Cricket

Virat Kohli’s 52nd ODI sets up India’s narrow win over South Africa

Virat Kohli’s 52nd ODI century set up India’s total of 349/8 in the first ODI in Ranchi, a score that proved just enough for a 17-run win over South Africa. 

Five days after Temba Bavuma’s Test side sealed a famous 2-0 series victory with a 408-run hammering, Aiden Markram’s ODI unit pushed India hard, recovering from 11/3 to take the chase into the final over. They needed 18 off the last six balls, but Arshdeep Singh held his nerve and removed Corbin Bosch – who made a superb 67 off 51 deliveries – to secure a narrow victory.

India dominated early, only to hit turbulence when Marco Jansen (70 off 39) and Matthew Breetzke (72 off 80) added 97 for the sixth wicket. With both falling to Kuldeep Yadav in the 34th over, the hosts appeared to have killed the game. But Bosch, inspired by Jansen and Breetzke’s defiance, launched a late assault with five fours and four sixes, forcing India to fight to the finish. Arshdeep Singh’s calm in the last over sealed a close result – exactly the kind of contest the flagging ODI format needs.

Kohli’s fluent 135 off 120 balls, featuring seven sixes – his second-highest tally in an ODI innings – was the centrepiece. Rohit Sharma, in a breezy 57, crossed Shahid Afridi’s record for most ODI sixes (351), as the veteran pair reminded fans of their value in familiar conditions. Stand-in captain KL Rahul chipped in with 60 off 56 at No. 6, though India lost momentum at the death and fell short of the 350 mark.

Rahul lost the toss, but little else went wrong on a good batting surface. Yashasvi Jaiswal’s second ODI outing lasted just 16 balls for 18, edging Nandre Burger. Rohit, on 1 off 3 at that point, was joined by Kohli, and the pair added 136. 

Kohli edged his first ball for four but settled immediately, driving and cutting with authority. His ease going straight down the ground stood out; Burger and Ottneil Baartman were repeatedly lofted over mid-off and mid-on. Kohli reached fifty with a six off 48 balls and hit another next delivery.

Rohit, by his own high 2023 World Cup standards, was more circumspect – perhaps a sign he wants to close out his ODI career in the manner he built it. Yet he still scored at 111, striking five fours and three sixes. Dewald Brevis then produced a stunning catch at point to remove Ruturaj Gaikwad for 8. Washington Sundar, batting at No. 5 for the first time, entered during a slowdown and struggled to break free. Dot-ball pressure forced a mis-timed chip to mid-off, ending his laboured 13 off 18.

These wickets and disciplined South African bowling slowed Kohli, who moved from 84 off 76 to a century off 103 balls. Once past the three-figure mark, he accelerated hard, taking 22 off a Prenelan Subrayen over, including two fours and two sixes. He fell for 135, leaving India 276/5 with seven overs left. Rahul eased to a run-a-ball fifty, while Ravindra Jadeja – playing his first ODI since the Champions Trophy final in March – added some urgency with a 20-ball 32.

South Africa’s reply began disastrously. Three wickets fell in the first five overs: two to debutant Harshit Rana and one to Arshdeep. Rana bowled Ryan Rickelton first ball, then removed Quinton de Kock for a second-ball duck, the left-hander edging behind. Markram fell similarly to Arshdeep at 11/3.

Tony de Zorzi counter-attacked with intent, striking three fours in his first four balls, and made 39 before falling lbw to Kuldeep – a dismissal confirmed instantly via DRS by Rahul. Breetzke, who now has a record five fifties in his first five ODI innings, anchored well as Brevis swung hard at the other end.

Brevis smashed three sixes in his first 20 balls, but as with much of his early-career batting, the cameo was short-lived. Attempting a fourth big hit, he picked out deep point, giving Rana his third wicket. Jansen, however, embraced the same high-risk method with great success, racing to a 26-ball fifty. He began with back-to-back boundaries and a six off Kuldeep before targeting Prasidh Krishna for consecutive sixes. In this period, Breetzke calmly notched another fifty off 55 balls.

The chase turned again in the 34th over, when Jansen pulled Kuldeep to cow corner and, two balls later, Breetzke chipped to long-on. Their 97-run stand had ignited hopes of a stunning heist, and Bosch’s fearless hitting kept the dream alive until the final over. Ultimately, Arshdeep’s composure ended those hopes and gave India a hard-earned 1-0 lead.

About the Author


Written by Jamie Alter

Jamie Alter is a sports journalist, author, commentator, anchor, actor, and YouTuber who has covered multiple cricket World Cups and other major sporting events while working with ESPNcricinfo, Cricbuzz, Network 18, the Zee Group and as Digital Sports Editor of the Times of India. Follow Jamie on Twitter, Youtube and Instagram.

Related Post
शेयर
द्वारा प्रकाशित
Jamie Alter

हाल के पोस्ट

Rahmanullah Gurbaz reveals how Virat Kohli helps him when he is in trouble

Afghanistan wicket-keeper bat Rahmanullah Gurbaz has revealed that Virat Kohli is always ready to help… अधिक पढ़ें

December 2, 2025

Harshit Rana says he is not bothered by outside noise ahead of 2nd ODI against South Africa

India’s fast bowler Harshit Rana said he is not bothered by the outside noise ahead… अधिक पढ़ें

December 2, 2025

India vs South Africa, 2nd ODI – Match Preview

India would look to take an impregnable lead of 2-0 in the three-match series when… अधिक पढ़ें

December 2, 2025

Arteta urges fans to support ‘like animals’ ahead of clash against Brentford

Arsenal head coach Mikel Arteta has urged the club’s fans to support the team like… अधिक पढ़ें

December 2, 2025

Calvin Betton slams ATP for being obsessed with Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, calls it pathetic

Top doubles coach Calvin Betton has slammed ATP for being obsessed with Carlos Alcaraz and… अधिक पढ़ें

December 2, 2025

Luka Doncic takes blame for Lakers’ loss to Suns, says no way he can have nine turnovers

Los Angeles Lakers talisman Luka Doncic took the blame for the 125-108 loss to the… अधिक पढ़ें

December 2, 2025