logo
South Africa teen Pretorius hits century on Test debut against Zimbabwe

South Africa teen Pretorius hits century on Test debut against Zimbabwe

France 2416 hours ago

South Africa scored 418 for nine, a total which seemed unlikely when Pretorius arrived at the crease with his team in trouble at 23 for three.
Fast bowling all-rounder Corbin Bosch, batting at number eight, made 100 not out, reaching his century in the last over of the day.
Pretorius, a solidly-built left-hander aged 19 years and 93 days, became the youngest South African to hit a Test century and the seventh from his country to make a hundred on Test debut.
Pretorius hit a six off the fourth ball he faced, from left-arm spinner Wellington Masakadza, then smiled broadly at batting partner Wiaan Mulder.
He hit another six and seven fours in reaching his century off 112 balls. He hit a total of four sixes and 11 fours off 160 deliveries before he was caught at mid-on off a top-edged pull against fast bowler Tanaka Chivanga.
Pretorius gave no chances but the Zimbabwean players seemed convinced that he had edged a ball from Chivanga to wicketkeeper Tafadzwa Tsiga when he was on 30. No decision review system is in place for the series.
Chivanga, who took the first three wickets while conceding only eight runs, took four for 83 despite seeming to struggle with a hamstring strain during the afternoon.
Chivanga and fellow fast bowler Blessing Muzarabani, who took two for 59, generated pace and bounce but they were the only specialist seamers in the team and Zimbabwe's four spin bowlers proved expensive.
"We knew they had only two seamers so we tried to take the spinners out of the attack," said Pretorius.
"It was doing quite a bit early in the morning and the situation when I came in was quite tough.
"Wiaan kept me quite calm and I just tried to enjoy the moment and play with a smile on my face."
Pretorius, Dewald Brevis and fast bowler Codi Yusuf were new caps in a South African team containing only four of the players who clinched the World Test Championship against Australia at Lord's two weeks ago.
The team also had a new captain in veteran left-arm spin bowler Keshav Maharaj.
Powerful partnership revives South Africa
Mulder was run out for 17 and South Africa were still in trouble when Brevis, 22, joined Pretorius at 55 for four.
Pretorius and Brevis put on 95 off 88 balls for the fifth wicket. Brevis slammed 51 off 41 deliveries, hitting four sixes and three fours. He reached his half-century with the third of three sixes in an over off leg-spinner Vincent Masekesa.
Bosch, who was stranded on 81 not out batting at number nine in his only previous Test, against Pakistan at Centurion in December, helped Pretorius add 108 for the seventh wicket.
He was on 84 when the ninth wicket fell but last man Kwena Maphaka shepherded him to his maiden first-class century.
South Africa's previous youngest centurion was Graeme Pollock, who was aged 19 years and 317 days when he made 120 against Australia in Sydney in 1963/64.
Pretorius became the 10th youngest Test centurion of all time in a list headed by Mohammad Ashraful of Bangladesh, who was 17 years and 61 days old when he made a hundred against Sri Lanka in 2001.
It continued a meteoric rise to prominence for Pretorius, who made a century on his first-class debut last December when he was 18 and has now hit four centuries in eight matches.
"Obviously the domestic performances helped with the confidence but that is in the past. This is also in the past now. Hopefully I can do it again and again. I just love batting," said Pretorius.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

South Africa's Potgieter grabs PGA Detroit lead
South Africa's Potgieter grabs PGA Detroit lead

France 24

time10 hours ago

  • France 24

South Africa's Potgieter grabs PGA Detroit lead

Potgieter, seeking his first PGA title in only his 20th tour start, reeled off five birdies in a row on the way to firing a bogey-free seven-under par 65 to stand on 19-under 197 after 54 holes at Detroit Golf Club. "Being in contention is great," Potgieter said. "We're looking forward to tomorrow and maybe trying to just keep the ball in front, what we did today, hit a little bit more fairways and greens and if that putter just stays hot it will be good." Americans Max Greyserman, Chris Kirk, Andrew Putnam, Jake Knapp and Mark Hubbard shared second on 199 with South African Thriston Lawrence and Americans Michael Thorbjornsen and Jackson Suber on 200. "I just played really solid. Hit it really good. Gave myself a lot of chances," Knapp said. "With how bunched as this leaderboard is... you have to try to make as many birdies as you can." Potgieter, who managed his best PGA finish with a Mexico Open playoff loss to American Brian Campbell in February, began the day two adrift in a shootout. The last group teed off with seven players sharing the lead on 14-under and 12 more only one stroke adrift. Potgieter took command early, blasting out of a bunker from 35 feet for birdie at the first then starting his birdie run with a putt from just inside eight feet at the fourth. He followed with a 33-foot birdie putt at the par-three fifth, dropped his approach inches from the hole at six to set up a tap-in birdie, sank an eight-foot birdie putt at the par-five seventh and made an 11-foot birdie putt at the eighth to reach 18-under with a three-stroke lead. Suber made back-to-back birdies at the ninth and 10th to reach 17-under and climb within one of the lead, but he fell back with a bogey at 12. Potgieter, meanwhile, sank a birdie putt from just outside six feet at 13 to reach 19-under and restore a three-stroke edge. Knapp, who broke Potgieter's day-old course record of 62 with a 61 on Thursday, birdied the last three holes to shoot 66 and swipe a share of second. "I definitely thought I could get that course record back today with that six-under front nine," Potgieter said. "I was definitely trying to chase that course record again." Davis Thompson's 66 to finish on 202 was the first PGA round since 2020 to feature three front-nine eagles. He made three in the first eight, starting with an 80-yard hole-out from the fairway at the opening hole. He followed with a 37-foot eagle putt at the par-five seventh and drove the green at the par-four eighth to set up a seven-foot eagle putt.

