Thriller at T20 World Cup: South Africa beat Afghanistan after two Super Overs
Ryan Rickelton and Quinton de Kock hit fifties in a century stand as South Africa reached 187 for six.
PTI
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Azmatullah Omarzai made 17 in first Super Over; Stubbs’ two sixes forced another tie.
Ahmedabad, 11 Feb
In a T20 World Cup game for the ages, South Africa somehow managed
to get past a plucky Afghanistan after two wildly oscillating Super Overs here
on Wednesday.
Ryan
Rickelton (61 off 28) and Quinton de Kock (59 off 41) put together a brilliant
century stand with quickfire fifties to power South Africa to 187 for six.
Rahmanullah
Gurbaz (84 off 42) then singlehandedly kept Afghanistan in the run chase before
some lusty hitting from the lower-order helped them tie the game in regulation
time.
What
followed was an incredible sequence of two Super Overs with fortunes swinging
either way after every ball.
In the
first Super Over, Azmatullah Omarzai struck Lungi Ngidi for two fours and a six
to help Afghanistan post 17 runs, but Tristan Stubbs hit two sixes off Fazalhaq
Farooqi, including off the last ball, to force another Super Over.
Coming
in to bat in the second Super Over, Davis Miller and Tristan Stubbs struck
three sixes to notch up 23 runs, a steep target which was made to look very
gettable by Rahmanullah Gurbaz. The opening batter smashed seasoned left-arm
spinner Keshav Maharaj for three consecutive sixes before getting out to
complete a sensational finish.
In
regulation time, the Afghans started aggressively in the run chase before
losing the plot, but some brilliant hitting from Omarzai, Rashid and Noor Ahmad, coupled with a disastrous final over from Kagiso Rabada, in which he gave away
two no-balls, cost South Africa dearly.
Afghanistan
made a bright start to their chase, with Gurbaz (84 off 42; 4x4s, 7x6s)
smashing Ngidi for two fours in the opening over.
Gurbaz
continued with his attacking approach, ramping Marco Jansen over the slips for
a maximum and then hitting Rabada over the third man fence.
George
Linde gave away 17 runs in his opening over as Gurbaz and Ibrahim Zadran took
the attack to the opposition to race to 50 in just four overs.
But
Ngidi put the brakes on the scoring, scalping two wickets in the fifth over in the
form of Zadran, who was cleaned up, and then accounting for Gulbadin Naib a
ball later with the pacer taking a brilliant return catch.
Gurbaz,
however, was in ominous form as he dispatched Linde for two sixes in the eighth over to bring up his fifty in 26 balls, lifting Afghanistan to 93 for 3 in 10
overs.
Gurbaz
was going great guns before twin blows in the 13th over changed the complexion
of the match.
Omarzai
(22 off 17) and Rashid (20 off 12) kept Afghanistan in the hunt before Noor
Ahmed (15 not out off 9) struck two big sixes to bring down the bring the
equation to 13 off the last six balls.
South
Africa looked to have pocked the match in the first ball of the last over, dismissing Ahmad, only for an ill-timed no ball from Rabada, and the batter
punished the Proteas, clearing the bowler for a maximum.
Rabada
bowled another no-ball in the fourth delivery before Ahmad was run out going
for the winning run as the match finished on level scores, forcing a Super Over.
Earlier,
South Africa were dealt an early blow in the form of skipper Aiden Markram
(5).
De Kock
broke the shackles in the fourth over, clearing Mujeeb ur Rahman over the fence
and then followed it up with a four.
Rickelton
then joined the party, hitting Omarzai (3/41) for two boundaries as South
Africa managed just 43 for 1 in the powerplay.
Both De
Kock and Rickelton pressed the accelerator button thereafter, taking on the
spin duo of Mohammad Nabi and Rashid (2/28) with some lusty hits.
Ahmad
was taken to task by the duo as the spinner gave away 23 runs in his first
over.
The
onslaught continued as De Kock brought up his fifth T20 World Cup fifty with a
boundary off Mujeeb and then Rickelton added salt to the bowler's wound with a
maximum to score a quality fifty of just 23 balls.
It took
some brilliance from Rashid and poor shot selection to break the
dangerous-looking partnership with both de Kock and Rickelton departing in the
13th over.
Rashid
first accounted for De Kock, caught at deep midwicket by Ibrahim Zadran and
then a ball later, the Afghan skipper trapped Rickelton plumb in front of the
wicket with a quicker delivery that skidded on after pitching.
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