India (Var)made five changes to their playing (Pat)eleven – Ruturaj Gaikwad, Shreyas Iyer, Axar, Ravi Bishnoi, and Avesh Khan made way for Shubman Gill, Tilak, Ravindra Jadeja, Kuldeep Yadav, and Mohammed Siraj.
South Africa
(Bavu)made eight (Anri)changes to the eleven that last played the Indians –
Quinton de Kock, Temba, Rilee Rossouw, Wayne Parnell, Keshav Maharaj, Kagiso
Rabada, Nortje, and Lungi Ngidi made way for Reeza Hendricks, Matthew Breetzke,
Heinrich Klaasen, Andile Phehlukwayo, Marco Jansen, Gerald Coetzee, Lizaad
Williams, and Tabraiz Shamsi (the player of the match).
On winning the
toss, Aiden Markram, South Africa’s skipper, chose to field.
The first
Powerplay of India’s innings – which was the mandatory Powerplay – was between
the first and the sixth over. They scored 59, and lost three wickets.
India’s openers
D(av)idn’t get off the mark. Yashasvi Jaiswal, who faced three balls, did not
open his account. Three balls into the match, he was caught by Miller off the
bowling of Jansen.
A couple of overs
into the match, India sought a batting review. They challenged the decision for
a wicket. Gill, the batsman, faced a couple of balls, failing to get off the
mark. It was struck down by South African umpire Allahudien Paleker. He was
trapped leg before wicket by Williams, who broke the six-run stand.
India scored 50
off five overs (31 balls). South Africa had conceded four extras at that point.
Tilak Varma, whose
20-ball innings included four boundaries and a six, scored 29. Twenty-four
balls after Gill’s dismissal, he was caught by Jansen. Coetzee broke the 49-run
stand.
Eight overs into
the match, there was the strategic timeout. India scored 69 for the loss of
three wickets at that point. While Suryakumar Yadav, India’s skipper, was
batting on 30, Rinku Singh had scored half-a-dozen.
Suryakumar’s
half-century – which included five boundaries and three sixes – came off 29
balls.
India scored 100
off 11 overs (67 balls). South Africa had conceded five extras at that point.
Seventy-two balls
(11.5 overs) into the match, India sought a batting review. They challenged the
decision for a wicket. Rinku was the batsman. It was upheld by Paleker.
The fourth-wicket
pair put on 50 off 34 balls. While Suryakumar’s contribution to the partnership
was 31, Rinku’s contribution to it was 18. Extras’ contribution to the
partnership was a run.
Suryakumar, whose
36-ball innings included five boundaries and three sixes, eventually scored 56.
Forty-eight balls after Varma’s dismissal, he was caught by Jansen. Shamsi
broke the 70-run partnership.
It was at that
point that there was the strategic timeout. India scored 125 for the loss of
four wickets at that point. While Rinku’s contribution to the partnership was
34, Jitesh hadn’t got off to the (Shar)mark.
Eighty-eight balls
(14.3 overs) into the match, India sought a batting review. They challenged the
decision for a wicket. Jitesh, the batsman, faced three balls, scoring a run.
It was struck down by South African umpire Lubabalo Gcuma. He was caught by
Tristan Stubbs. Markram broke the 17-run stand.
Rinku’s
half-century – which included nine boundaries – came off 30 balls.
India scored 150
off 16.2 overs (99 balls). The number of extras they had conceded at that point
gave South Africa no reason to be in seventh heaven. That was, incidentally,
the number of extras they eventually conceded.
A hundred and
seventeen balls (19.2 overs) into the match, India sought a batting review.
They challenged the decision for a wicket. Ravindra Jadeja, the batsman, scored
19 off 14 balls, which included a boundary and a six. It was struck down by Gcuma.
He was trapped leg before wicket by Coetzee, who broke the 38-run stand.
The seventh-wicket
pair didn’t get off the mark. Arshdeep Singh, who faced a ball, didn’t get off
the mark. The next ball, he was caught by Phehlukwayo off the bowling of
Coetzee.
It was at that
point that was an interruption due to rain. India scored 180 for the loss of
seven wickets.
Rinku, whose
39-ball innings included nine boundaries and a couple of sixes, eventually scored
68. He was unbeaten.
Phehlukwayo bowled
three wicketless overs, conceding 29.
Jansen, Williams,
and Markram bowled three overs apiece, conceding 39, 32, and 29, respectively.
They picked up a scalp apiece, as did Shamsi, who bowled four overs, conceding
18.
Coetzee bowled 3.3
overs, conceded 32. He picking up three scalps.
Owing to the rain,
South Africa’s target was revised to 152 off 15 overs.
The first
Powerplay of South Africa’s innings – which was the mandatory Powerplay – was
between the first and the fifth over. They scored 67, and lost a wicket.
South Africa’s
openers put on 42. Breetzke had no reason to be in seventh heaven – he scored
16, which included a boundary and a six. Seventeen balls into the chase, Varma,
Jadeja, and Jitesh ran him out.
South Africa
scored 50 off 3.4 overs (22 balls). India had conceded five extras at that
point.
The second-wicket
pair put on 50 off 29 balls. While Hendricks’ contribution to the partnership
was 23, Markram’s contribution to it was 30. Extras’ contribution to the
partnership was a run.
Half-a-dozen overs
into the chase, there was the strategic timeout. South Africa scored 78 for the
loss of a wicket at that point. While Hendricks was batting on 40, Markram was
batting on 17.
Markram, whose
17-ball innings included four boundaries and a six, eventually scored 30.
Thirty balls after Breetzke’s dismissal, he was caught by Siraj. Mukesh Kumar
broke the 54-run partnership.
South Africa
scored 100 off 8.1 overs (49 balls). India had conceded half-a-dozen extras at
that point.
Hendricks, whose
27-ball innings included eight boundaries and a six, eventually scored 49.
Seven balls later, he was caught by Suryakumar. Kuldeep broke the 12-run stand.
The fourth-wicket
pair didn’t get off the mark. Although his five-ball innings included a six,
Klaasen had no reason to be in seventh heaven – a couple of balls later, he was
caught by Jaiswal off the bowling of Siraj.
A dozen overs into
the chase, there was the strategic timeout. South Africa scored 128 for the
loss of four wickets at that point. While Miller was unbea‘ten’, Stubbs had
scored half-a-dozen.
Seventy-four balls
(12.1 overs) into the chase, India sought a bowling review. They challenged the
decision for a wicket. Miller was the batsman. It was struck down by Paleker.
Miller, whose
12-ball innings included a boundary and a six, scored 17. Twenty-one balls
after Klaasen’s dismissal, he was caught by Siraj. Mukesh broke the 31-run
stand.
South Africa
scored 150 off 13.5 overs (84 balls). India had conceded 11 extras at that
point. That was, incidentally, the number of extras they eventually conceded.
Stubbs, whose
12-ball innings included a couple of boundaries, scored 14. He was unbeaten.
Phehlukwayo, whose
four-ball innings included a six, was unbea‘ten’.
South Africa, who
eventually scored 154 for the loss of five wickets off 13.5 overs, had a reason
to be in seventh heaven – they won by five wickets.
Arshdeep bowled a
couple of overs, conceding 31. He was wicketless, as was Jadeja, who bowled 2.5
overs, conceding 28.
Siraj and Kuldeep
bowled three overs each, picking up a wicket apiece. While the former conceded
27, the latter conceded 26.
Mukesh bowled
three overs, conceding 34. He picked up two scalps.
South Africa led
the three-match series 1-0.