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Australia [196/6] beat South Africa [89] by 107 runs in the First T20I ; lead series 1-0

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South Africa showed spark during the T20Is against England, but ended up on the losing side. They will hope the returns of Faf du Plessis and Kagiso Rabada can translate that spark into results during the three T20Is against Australia.

Overview

South Africa v Australia, 1st T20I
New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
Friday, 21 February; 6pm local, 4pm GMT

Against England, captain Quinton de Kock and Temba Bavuma were superb at the top, and there were promising contributions from Rassie van der Dussen, David Miller and Heinrich Klaasen, but a lack of consistency, and at times experience, in the bowling department cost them. That, however, should be less of an issue now that pace spearhead Kagiso Rabada has returned to the side.

De Kock will also have the experience of du Plessis to count on. Du Plessis earlier this week stepped down as captain from Tests and T20Is, but remains a huge asset to the team with his experience. His form with the bat has come in for criticism recently, but the Wanderers could be just the place to set it right: he's aggregated 242 runs from four innings at a staggering 80.67 at the venue, including a career best 56-ball 119 against West Indies five years ago.

The X factor, however, could lie in the death-bowling skills of Andile Phehlukwayo and Tabraiz Shamsi, both of whom are currently in the top 10 of the MRF Tyres ICC T20I Bowlers' Rankings.

As for Australia, Justin Langer recently said the team was "very close" to finding their best combination for the men's T20 World Cup 2020 later this year. David Warner, in particular, will be looking forward to returning to the Wanderers, where he, in 2016, scored a 40-ball 77 and put on 161 runs with Glenn Maxwell – it was the highest stand for the fourth wicket in T20Is.

The presence of skipper Aaron Finch, No.3 on the MRF Tyres ICC T20I Rankings adds further solidity at the top, and despite Maxwell missing out through injury this time, the likes of Mitchell Marsh, Matthew Wade and D'Arcy Short will have an opportunity to stake their claim for a middle-order spot.

Their bowling too has plenty of experience and variety, with seasoned campaigners in Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, and Kane Richardson, not to forget the wrist-spin of Adam Zampa, who will be coming in after a superb run in the Big Bash League 2019-20.

Remember the last time

After winning the ODI series 2-1 in 2018, South Africa headed to Carrara, Queensland for a one-off T20I. In a rain-curtailed encounter of 10 overs a side, de Kock (22), Reeza Hendricks (19) and du Plessis (27) scored quick runs to help the visitors reach 108/6. Chris Morris, Lungi Ngidi and Andile Phehlukwayo then reduced Australia to 37/4 within four overs. Glenn Maxwell scored a breezy 23-ball 38, but didn't have enough support as the hosts went down by 21 runs.

What they said

Charl Langeveldt, South Africa bowling coach: "The surface at the Wanderers normally has bounce and Australia rely quite heavily on their pace attack. South Africa always relies on its pace attack. T20 is a batsman's game … but the bowlers normally win you the games."

Steve Smith, Australia batsman: "It’s nice to be back playing in South Africa. The last time I was here, things didn’t end overly well [ball-tampering scandal], but I’ve also got really fond memories of playing here. Just walking into the hotel in Sandton, initially I was like, ‘the last time I left here it wasn’t pretty’. It wasn’t the best time in my life. But I’ve moved on from that and learned a lot."

Conditions:

Rain is forecast on Friday evening, which might result in a shortened game. Wanderers has a reputation for being a batsman's venue in limited-overs cricket, with a flat surface and short boundaries. As many as three successful run-chases of over 200 in T20Is have been registered at this venue, and another high-scoring affair can be expected on Sunday.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1616111

South Africa Squad:Quinton de Kock (c & wk), Faf du Plessis, Rassie van der Dussen, David Miller, Heinrich Klaasen, Andile Phehlukwayo, Dwaine Pretorius, Dale Steyn, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Tabraiz Shamsi, Anrich Nortje, JJ Smuts, Bjorn Fortuin, Pite van Biljon

Australia Squad:Aaron Finch (c), Alex Carey (wk), David Warner, Steven Smith, Matthew Wade, Mitchell Marsh, Ashton Agar, Pat Cummins, Kane Richardson, Mitchell Starc, Adam Zampa, D Arcy Short, Sean Abbott, Jhye Richardson
 
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Smith and Warner,will they get booed after what happened two years ago in the same country?
 
i am rooting for south africa. they were brilliant against england.

aus is weak in t20s. expect a clean sweep from safrica
 
Teams:

South Africa (Playing XI): Quinton de Kock(w/c), Rassie van der Dussen, Faf du Plessis, JJ Smuts, David Miller, Pite van Biljon, Andile Phehlukwayo, Kagiso Rabada, Dale Steyn, Lungi Ngidi, Tabraiz Shamsi

Australia (Playing XI): Aaron Finch(c), David Warner, Steven Smith, Matthew Wade, Mitchell Marsh, Alex Carey(w), Ashton Agar, Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Kane Richardson, Adam Zampa

South Africa have won the toss and have opted to field
 
AUS 37/1 (3.2) CRR: 11.1

Warner out for 4.
 
wow south africa have been demolished. did not expect that

aus have made england wins look pretty ordinary with this thrashing
 
Just as well they are good at rugby. The cricket team is a group of abject losers.
 
England just about managed to beat SA. Australia are shellacking them! This WT20 is Australia's to lose.
 
AUSTRALIA totally outclassed the Standard Bank Proteas in all three disciplines to overwhelm their opponents by 107 runs in the opening KFC T20 International match at the Imperial Wanderers Stadium on Friday evening.

It was Australia’s biggest ever winning margin over the Proteas while the home side’s total of 89 was their lowest ever in this format, the previous lowest being 98 against Sri Lanka.

The Australians, after losing the toss, took charge of the match from the start, overcoming the early loss of David Warner during a second-wicket stand of 80 off 48 balls between Aaron Finch and Steve Smith as they scored 70 runs in the power play overs.

The Australians found runs far too easy to come by against some inaccurate bowling and the key difference between the two sides became evident when it came to South Africa’s turn to bat.

The visitors bowled with far greater accuracy and intensity with the result that the Proteas had to indulge in high risk shots at time to get their runs. The result was that they were a shaky 38/3 at the end of the power play.

Thereafter, it was left to the spin of KFC Man of the Match Ashton Agar to clean up the South African innings. In the process he claimed the 13th hat trick in the history of T20 International cricket and the second by an Australian after Brett Lee, who took the first hat trick in the augural T20 World Cup against Bangladesh at Newlands in 2007.

For good measure he almost claimed a second hat trick and finished with the remarkable figures of 5/24 which are the joint best for a T20I at the Wanderers. He was only the second Australian to claim a fifer and the best against South Africa with no Australian ever having taken more than 3 wickets against the Proteas before.

The Proteas bowled better at the death than they had done in previous matches although Kagiso Rabada never managed to find his rhythm and was expensive.

There were also 12 wides bowled by South Africa.

Pite van Biljon made his debut for the Proteas, becoming the 86th player to represent South Africa in this format.
 
Australia look settled for the T20 WC. Just need to sort the lower order out and 3rd seamer out. They are going to be extremely difficult to beat in home conditions.
 
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