South Africa 251 (de Kock 94, du Plessis 57, Thisara 3-26) v beat Sri Lanka 138 (Oshada 31, Rabada 3-43, Ngidi 2-14) by 113 runs
South Africa lost 6 for 31 this afternoon, but the hosts'
bowling attack then reversed the treatment to dismantle Sri Lanka's chase under
lights at Centurion. Kagiso Rabada led the attack with 3 for 43 and Lungi
Ngidi, Anrich Nortje and Imran Tahir all struck twice as the visitors collapsed
from 92 for 3 to 138 all out in pursuit of 252. On a pitch that encouraged both
seam and spin, South Africa had also been bowled out short of their full
complement of overs, and were thankful for Quinton de Kock's 94 and Faf du
Plessis' 57 as Sri Lanka's bowlers, lead by Thisara Perera's 3 for 26 in his
150th ODI, also shared the wickets around.
Had Niroshan Dickwella and Avishka Fernando been able to set
aside quick runs and simply survive Rabada and Ngidi's opening bursts, the job
would only have become easier for Sri Lanka on a pitch that remained generally
good for batting - cracks aside - throughout. But the visiting openers instead
sought to go after the new ball, without much success.
Dickwella backed away into a wild, top-edged pull that was
safely pouched by de Kock in the third over - Rabada's 100th ODI wicket - and
Avishka swiped a four and a top-edged six before he was bowled swinging across
the line at Ngidi not long after. Rabada bowled what could be his fastest spell
of the summer with the new ball, reaching speeds of as much as 151.8kph.
Nortje didn't find the dry track at the Wanderers on Sunday
much to his liking, but there was a little more pace in this pitch and he was
off to the perfect start when he found the leading edge of Kusal Perera's bat
with his first ball of the evening. While not quite as quick as Rabada, Nortje
topped out at 148kph in his first spell, and also played his part in the field.
His direct-hit from short third man found Kusal Mendis short
of his ground and run-out for 24, with the batsman furious at the
miscommunication with Oshada Fernando that brought his downfall. Oshada soon
joined him in the dressing room, trapped lbw by Nortje with Sri Lanka in the
mire at 92 for 5.
When de Silva chipped Rabada tamely to du Plessis at
midwicket Sri Lanka were six down, and South Africa forced the issue by
bringing in a slip and a short leg in and coming around the stumps at Akila
Dananjaya. Imran Tahir then got to work on the lower order, a double-strike in
his eighth over further denting Sri Lanka's chase.
Thisara Perera holed out to deep cover the ball after he had
slogged Tahir onto the grass banks over midwicket, and Kasun Rajitha was pinned
in front by a quick googly first ball. Rabada and Ngidi returned to deliver the
last rites, with South Africa field-testing David Miller as a back-up
wicketkeeper as the match reached a swift conclusion.
South Africa's innings had collapsed in similar fashion this
afternoon, but the hosts had been given a strong start by de Kock, who missed
out on another possible hundred but put together a 91-run opening stand with
Reeza Hendricks. He looked set to reach his first limited-overs hundred of the
summer when an expansive swipe into the leg side brought only a top edge that
was easily snaffled by Dickwella behind the stumps. Du Plessis kept the score
ticking over with his half-century, but his dismissal sparked a collapse as
South Africa slipped from 220 for 4 to be bowled out with almost five overs of
their innings unused.
De Kock burst out of the blocks with four boundaries in the
arc between backward point and wide long-off in Vishwa Fernando's first over.
He thrashed 11 boundaries inside the first Powerplay, raising a 36-ball fifty -
his 20th in ODIs and sixth against Sri Lanka.
Hendricks' departure in the 15th over barely slowed de Kock,
and with back-t0-back boundaries off Akila he motored through the 70s. Then he
took Dhananjaya on, plundering 15 from his second over of the innings. But with
a 14th ODI ton in sight, he fell against the run of play to give Sri Lanka the
opening they were searching for.
Rassie van der Dussen came and went for just 2, while Wiaan
Mulder batted in fast-forward, hitting the first four balls he faced to the
boundary, but was then bowled around his legs by Vishwa to leave South Africa
wobbling at 176 for 4.
Du Plessis and David Miller shored up the innings with a
44-run stand, du Plessis raising his fifty and going past 5,000 runs in ODI
cricket in the process. But his dismissal, bowled by a delivery from Thisara
that kept low in the 37th over, started the slide in earnest.
In the space of just under nine overs, South Africa's lower
order collapsed in a heap. It had been expected that conditions here would suit
the side batting second, and all the indications were that South Africa were 30
or 40 runs short of where they could have been. But the all-round brilliance of
their bowlers meant that their 251 was plenty, and they will go to Durban 2-0
up.
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