Velaikaran Fly ~ Bee Causes De Kock's Missed Stumping at Johannesburg Test
Posted on the 03 April 2018 by Sampathkumar Sampath
Ragupathi
s/0 Gajapathi s/o Valayapathi, spake Rajnikant in Velaikaran movie.Rajni hitting the villains black and blue in
the garb of hitting a big fly was a big comedy those days.In a late film, Vadivelu’s Hitler mush would
be mistaken for a bee and would hit with a stone, making him bleed !!
The final test is
ending for a finish at Johannesburg, the largest city in South Africa. Johannesburg is not one of South Africa's
three capital cities, it is the seat of the Constitutional Court. The city is
located in the mineral-rich Witwatersrand range of hills and is known for
stinging bees !!~remember all the players falling flat on the
ground including the big burly Swaroop Kishen, when bees swarmed the ground in
Bangalore ! ~ we have seen stray dogs, sea gulls and the like on a Cricket
ground – then bees too !!
It is stated that swarming
bees are generally not a threat, they are intent on locating a new nesting
place. The will behave aggressively if they are disturbed or threatened. But when
people panic on seeing large swarm of bees and make an attempt to disperse the
bees, they sting and it would be painful and venomous too. When a bee stings it
secretes a compound called isopentyl acetate. This is a hormone which in
sufficient quantities smells like banana oil. It triggers the 'attack/defend'
part of the bees brain. The bee leaves a tiny amount of this hormone at the
sting site. Humane and ethical are the “buzz words” when it comes to the business of
bee removal.Bees play an integral part
in the planets food production and also in ecological stability. Removal of
bees is what is aimed at, safe removal
and relocation. But often men kill them with fire or with insecticides, when
schools of them would die instantaneously.
At Johannesburg,
the score card reads : Australia 221 and 88 for 3 (Handscomb 23*, Shaun Marsh
7*) need 524 more runs to beat South Africa 488 and 344 for 6 (du Plessis 120,
Elgar 81)~ that could have been even
worser, if not Quinton de Kock missing out a stumping late on the second day.Now in a Test where South Africa, had been
amassing runs and more runs against attack crippled by injury and
controversy. It was a day on which
South Africa started with an advantage of 401 and batted on, and on, and on,
past a lead of 450, and 500, and 550, and 600. The accepted explanation was
that Faf du Plessis would have a limited attack at his disposal: Morne Morkel
had a side strain, Kagiso Rabada was suffering from a stiff back, and Vernon
Philander had strapping on his leg. By stumps, Morkel had 2 for 18, Rabada had
caused new-ball jitters, and a catch had been dropped off Philander's bowling. Du
Plessis had finally declared at tea, setting Australia an ostensible target of
612 for victory. For context, only once in Test history has a team scored more
than 500 in the fourth innings: in the famous timeless Durban Test of 1939,
England made 654 for 5, a draw declared on day 10 only because England, who
were just 42 runs from victory, had to board a train to catch up with their
ship home, which had already left Durban without them and was now in Cape Town.
Muhammad Ali, the
famed boxer was cited as floating like a bee and stinging like a bee.A similar floating delivery by off-spinner
Keshav Maharaj stung wicketkeeper Quinton de Kock, courtesy a real bee which
appeared out of nowhere at the New Wanderers on Saturday. Shaun Marsh attempted
to dance down the track and loft Maharaj over his head but missed it
completely. However, de Kock grassed the stumping opporutnity after he was
stung by a bee on his upper left-arm. He immediately pulled away, clutching his
arm and let the ball roll by as the batsman survived a close shave.
Commentators on air
thought it was a missed stumping chance by the keeper but replays showed that
de Kock had moved away after he was stung. Footage showed the southpaw flicking
away the bee. However, the miss did not prove too costly as Maharaj picked up
Marsh’s wicket a few overs later. Jo’burg is infamous for its notorious bees.
In February last year, a Test match between Sri Lanka and South Africa had to
be stopped for nearly an hour as bees swarmed the entire field.
Commentators Shane
Warne and Mark Nicholas originally thought Marsh may have got an edge, leaving
de Kock unable to react in time. But the gloveman was clutching his upper arm. The
same eagle-eyed South African television camera operators who caught Cameron
Bancroft ball-tampering during the third Test, showed it was in fact a bee
which had stung de Kock on his left arm at the exact moment as the stumping
opportunity. The footage shows de Kock flicking away the bee through his gloves
and trying to remove the sting ! ~ but no amount of help from insects is going
to help Australia save the Test !!!
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
2nd Apr
2018.