Springbok coach Erasmus introduces 'hybrid player' Esterhuizen
Springbok coach Erasmus introduces 'hybrid player' Esterhuizen

France 24

time13 hours ago

  • France 24

Springbok coach Erasmus introduces 'hybrid player' Esterhuizen

When replacement back Andre Esterhuizen came on early in the second half of the non-cap exhibition match for the world champions, it was as a loose forward. "You can call him a hybrid player -- he is a backline player who can also play in the forwards now," Erasmus told a press conference. "You can have a forward covering a back position like (flanker) Kwagga Smith covering wing, and you can have a back covering a forward position, like Andre. "We started chatting to Andre about it five months ago, now he is a backline player who can also play as a forward." Former Springboks flanker Erasmus, who played key coaching roles in the 2019 and 2023 Rugby World Cup triumphs of South Africa, is a master innovator. He is best known for changing the traditional five forwards-three backs split on the substitutes' bench, choosing six-two and even seven-one combinations instead. Erasmus hailed lock Lood de Jager, back in the team after a two-year absence with a career-threatening heart illness andthen injuries. "The condition that he had was almost career ending, but when we did the fitness testing three weeks ago, he was exceptional," said the coach. Lock depth "His body might be 32 or 33, but he has had some 'rest' in the last couple of years, and I think that showed. "We are very glad Lood came through, and we have some nice depth at lock now," said Erasmus, referring to eight locks in a 45-man squad for three July Tests against Italy and Georgia. After torrential rain during the eight-try victory over the Baabaas, Erasmus said he was hoping for dry weather when the record four-time Rugby World Cup title-holders face Italy on July 5. "Some of the half gaps and some of the line breaks we made today would have stuck if the weather had been drier," he said. "We cannot wait to play on a dry pitch and improve our attack. We want to get better and in the next three matches we will be trying to focus on ourselves before the Rugby Championship. "We know who is going to play in the two Tests against Italy, and certainly by the end of the Georgia game, which will be a grind, we will have a group that have had some game time. "We will not get carried away with this performance, (but) some of the newer guys showed us that they can do it at this level," added Erasmus. Democratic Republic of Congo-born flanker Vincent Tshituka from the Sharks, one of four debutants, scored two tries. South Africa face Italy in Pretoria, then in Gqeberha on July 12 before a one-off Test against Georgia in Mbombela on July 19. Two Rugby Championship fixtures each against Australia, New Zealand and Argentina follow between August and October. November Tests in France, Italy, Ireland and Wales complete the schedule for the Springboks, who will defend the World Cup in Australia in 2027.

Debutant Tshituka scores twice as Springboks crush BaaBaas
Debutant Tshituka scores twice as Springboks crush BaaBaas

France 24

time16 hours ago

  • France 24

Debutant Tshituka scores twice as Springboks crush BaaBaas

Hooker Malcolm Marx, winger Cheslin Kolbe, prop Jan-Hendrik Wessels, winger Kurt-Lee Arendse, lock Lood de Jager and centre Damian de Allende were the other try scorers for the Springboks. Fly-half Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu converted two of the three first-half tries before his replacement, Manie Libbok, added the extra points to all five second-half scores. Full-back Melvyn Jaminet claimed the lone try for the Barbarians and converted it in a non-cap exhibition match at Cape Town Stadium. Record four-time Rugby World Cup winners South Africa were ahead within six minutes through a pushover Marx try, led 19-0 by half-time and were in control throughout. It did not help the Barbarians' cause that loose forward Lachlan Boshier was sin-binned soon after coming off the bench in the second half after a head-to-head clash with Arendse. During his 10-minute absence, the world champions scored two of their eight tries through Arendse and De Jager, who impressed on his recall after a two-year absence due to illness and injuries. South Africa head coach Rassie Erasmus pledged before the match that his team would treat the match as a Test. The Springboks fulfilled the promise with a structured, limited-risk performance, and man-of-the-match award winner Kolbe and De Jager will be among those satisfied with their form. Renowned for ball-in-hand play, the Barbarians rarely got a chance to demonstrate their skills, but held their own at scrum time against opponents famed for their set-piece work. Among those supporting the Springboks were cricketers Temba Bavuma and Kagiso Rabada, two stars of the World Test Championship triumph final by South Africa over Australia this month. It was a first victory for South Africa over the Barbarians since winning by 10 points in Cardiff 25 years ago.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store