The Herald (South Africa)

SA seal deal in thrilling super over

- Telford Vice

David Miller starred with the bat – twice – and the gloves to help SA reel off a sixth consecutiv­e victory over Sri Lanka at Newlands on Tuesday.

The home side, who won the one-day series between the teams 5-0, added success in a thrilling first T20.

Sri Lanka made 134/7 after being put in to bat, and SA replied with 134/8 to tie the game.

That forced a super over, in which Miller and Rassie van der Dussen scored 14.

Thisara Perera and Avishka Fernando answered with five for the Lankans, making SA the winners.

Miller’s 41 was his team’s best batting effort in their 20 overs, and followed his first foray into wicketkeep­ing in almost seven years.

Though regular stumper Quinton de Kock was part of the XI, Miller took on the job in a nod to his likely role as De Kock’s understudy at the coming World Cup.

SA’s bowlers kept the Lankans on a short leash throughout their innings, in which only three overs yielded 10 or more runs, none reached 15 and only four more runs were scored in the second half than the first.

Lungi Ngidi and Anrich Nortjé were non-starters because of side and shoulder injuries, which brought Lutho Sipamla into the squad – he had been in the group selected for the last two games.

Wicketkeep­er Miller, who was previously behind the stumps in October 2012, still looked the part when he pouched a routine catch from the second ball of the match, which Dale Steyn bowled and Niroshan Dickwella edged.

There was more complicate­d work to do in the 13th, when Imran Tahir ripped a googly across and past the lefthanded Kamindu Mendis.

Miller collected the ball neatly, and had the bails off with snappy glovework to claim a stumping.

That ended easily the Lankans’ best innings, with Mendis hitting three fours and two sixes in his 29-ball 41 and featuring in two of their stands that made it into the 30s.

Andile Phehlukway­o quashed any ambitions the visitors might have had of posting a bigger total by taking three wickets between the 12th and 19th overs.

Reeza Hendricks was run out for eight after De Kock called for a third.

SA’s top order had been cleared away with just 52 scored by midway through the 10th over, including De Kock and Faf du Plessis.

Van der Dussen and Miller staunched the flow of wickets with a partnershi­p of 66 off 42 balls that seemed to clear SA’s path to victory.

But Lasith Malinga had Van der Dussen caught at third man for 34 in the 17th, and two balls later Miller was run out trying to take two.

Phehlukway­o and Kagiso Rabada came and went before the last over arrived with five required.

Left-arm fast bowler Isuru Udana conceded only two off the first four balls, and the pressure told when JP Duminy was run out trying to take a second off the fifth.

Dale Steyn should have been run out, but wicketkeep­er Dickwella’s throw somehow missed the stumps, allowing Steyn to scamper the single that levelled the scores.

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 ?? Picture: ASHLEY VLOTMAN/GALLO IMAGES ?? HEART-STOPPING STUFF: SA’s Andile Phehlukway­o celebrates the wicket of Angelo Perera, of Sri Lanka, during their first KFC T20 Internatio­nal at Newlands in Cape Town on Tuesday
Picture: ASHLEY VLOTMAN/GALLO IMAGES HEART-STOPPING STUFF: SA’s Andile Phehlukway­o celebrates the wicket of Angelo Perera, of Sri Lanka, during their first KFC T20 Internatio­nal at Newlands in Cape Town on Tuesday

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