We got a good hiding from India: South Africa coach Ottis Gibson after ODI series loss

A 73-run win over the Proteas in the fifth one-dayer here yesterday has ensured India their first ever series victory on South African soil across all formats.
India's Shreyas Iyer makes a run during the fourth ODI cricket match between South Africa and India in Port Elizabeth, South Africa Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2018. | AP
India's Shreyas Iyer makes a run during the fourth ODI cricket match between South Africa and India in Port Elizabeth, South Africa Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2018. | AP

PORT ELIZABETH: A disappointed South Africa coach Ottis Gibson says he has no excuses to offer for the "hiding" his depleted side has taken from a rampaging India, leaving him with a lot to think about going forward.
    
A 73-run win over the Proteas in the fifth one-dayer here yesterday has ensured India their first ever series victory on South African soil across all formats. The Virat Kohli-led team has taken an unassailable 4-1 lead in the six-match ODI series.
    
"You take three of your best batsmen out of any team, they will struggle and when you do it against a very strong Indian team it has exposed us. I've told the lads in the dressing room we will not make excuses but will try and get better. We have got a good hiding from India, let us not kid ourselves about that, but it has also given us a lot of food for thought going forward," said Gibson at the post-match conference.
    
"I know we have been focusing on the World Cup, but I don't think the team that will go to that tournament is the one that you saw tonight," he added.
    
Gibson also conceded that India's wrist spin pair of Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav have tormented his side in this ODI series but felt they may not be that useful in the World Cup in England.
    
"I think India has two world-class spinners and they might spin it anywhere, but we have got a whole year to learn to deal with that stuff. But I don't believe it will spin that much in England," he said.
    
He felt his batsmen let the team down at crucial junctures through the entire ODI series, particularly in the fifth match here.
    
"We were optimistic the series was still there to be drawn. To bowl India out for 270-odd was a great effort from the bowlers and we let ourselves down with the bat.
    
"You want to have a group of players who can adapt to certain conditions and play accordingly. We know we have those players but they have not produced it in this series, which is disappointing. We succumbed quite easily tonight," the coach said.
    
South Africa managed to restrict India under 300 for the second game running, but 275 proved to be a tall ask with the Indian wrist-spinners coming back to form once again. This was despite Hashim Amla's anchoring 71-run knock. But once he was run out, the Proteas collapsed again.
    
"We were 50 for none and lost a wicket with four balls to go in Power Play to Jasprit Bumrah who has been their best fast bowler all summer. We lost a couple more shortly thereafter and that set us back.
    
"Hashim (Amla) worked really hard to rebuild but every time we rebuilt we lost wickets. With four bowlers, we needed our best six or seven batsmen to bat the bulk of overs and they were not able to do that tonight," he said.
    
Gibson said, on the contrary, the Indian top-order made the difference in the ODI series by scoring the bulk of runs.
    
"A lot of credit has to go to India. In every game, one of their top three (batsmen) has scored a hundred and that is been the difference in the series. We've got one hundred from captain Faf du Plessis in Durban, and we've not been able to get another since. It's not that we can't."
    
Gibson lamented that injuries cost South Africa in the series and hampered their preparation for the 2019 World Cup as they looked to try out new faces. At the same time, he added that stand-in skipper Aiden Markram would not be judged too harshly on this result after he took over from injured Faf du Plessis.    
"This (appointing Markram) was a decision for the future, not a decision for now. Aiden has shown all the hallmarks of a good leader and with Faf out we thought we could give him that opportunity. Looking back I think it was the right decision."
 

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