There were certainly shades of Makhaya in his 4-56. Batsmen, be afraid. Be very afraid…
South Africa’s batting crumbled quicker than the Lord’s wicket second time around, as they were hammered by a whopping 211 runs in the first Test in London. Twitter was not pleased at all.
When the chips were down in the series decider in Cardiff, the Proteas ch… cho… chose not to play very well. Would you believe the interwebz was all over it and pretty choked up.
The Proteas held their nerve at the death to win the second of three T20 internationals by three runs in Taunton, setting up a decider in Cardiff on Sunday afternoon.
The Proteas’ constipated batting was followed up by bowling with all the flow of diarrhoea to follow up a tragic Champions Trophy campaign with a sorry start to the three-match series.
It goes this deep, folks.
South Africa had only themselves to blame after three run-outs, a load of shoddy fielding and listless captaincy all contributed to their demise against India at the Oval in London.
Rabada, Parnell and Maharaj were too hot for the English at Lord’s, as the Proteas managed a bit of redemption ahead of the ICC Champions Trophy. Here’s how the internet saw it.
As the paceman completed his fall from one-time world number one ODI bowler to banishment by CSA, the interwebz wasn’t angry, just disappointed in old Lopsy. Very disappointed.
Check out all the latest T20 action from India with a South African slant – as our players bring some essential Protea fire to the biggest cricket show on earth over the coming weeks.
A funny old day in Dunedin saw both sides continue neck-and-neck. Oh, and Stephen Cook wandered off without being given out and the ground was evacuated. Here’s what Twitter said.
We have a tantalising game of cricket on our hands after the second day comes to an end in Dunedin. Here’s what the Twitterati had to say about the Proteas’ efforts with bat and ball.
When you need someone to get stuck in, the opener from Welkom is your guy. As he turned around the Proteas’ fortunes in Dunedin, the interwebz was up keeping watch in the early hours.
A consummate performance with ball and bat saw the Proteas home at Eden Park, as they clinched the five-match ODI series 3-2. Here’s what the internet thought of it.
AB de Villiers’ fireworks weren’t enough as the Kiwi opener went berserk in Hamilton to set up a series decider on Saturday. Here’s the tale of the tape, seen through the eyes of the Twitterati.
It was an absolute thriller under the lights in Hamilton, as AB de Villiers and Andile Phehlukwayo kept their nerve to chalk up a victory in game one of five. Here’s what the internet said.
A five-wicket haul from Imran Tahir helped South Africa secure an 78-run win over New Zealand in the first and only T20 on their tour to the Land of the Long White cloud.
The Proteas’ new Test skipper passed Aussie David Warner’s record score in the fourth one-dayer in Cape Town, falling just shy of a double ton – and everyone on the internet was very pleased.
The Proteas nearly found themselves pollinated at the Bullring on Saturday, as a swarm of insects decided to disrupt the cricket.
The comeback kid made his mark with a half-century at Newlands, before the Proteas lost their nerve in Cape Town. Here’s what the Twitterz made of the superstar’s return.
The Proteas blew away the tourists again on day three in Johannesburg to complete a 3-0 series win. Here’s what the experts at home made of it.
After the mighty # did the business on day one at the Wanderers in his hundredth Test match, we look at how the armchair pundits responded.
South Africa’s 29-year-old paceman has Kol-packed his bags and will jet off with Rilee Rossouw to begin a four-year county contract with Hampshire. Here’s what the interwebz makes of it.
The Proteas were absolutely magnificent on day two in Perth, dragging themselves back from the abyss against the Aussies. Here’s how they did it.
South Africa are polishing off their preparations to take on the Aussies Down Under. Here’s why they won’t miss good old AB quite as much as you might be thinking.