The Star Late Edition

Proteas back in complete control

- STUART HESS stuart.hess@inl.co.za

PAKISTAN 140/9 (Azam 50; Linde 3/23, Williams 3/35)

SOUTH AFRICA 141/4 (Markram 54; Qadir 2/26)

SA won by 6 wickets, 4-match series tied 1-1

THIS match was decided after the first ball. That one ball saw Mohammad Rizwan charge down the wicket at George Linde and attempt to belt him over long off for six. Instead, having connected with the ball with the outside corner of his bat, Rizwan skied it to Aiden Markram at mid-off. Game over.

There was some criticism in the aftermath of Rizwan being arrogant, but can you blame him? His four T20 innings against South Africa before yesterday’s match read as follows: 104*, 51, 42 and 74*. His desire to dominate was thus understand­able.

But it immediatel­y put Pakistan on the backfoot. More importantl­y, it gave the South Africans an enormous lift. After Saturday’s series opener, Proteas skipper Heinrich Klaasen mentioned that his bowlers needed to stay out of Rizwan’s hitting zone, which is predominan­tly on the legside. There was no danger of that yesterday. South Africa could control the game thereafter.

The only blip came in a horrible opening over for Sisanda Magala, who lost his rhythm completely and bowled three no-balls, conceded nine runs after his first legitimate ball, and completed that over having shipped 18 runs.

It would have been perfectly understand­able had Klaasen looked elsewhere for some more overs – Andile Phehlukway­o didn’t bowl a ball, for instance – but he stuck with Magala, and to the fast bowler’s credit, he recovered beautifull­y.

He claimed his first internatio­nal wicket, that of Babar Azam in his third over, zipping one through the Pakistan captain’s defences after he’d made a run-a-ball 50. Babar really couldn’t afford to accelerate, because he was attempting to hold the innings together while his teammates were being very charitable with their wickets.

Linde benefited from that with three wickets, as did Lizaad Williams, while Tabraiz Shamsi kept his shoe on his foot while taking 1/22.

South Africa conducted the run chase in aggressive fashion. Markram made 54 off 30 balls with some exquisite shots among his seven fours and three sixes.

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Proteas gave themselves some heart palpitatio­ns, losing a few wickets for no good reason, but Klaasen (36*) and Linde (20*) ensured there were no further hassles.

The third match is set for SuperSport Park tomorrow, followed by the fourth at the same venue on Friday.

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