Millennium Post

SL CLAIM T20 SERIES AGAINST SA

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CAPE TOWN: AB de Villiers hit a half-century on his return to internatio­nal cricket, but it was not enough to prevent Sri Lanka from beating South Africa in the series-deciding third and final Twenty20 internatio­nal at Newlands.

De Villiers made 63 off 44 balls in a South African total of 169 for five but Sri Lanka won by five wickets with one ball to spare to regain some pride after being outplayed in a three-match Test series.

“I’m over the moon,” said stand-in Sri Lankan captain Dinesh Chandimal. “After losing the Test series, I’m really happy with the way we played.”

Opening batsman Niroshan Dickwella made 68 off 51 balls before Seekkuge Prasanna clinched a 2-1 series win for the tourists by slamming an unbeaten 37 off 16 deliveries.

Dickwella was named man of the match and man of the series after making useful contributi­ons in all three matches.

South Africa dropped five catches — including three off successive balls in one over from Wayne Parnell — and were hampered by an injury to fast bowling discovery Lungi Ngidi, who left the field after bowling only two of his potential four overs.

Sri Lanka, though, could take pride in overcoming the loss of injured captain Angelo Mathews, who played a matchwinni­ng innings to level the series in the second match in Johannesbu­rg last Sunday. “Angelo is a big part of this win,” said Chandimal.

“It’s a bitter pill to swallow,” said South African captain Farhaan Behardien. “I thought we had enough runs on the board but the dropped catches put us on the back foot and losing Lungi Ngidi wasn’t ideal.”

Playing in his first internatio­nal match after recovering from an elbow injury which kept him out of action for six months, De Villiers made a cautious start, with his first run coming off the fifth ball he faced.

His first six runs were singles but he gradually increased his range of strokes, hitting leftarm spinner Lakshan Sandakan for a straight six and pulling a short ball from Asela Gunaratne for another six as he went to his ninth T20 internatio­nal fifty off 35 balls.

He cleared the boundary with another pull shot, off Isuru Udana, but he lost his wicket just as South Africa were looking to pile on the pressure when he squeezed a drive against Nuwan Kulasekera to Upul Tharanga at backward point off the first ball of the 18th over.

With Behardien having been run out three balls earlier, it meant South Africa lost two experience­d, explosive batsmen in quick succession.

Mangaliso Mosehle hit three sixes in the final over, however, to enable South Africa to post a competitiv­e total.

The left-handed Dickwella provided the foundation for Sri Lanka’s win with a 71-run third-wicket partnershi­p with Dhananjaya de Silva. But leg-spinner Imran Tahir dismissed both batsmen in the 16th over to give South Africa a chance before Prasanna’s uninhibite­d hitting took Sri Lanka over the line.

 ?? PIC/PTI ?? Sri Lanka’s Niroshan Dickwella, left, celebrates after scoring a half century during the 3rd T20 against South Africa in Cape Town on Wednesday
PIC/PTI Sri Lanka’s Niroshan Dickwella, left, celebrates after scoring a half century during the 3rd T20 against South Africa in Cape Town on Wednesday

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