Cricket World Cup 2019: SA restrict England to 311/8

England were pegged back by wickets at regular intervals

ngidi-sa-england-reuters South Africa's Lungi Ngidi celebrates with Hashim Amla and teammates after taking the wicket of England's Jos Buttler during the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019, at The Oval in London | Reuters

South Africa put up a decent bowling performance on a slightly slow pitch to keep the dangerous English batsmen in check, restricting the hosts to 311/8 in the opening match of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019, at The Oval in London.

Four of the English batsmen—Ben Stokes (89), captain Eoin Morgan (57), Jason Roy (54) and Joe Root (51)—made fifties but could not convert it into a century.

England, who last year set a world record for the highest one-day international total of 481/6, were pegged back by wickets at regular intervals.

England lost a wicket off the second ball before Roy and Root shared a stand of 106 that was equalled by Morgan and Stokes.

South Africa captain Faf du Plessis, despite being without injured spearhead Dale Steyn, saw his decision to field rewarded in dramatic style when Imran Tahir struck with just the second ball of the match to dismiss Jonny Bairstow for a golden duck. Normally it is a paceman who has the first spell.

But Du Plessis gave the ball to 40-year-old leg-spinner Tahir, the oldest player in the tournament, instead and a well-flighted delivery had Bairstow edging to wicket-keeper Quinton de Kock, with the Pakistan-born Tahir running off in a semi-circle—his familiar celebration.

Roy and Root were both in fine touch and England would have wanted at least one of them to go on to a big score.

But from 107/1, England lost two wickets for four runs in four balls. Roy flat-batted an intended pull off Andile Phehlukwayo to Du Plessis at mid-off before Root steered Rabada to backward point, where JP Duminy held a sharp catch.

Morgan, whose aggressive approach has been symbolic of England's rise to the top of the one-day international rankings after their woeful first-round exit at the 2015 World Cup, struck the first two sixes of the match off successive balls from fast bowler Lungi Ngidi.

The left-hander's drive over long-off was followed by a pull above long leg. But having completed a run-a-ball fifty, Morgan's drive off Tahir (two for 61) was well caught low down by a diving Aiden Markram, running in from long-on.

Dangerman Jos Buttler fell for just 18 while left-hander Stokes, trying to break the shackles, saw his 79-ball knock end in the penultimate over when a reverse hit off Ngidi (three for 66) found Hashim Amla at third man.

(With PTI inputs)