 (38) vs Aus today but with nil boundaries.

Run outs vs Aus

3

No. of times Amla has been run out against Aus in ODIs, most against any team. WI is the only other team against which he has been run out more than once.

Aus v SA in WI

2

No. of ODIs between Australia and South Africa in West Indies, before this Tri-Series - both in World Cup 2007. Aus won both those matches.