Career-best performances from Marco Jansen and Keshav Maharaj have propelled South Africa to a 122-run thrashing of inept Australia at a raucous, sold-out Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg, as the Proteas eased to a 3-2 ODI series triumph.
After sweeping the Proteas 3-0 in the Twenty20s, Australia had marched to a 2-0 ODI series lead but their tour has ended disastrously, crushed by 111, 164 and 122 runs in the last three fixtures while also losing gun opener Travis Head to a fractured hand at Centurion.
Australia’s bowlers were treated with disdain in the back half of the tour, while the tourists’ brisk starts with the bat were repeatedly undermined by huge collapses, all worrying signs leading into the World Cup.
Captain Mitchell Marsh (71) and Marnus Labuschagne (44) added 90 for the third wicket before their back-to-back dismissals sparked a horror 8-69 collapse.
Jansen started with a double-wicket maiden in his first over, sending danger man David Warner (11) and Josh Inglis (0) packing.
Jansen gave World Cup hopeful Labuschagne – the series leading runscorer with 283 at 70.75 – a real working over early and he should have had Marsh for 35 but for a moment of confusion in the field.
Marsh’s miscued shot sailed high in the air before the ball plopped between Gerald Coetzee in the outfield and Aiden Markram at midwicket, Coetzee the guilty party.
After crunching Jansen for successive sixes, Marsh’s attempted third maximum in the over proved his downfall, uppercutting to Lungi Ngidi on the third man boundary.
Jansen then captured Labuschagne and Alex Carey (2) with short balls to collect the first five wickets of the innings.
Maharaj bowled Tim David (1), accepted a return catch from Cameron Green (18) and destroyed the tail.
Earlier, player-of-the-series Markram (93) and David Miller (63) combined for a 109-run, fifth-wicket stand before Jansen and Andile Phehlukwayo (39no) produced some late fireworks.
Skipper Temba Bavuma was run out for a duck and Quinton de Kock, playing his last ODI on home soil, made 27 before walking off to a standing ovation.
Phehlukwayo belted Michael Neser’s last four balls of the innings for 6, 6, 6, 4.
Head will return home to undertake further medical review on his fractured left hand before a final call is made on whether he will play in the World Cup.
Australia have until September 28 to finalise their 15-player World Cup squad, leaving Head in a race against time to recover from the blow he took from Coetzee in the fourth ODI.
Uncapped Matt Short has been called up to replace Head in Australia’s three-match series against India, starting in Mohali next week, where captain Pat Cummins, Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc and Glenn Maxwell will all make their return from injury.
AAP