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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Narine, Pollard deliver winning start for West Indies

West Indies 191 for 6 (Pollard 67*, Phangiso 3-40) beat South Africa 188 (Rossouw 61, Narine 6-27) by four wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Sunil Narine and Kieron Pollard, making their international comebacks, combined to give West Indies a four-wicket win against South Africa in the triangular series opener in Providence. Narine snaffled a career-best 6 for 27 to ensure West Indies bowled South Africa out for 188, before Pollard struck an aggressive, unbeaten 67 to take his team to the target.

The last time South Africa were dismissed for a lower total against West Indies was soon after readmission, in April 1992. Then, the West Indies quicks blasted them out. This time, Narine had them in a spin with his variations. With the help of Sulieman Benn, Carlos Brathwaite and his captain Jason Holder, Narine reduced South Africa to 188, a total well below the first-innings average of 211 in Providence.

South Africa's struggles were indicative of the difficulties in scoring freely on a slow Providence pitch, with West Indies also finding run-making tough. But with not enough to defend, a drizzle in the air and too many extras, South Africa were up against it. In the end, West Indies earned their third ODI victory over South Africa in the last decade.

Opening the batting together for the 50th time in ODIs, Quinton de Kock and Hashim Amla got South Africa off to a strong start. They marked the milestone with a 52-run stand, providing a strong foundation. But Narine's introduction halted their progress.

Two balls after Brathwaite removed de Kock, who inside-edged a pull onto his stumps, Narine deceived Amla with a knuckle ball to trap him lbw.

Rilee Rossouw started cautiously. In the 12th over, Rossouw poked at a Brathwaite delivery, but the thick outside edge landed inches short of wicketkeeper Denesh Ramdin. An over later, he survived an lbw shout off Narine. Replays showed the ball had pitched outside leg stump.

AB de Villiers ushered Rossouw through his nerves and coaxed him into strike rotation against a disciplined West Indies effort. The pair brought up South Africa's 100 in the 24th over, and hit just the one boundary in their 120-ball stand; the drought was broken when Rossouw reverse-swept Sulieman Benn in the 30th over but de Villiers was dismissed off the next ball, popping a return catch to Taylor.

After the dismissal of de Villiers, Rossouw dropped anchor and brought up his fifth ODI fifty off 74 balls. But he was caught at slip off a ripping offbreak from Narine in the 36th over.

That wicket sparked a collapse in which South Africa lost 7 for 28, five of them to Narine. Farhaan Behardien was out for a second-ball duck and Chris Morris squandered a review when he was given out lbw. As a result, Imran Tahir, who was wrongly adjudged lbw, was unable to make use of the review. South Africa were bowled out in the 47th over. Although their top five batsmen scored over 20, no batsman from the bottom six could register a double-digit score.

After the advantage their bowling attack gave them, West Indies began their reply in careless fashion. Johnson Charles played loosely outside his off stump and edged to third man three times in the first two overs. He should have been out lbw to a Kagiso Rabada yorker at the end of the fourth over but de Villiers did not review. By then, Charles had realised the need to show some caution. Both he and opening partner Andre Fletcher held back and built slowly.

South Africa waited until after the first Powerplay to bring on Imran Tahir. He had immediate success, beating Fletcher with a googly that snuck between bat and body, and cannoned into the stumps. Six overs later, another googly accounted for Charles, prompting Tahir to sprint off in celebration. South Africa had West Indies in the same position they were in - 52 for 2 - in 17 overs and then edged ahead when a full, flat delivery from Aaron Phangiso had Marlon Samuels trapped in front.

Darren Bravo and Ramdin steadied the innings, but fell behind the required run-rate. Ramdin drove a catch to de Villiers at short extra cover, which brought Pollard to the crease.

Pollard slammed the second ball he faced, off JP Duminy, over long-on, to record the first six of the match and added two more in the next over off Phangiso. He was the only batsmen to hit a six in the match. Bravo recognised the supporting role he had to play and let Pollard take control. Together they added 74 for the fifth wicket and put West Indies back on track.

Phangiso removed Bravo and Brathwaite to claim career-best figures of 3 for 40 but his efforts were in vain. South Africa were left to wonder what might have happened had they decided not to rest Dale Steyn - who took 3 for 22 in a NatWest T20 Blast match on Friday.

Long time ago

1992

Last time South Africa got all out for a lower total than 188 against West Indies - 152 and 180 in April 1992.

West Indies' best

0

No. of 6-wkt hauls by West Indies spinners in ODIs, before Narine's 6/27 in this match. The previous best figures for a WI spinner were also by Narine - 5/27 v NZ, 2012.

Narine's best

5/27

Sunil Narine's previous best bowling figures in ODIs. He went one better, taking 6/27 in this match.

Applied brakes

42

Runs conceded by WI bowlers between 31st and 41st over of the innings. They also took 4 key wickets of de Villiers, Rossouw, Behardien and Duminy.

Rossouw vs West Indies

4

No. of scores of 50 or more for Rilee Rossouw against West Indies in ODIs, in 7 innings including today. Both his centuries have also come against them.

Got'em both cheaply

51

Runs scored by Amla (20) and de Villiers (31) combined in this match. Amla averaged 91.70 and de Villiers 76.18 against WI in ODIs before this match.

No early breakthrough

9

No. of ODIs where the openers failed to add 50+ runs against West Indies, before Amla-de Kock in this match. Last was 71 runs by Stirling-Porterfield in WC'15.

Opening milestone

3

No. of pairs who have opened in 50 or more ODIs for SA. This is the 50th time for Amla and de Kock. Other 2: Gibbs-Smith (74 matches) & Gibbs-Kirsten (66).

New format

3

No. of D/N ODIs played in West Indies, before this Tri-series since they started hosting ODIs in 1977. In this series, all the 10 matches will be played as Day/Night