South Africa 183 for 9 (Miller 82, Linde 48, Shaheen 3-22, Abrar 3-37) defeated Pakistan 172 for 8 from 11 runs (Rizwan 74, Ayub 31, Linde 4-21)
The Killer Miller Show
David Miller has earned a reputation as a master of the middle and final overs. But after the early dismissals of Shaheen and Abrar, Miller came in at number four in the inexperienced team. And for the next hour or so, he demonstrated how his timing and technique were every bit the equal of his power. Taking advantage of the start of his innings in the powerplay, he lofted Shaheen off the pads to get the go-ahead, before he smashed another four through cover.
Miller had just started, and was ruthless against spin, hitting Abrar for three consecutive sixes in the tenth over. He cut the innings like a scythe for Pakistan; When he came on and when Shaheen finally dismissed him, he added 82 of South Africa’s 125.
Linde punishes Rizwan’s gambling
Tactics are always judged by results rather than thought processes, and Linde ensured that Rizwan’s aggressive death overs moves cost Pakistan dearly. After Miller fell and Pakistan hit two more quick blows to leave South Africa at 141 for 8, the Pakistan captain got a chance to dismiss South Africa. Shaheen, Abbas Afridi and Haris Rauf were out by the 19th over; Pakistan probably hoped that South Africa’s innings would be over by then.
But that didn’t happen, Linde managed the strike and Mafaka’s awkward boundary eased the pressure on him. This left Mookie to bowl the final over, and when Linde refused to concede a run on the first ball, his intentions were clear. Muqim missed his length on almost every one of the last five balls; Three sixes went by before Linde bowled the last ball to cow corner. But South Africa had reached 183 and Pakistan’s hopes of cleaning it up were over and buried.
Rizbar now, Rizbar forever?
The obituary of Mohammad Rizwan-Babar Azam’s opening has been written so many times that no attempt can be made to write another one. It seemed that the days of Pakistan starting with their two trusted anchors were finally over, but in a tight encounter, both of them departed while Saeem Ayub remained in the dugout. Both were looking bad and were far behind the expected pace. Babar could have fallen victim to Mafaka on the very first ball and was eventually out on the fourth ball without scoring any runs.
Ayub came on and showed why he is so powerful in the first six, his full reserves of power, sharpness and audacity on display as he blitzed through the remaining powerplay, hitting seven fours in his first 13 balls and scoring 31 runs. He is short, effective when the field spreads out, and pierces the sweeper cover on the second ball after the powerplay. However, he had led Pakistan to spectacular success and one had to wonder how much he could have added if he had been around from the start. At the death, it became clear how much each run would have mattered.
Daniel Rasool is ESPNcricinfo’s Pakistan correspondent. @danny61000











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