19th March 2006: The Day that Cricket Changed Forever
Sometimes, a cornered cat is the deadliest being that exists. One can never be sure of what it can do to its aggressors. The South African cricket team, popularly called the Proteas, turned out to be exactly this as they encountered Australia for the final MTN Standard Bank ODI at the 'Bullring' Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg. Having risen from a 0-2 trail in the series to 2-2 after 4 matches, SA looked poised for a challenge, while the Aussies were smug as ever.
Having won the toss, Ricky Ponting elected to Bat first as the pitch looked green and fast. Little did he know that shortly, things would go haywire there! Right from the first ball, the kangaroos unleashed a run-flood and endlessly pounded fours and sixes all around. Ricky Ponting came in at his traditional no. 3 slot and upped the onslaught. In 73 balls, he stroked his career's fastest century, the scorecard standing in the mid-300s. As the tense home crowd watched, their bowlers were beaten black and blue as the Aussie captain danced his way to a regal 164 off 105 balls, studded with 9 sixes and 13 fours. Australia had hoisted a massive 434-4, the then highest ever ODI team total in cricket.