AB de Villiers' "Atom Bomb" Century Dominates Headlines
AB de Villiers took 31 balls to smash the fastest century in ODIs. He blasted 16 sixes and nine fours in his blistering 44-ball knock of 149.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: January 19, 2015 05:41 pm IST
South Africa one-day cricket captain AB de Villiers dominated the headlines on the front pages of the country's newspapers on Monday after his record-breaking performance in the match against visiting West Indies at Wanderers Stadium here.
"Atom Bomb" read the headline in the Afrikaans daily Beeld; while the daily 'The New Age' titled its story "Easy as AB(C)De Villiers".
'The Star' used his initials to describe his performance as "Absolutely Brilliant".
De Villiers's knock of 149 off 44 balls including 16 sixes helped South Africa reach 439 for two and better their own record of 438 against Australia at the same venue in 2006. (Match Report | Pics)
With 16 sixes, de Villiers has now equalled the record set by India's Rohit Sharma. ("Hell of an Innings": Corey Anderson)
Hashim Amla hit 153 not out and Rilee Rossouw 128, beating a 15-year record set by former Proteas Gary Kirsten and Herschelle Gibbs. (Kumble Congratulates AB)
Gibbs, who was the star when his knock took the Proteas to victory against Australia in 2006, was ecstatic about de Villiers beating that record.
"It was out of this world!" Gibbs told Beeld. "It brought back wonderful memories of my innings (of 175) and I got goosebumps." ('Record Wasn't Part of Plan' | Pics: World at His Feet)
Former captain Shaun Pollock and retired paceman Makhaya Ntini concurred with Gibbs' view, describing the match as one that was unlikely to be repeated.
De Villiers said he did not even want to come out and bat on Sunday.
"I actually wanted David Miller to go in to bat if a wicket fell," De Villiers said.
But coach Russell Domingo was adamant that the captain go in.
De Villiers' score also helped raise R114,000 of the total R210,000 during the match for breast cancer advocacy projects as the Proteas played in all-pink gear in support of the venture.
Wanderers Stadium was a sea of pink as fans rallied to the call to wear the colour in support of Breast Cancer awareness.