A doddle of a draw, but SA need to keep their cool

14 February 2015 - 17:14 By Telford Vice
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Chris Gayle of West Indies walks off for 10 runs during the 4th Momentum ODI between South Africa and West Indies at St Georges Park on January 25, 2015 in Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
Chris Gayle of West Indies walks off for 10 runs during the 4th Momentum ODI between South Africa and West Indies at St Georges Park on January 25, 2015 in Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
Image: Duif du Toit/Gallo Images

No Australia. No England. No Sri Lanka. No New Zealand. SA have been handed a doddle of a draw. But, as South Africans know only too painfully, the World Cup does strange things to their team. Here's how their opponents this time stack up.

SA v Zimbabwe: Seddon Park, Hamilton

Sunday, February 15, 3am

Yes, Zimbabwe have beaten SA in a World Cup - at Chelmsford in 1999. But that was in the last group match, when SA had one eye on the semifinals and the other on the final. And that Zimbabwean team was studded with stars. Spot the difference this time, and chalk up two points for AB de Villiers's team.

SA v India: Melbourne Cricket Ground

Sunday, February 22, 5.30am

Played three, won three. That's SA's record against the Indians at the World Cup. But that won't take the edge off this encounter as SA's biggest of the group stage. India no longer have Sachin Tendulkar and Gary Kirsten. But they do have MS Dhoni and Virat Kohli. And they have the swagger that comes with having been there, done that, in 2011. They will arrive at the MCG expecting to win; just as they did in Adelaide in 1992, Hove in 1999, and Nagpur in 2011. This time, the distinctly ordinary flavour of their attack should give SA the edge.

SA v West Indies: Sydney Cricket Ground

Friday, February 27, 5.30am

SA have won one more World Cup match than they have lost against the Windies, but their two defeats stick out like Andy Caddick's ears. Brian Lara would have taken a hundred off any attack he faced that day in Karachi in 1996 - chalk that one up to bad luck. But at Newlands in 2003 SA's clumsy stumble against the Caribbean crew in the opening match of the tournament proved a harbinger of ignominy. This summer SA showed the West Indians who's boss, and they should do so again. But with Chris Gayle, Andre Russell and Darren Sammy, this lot can play.

SA v Ireland: Manuka Oval, Canberra

Tuesday, March 3, 5.30am

Happily, SA are not England: the Irish have no beef with them. So a repeat of Kevin O'Brien's wonderful century against the English in Bangalore in 2011 is unlikely. Neither is anything except a SA win.

SA v Pakistan: Eden Park, Auckland

Saturday, March 7, 3am

SA have won seven of their last 10 ODIs against Pakistan. Will that make them breathe more easily about this fixture? No. Beatable, but dangerous.

SA v UAE: Westpac Stadium, Wellington

Thursday, March 12, 3am

These are the Sultans of Sink. As in without trace. Two points. Thanks for coming.

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