Business Day

Sunrisers undisputed champions of SA20

• Eastern Cape side canter to a win after setting a target of 204/3

- Amir Chetty

The Sunrisers Eastern Cape were streets ahead of Durban’s Super Giants and the rest of their opposition in season two as they successful­ly retained their Betway SA20 title in Cape Town on Saturday evening.

The Orange Army looked relaxed ahead of the showdown, having claimed victory over the same opponents by 51 runs in the first qualifier to advance directly to the final.

They posted a commanding 204/3, thanks in large part to half-centuries from Tristan Stubbs (56 not out)], Tom Abell (55), and 42 apiece by skipper Aiden Markram and Jordan Hermann, as they turned on the charm to claim a crushing 89run victory in front of a predominan­tly orange sea at Newlands.

The men from Durban, who were required to catch two additional flights to Johannesbu­rg where they beat the home team Joburg Super Kings by 69 runs in the second qualifier before returning to Cape Town to contest the final, could only register 115 runs as they were bundled out in 17 overs.

Left-arm seamer Marco Jansen was devastatin­g up front and at the back end of the innings claiming 5/30 from four overs, while two wickets each by Ottniel Baartman and Dan Worrall ensured the men from Gqeberha locked out the top three spots on the tournament’s wicket-taker list.

The two SA seamers were rewarded for their outstandin­g performanc­es this season, as Jansen took home the rising star of the season award, while Baartman secured the bowler of the season accolade, while the team took home the spirit of cricket award.

“I said last year that if we made the final, we stood a great chance of winning it, but this year I didn’t have that feeling,” Jansen said after the match. “It ’ s something new for me to play in two finals back to back.

“I didn’t know what to expect and I’m sure some of the guys also didn’t know what to expect.

“We just tried to go out there and give our best, we executed our plans well with the bat, ball, and in the field, so I didn’t have that same feeling that I had last year,” said Jansen.

Markram and his charges have been clinical in all department­s, and it showed on the results table as they finished the group stages with seven wins, with a six-game unbeaten run at the back end of the competitio­n to lift the trophy again.

“I think it’s quite rare that you go through a competitio­n where you win quite a few games on the bounce like we did,” Markram said. “You expect a loss at some stage simply because of how busy the schedule is and how good the teams are. When you do get a bit of momentum, it ’ s important to go two, three, four wins and get comfortabl­e on the log.

“But it’s just execution of plans, we do our homework on players, and back ways to either keep them quiet or get them out, if it goes well and the tails are up, things tend to go well for us, the results go well too. It’s completely fair and understand­able if the guys are slightly off the boil on the odd occasion.”

 ?? Nic Bothma ?? Kings of orange: Sunrisers Eastern Cape captain Aiden Markram and franchise owner Kavya Maran lift the SA20 trophy as they celebrate with the team at Newlands in Cape Town./
Nic Bothma Kings of orange: Sunrisers Eastern Cape captain Aiden Markram and franchise owner Kavya Maran lift the SA20 trophy as they celebrate with the team at Newlands in Cape Town./

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