South Africa 181 for 3 (van der Dusen 72*, Klassen 64, Archer 2-55) Beat England 179 (Route 37, Mulder 3-25, Jansen 3-39, Maharaj 2-35) by seven wickets
After batting first in Karachi, the most run-lady venue of the event, England played like a side that would not happen. He was taken out for the lowest clan of this Champions Trophy and gifted the wickets of South Africa in the performance of careless and sometimes careless strokeplay. The absence of both the South Africa disease and the injury had collided with both and was not always in its best, but he was particularly well caught in the field, pursued them completely, and had a lot of positivity to take in a knockout.
Ben Docket picked up, from where salt left and made two limits in three balls from Lungi cash, but Jamie Smith repeated Salt’s mistake and pulled Jensen Markram in mid-on. The balls were fed on the pad, but when she tried to clip Jensen as a crime, she got a leading lead for the destroyer-in-chief of South Africa. England were 37 for 3 in the seventh over.
This can be 38 for 4 when Joe Root cut Kagiso Rabada at a backward point and although the rooter attained both hands, he could not hold it. Root nails the drive and made a 62 -run stand with the bridge and a confident Harry Brook and England. But they could not keep Zansen out of the game. When Brook gave a belt to Maharaj on midwicket, Jansen ran to his right and slipped on his knees to catch a surprise. After four balls, Route was bowled when he missed a leg-side flick from Mulder and the ball hit his back pad from behind on stumps.
At that level, Butler, playing his last innings as the captain of England, had to face only one ball and had a big job on his hands. He was slightly helped from Liam Livingstone, who accused the track to meet a Maharaj Ball, but South Africa’s left -handed spinner saw him coming, thrown and stumped him. Livingstone has scored only more than 20 runs in its last seven innings.
Till then, England’s effort was mostly visible for the time of time, while South Africa focused on the search for wickets. Rabada was brought back in half the way. He defeated Jamie Overton first, then forced a defensive shot and kept him under investigation, and then he was caught in the mid-on because the batsman tried to attack. He saw Rabada to the leg, but pasted the ball towards the mid-on, where the cash ran back and took the stunner of one hand, as he was hit on the ground.
South Africa continued to hold well: Jonsen took a low catch to see the end of Joffra Archer in the midwick and Maharaj grabbed a tambling on mid-off to end Butler’s innings at 21 and gave the cash his 100th OD wicket. England were excluded in the 39th over, and took South Africa’s concerns about the slow pace with them.
At that level, South Africa’s semi-final qualification was assured as they may have lost the match, but their net run-rate could not take a dip under Afghanistan. It chased, but not necessarily away from the South African batsmen, who all wanted runs before an important week. Triston Stabs, while playing at his ninth ODI and first ICC event, found no one found because he tried to play an Archer Ball late, but defended it to his stumps.
Although he first ran for ten balls, as he struggled to find his line, Archer quickly improved and gave his initial spell with good speed and better accuracy. He was rewarded with a second wicket, when Ryan Ricelton, who looked confident in his 25-ball 27, was bent by a delivery, which took him back and collapsed in the middle stump.
From there, it was all South Africa. While van dera Dusen appeared disappointed with its slow scoring rate compared to Klassen several times, the pair complemented each other well. Van Der Dusen scored extensively through the leg side, while six out of the 11 fours of Klassen came through the cover. Klassen arrived in her fifty with one of the shots that were facing the 41st ball. This was his fifth gradual half -century in the format, the highest combined for South Africa. Van Der Dusen came out of 72 balls as he rocked Adil Rashid through Square leg and brought each other to fifty in the competition. Klassen left when he tried to break Rashid on the right leg, but reached the third place outside. David Miller won the second ball, when he smoked Livingstone on Livingstone for six.
This is the third serial tournament for which South Africa has qualified for knockout after the 2023 ODI World Cup and 2024 T20 World Cup. Their semi -final protests and site will be confirmed after the match between India and New Zealand on Sunday. They will play on Wednesday (if it is India) or Lahore (if it is New Zealand) either in Dubai.
Firdose Moonda is a reporter of Espncricinfo for South Africa and women’s cricket













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