BBC SPORTArabicSpanishRussianChinese
BBCiNEWS  SPORT  WEATHER  WORLD SERVICE  A-Z INDEX   SEARCH 

BBC Sport
 You are in: Cricket 
Sport Front Page
-------------------
Football
Cricket
Statistics
Counties
Scorecards
The Ashes
World Cup
Rugby Union
Rugby League
Tennis
Golf
Motorsport
Boxing
Athletics
Other Sports
-------------------
Special Events
-------------------
Sports Talk
-------------------
BBC Pundits
TV & Radio
Question of Sport
-------------------
Photo Galleries
Funny Old Game
-------------------
Around The UK: 
N Ireland
Scotland
Wales

BBC Sport Academy
News image
BBC News
News image
BBC Weather
News image
SERVICES
-------------
LANGUAGES
EDITIONS

Friday, 18 October, 2002, 15:04 GMT 16:04 UK
Kirsten achieves landmark
Gary Kirsten works the ball away through the onside
Kirsten faced 160 balls on his way to the milestone
1st Test, East London, day one: South Africa 369-2 (at close) v Bangladesh

Gary Kirsten has become the first player to score a century against all nine Test playing countries.

Kirsten went to his 15th Test hundred with a push to mid-wicket off the bowling of Sanwar Hossain and was unbeaten on 113 at close of play.

He took four hours to reach the mark and faced 160 balls, hitting eight fours.

"I didn't think I was going to get another crack at this one (the record), because I don't know how long I'm going to keep going," said 34-year-old Kirsten who made his Test debut in 1993.

"It was probably the most tentative I've been in my 15 Test hundreds as I got close to it. I just wanted to get there."

Kirsten put on 272 runs for the second wicket with Graeme Smith, who reached 200 before falling to Sanwar Hossain shortly in the final session of play.

The opener holed out at mid-on when he gave left-arm seamer Manjural Islam the charge.

Careless shot

Graeme Smith
Smith's innings promised much for the future

Herschelle Gibbs was the only batsman dismissed in the first two sessions, but his exit for 41 owed more to a careless shot than good bowling by Tapash Baisya.

Gibbs hit a six and six boundaries in an opening stand of 87 with Smith, but a long-hop proved his undoing as he picked out Tushar Imran at cover.

Bangladesh went into the game as clear underdogs, having lost 12 of their 13 Tests since being granted full-member status of the International Cricket Council two years ago.

Poor control

Skipper Khaled Mashud won the toss and chose to see if his bowlers could exploit a green-looking pitch.

Left-armer Manjurul bowled tidily, but 19-year-old Baisya lacked control in his second Test appearance.

Despite the wicket of Gibbs, he conceded runs too easily and had figures of one for 71 from 15 overs at tea.

The South Africans continued to dominate through Kirsten and Smith after the interval.

And Smith's dismissal owed more to the batsman's excitement at reaching his double hundred than the penetration of the Bangladeshi attack.


South Africa: Mark Boucher (captain), Herschelle Gibbs, Gary Kirsten, Graeme Smith, Jacques Kallis, Ashwell Prince, Martin van Jaarsveld, Claude Henderson, Mornantau Hayward, Makhaya Ntini, David Terbrugge.

Bangladesh: Habibul Bashar, Javed Omar, Al-Shariar, Tushar Imran, Sanwar Hossain, Khaled Mashud (captain), Manjurul Islam, Talha Jubair, Mohammad Rafique, Tapash Baishya, Alok Kapali.

Umpires: Daryl Harper (Aus), Russell Tiffin (Zim)

TV umpire: Shahid Wadvalla (SA)

Match referee: Ranjan Madugalle (SrL)

 WATCH/LISTEN
 ON THIS STORY
Telford Vice for BBC Sport
"South Africa dominated the opening day"
All the reports from the Test match

Day four

Day three

Day two

Day one

STATS
Links to more Cricket stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Cricket stories

© BBC^^ Back to top

Sport Front Page | Football | Cricket | Rugby Union | Rugby League |
Tennis | Golf | Motorsport | Boxing | Athletics | Other Sports |
Special Events | Sports Talk | BBC Pundits | TV & Radio | Question of Sport |
Photo Galleries | Funny Old Game | N Ireland | Scotland | Wales