Rob Smyth 

South Africa beat Sri Lanka by six wickets in New York: T20 Cricket World Cup 2024 – as it happened

Sri Lanka were skittled for their lowest T20 score of 77 on a very tough pitch, with South Africa surviving an early scare to win comfortably
  
  

Ottniel Baartman celebrates the wicket of Pathum Nissanka.
Ottniel Baartman celebrates the wicket of Pathum Nissanka. Photograph: Alex Davidson-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

That’s all for today. Andy Bull’s report should be on the site shortly, and we’ll be back tomorrow for England v Scotland. Goodnight!

South Africa captain Aiden Markram speaks

Yeah we’re happy with the win. Incredible performance in the field, but the batting was a little bit up and down. It was quite a tough wicket. Hopefully we can take a bit of learning from spending some time out there.

There will be lots of different conditions as you move around the tournament. We’re fortunate that we have our next two games here and have a decent idea of how it will play.

I wasn’t worried about [Anrich Nortje] but it was a fantastic day for his confidence. He’s massively loved in the changing-room and we’re all really proud of him. Hopefully it’s the start of a massive World Cup for him.

Sri Lanka captain Wanindu Hasraranga’s verdict

We were looking for 160-170 but we now realise it’s a 120-130 wicket, especially with our bowlers. As a team we wanted to do much better, especially as a batting unit, but we still have three games to go.

The player of the match is Anrich Nortje

It’s good to get the result and get some momentum going. [On his performance] I’m very happy. I’ve been feeling good and, though it hasn’t paid off in the last few games, it was great to get some rewards today. Everyone bowled really well and it was a great effort to restrict them to 77, even if it was a tricky pitch. I’m not sure whether all the games will be like that or whether there might be any changes.

Sri Lanka salvaged some dignity from the jaws of defeat after being bowled out for their lowest T20 total. South Africa’s star performers were Ottneil Baartman, who took a wicket with his first ball at a World Cup and picked up 1 for 9 from four overs, and especially Anrich Nortje, who trampled all over Sri Lanka’s top seven to finish with remarkable figures of 4-0-7-4.

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South Africa win by six wickets!

16.2 overs: South Africa 80-4 (Klaasen 19, Miller 6) Miller belts Hasraranga for four to complete an ultimately comfortable victory for South Africa with 22 balls to spare. It was a strange game on an unscrupulous pitch, and South Africa’s hitters played within themselves even when they were chasing just 78.

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16th over: South Africa 75-4 (Klaasen 18, Miller 2) Maheesh Theekshana gets a belated bowl and is milked for three runs.

Miller survives an LBW appeal after being hit on the pad by an unplayable grubber. Sri Lanka review on the might-as-well principle but I suspect they know it pitched well outside leg. If they didn’t, they do know.

Three to win.

15th over: South Africa 72-4 (Klaasen 16, Miller 1) After playing watchfully for the first 14 balls, Klaasen finally opens his shoulders. He savages consecutive deliveries from Hasaranga down the ground for six and four, and suddenly South Africa are one hit away from victory.

14th over: South Africa 61-4 (Klaasen 4, Miller 1) A 94mph attempted yorker from Pathirana is inside-edged for a single by Klaasen. This is fascinating, almost a Test match in coloured clothing.

There has been only one boundary since the fourth over, and no fours since the first over. That can’t be a good thing, yet if Sri Lanka had posted 100, never mind 120, we’d be watching an unusual cracker.

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13th over: South Africa 58-4 (Klaasen 3, Miller 0) Hasaranga is trying to create a bit of theatre, putting his hands to his head even when Miller defends his first ball fairly comfortably. Quite right too.

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WICKET! South Africa 58-4 (Stubbs c Asalanka b Hasaranga 13)

Sheesh, what a strange game this is. Stubbs slaps Hasaranga straight to short cover, where Asalanka takes a quite superb low catch. He goes for 13 from 28 balls; South Africa still need 20.

12th over: South Africa 57-3 (Stubbs 13, Klaasen 2) A beautiful roundarm yorker from Pathirana knocks Klaasen off his feet. More importantly for South Africa, Klaasen just manages to get some bat on the ball, without which he’d have been plumb LBW.

Stubbs, who looks more comfortable, works a couple into the leg side. This brutal South African middle order have so far dealt exclusively in ones and twos. That’s a compliment – it would have been easy to let the ego take over, especially after their form in the IPL, but this pitch requires a different approach.

11th over: South Africa 51-3 (Stubbs 10, Klaasen 0) ICYMI, here’s Simon Burnton on the story behind this challenging pitch.

WICKET! South Africa 51-3 (de Kock ct and b Hasaranga 20)

Is something brilliant happening? Probably not but Quinton de Kock has gone, chipping a simple return catch to the the legspinner Hasaranga. South Africa need 27 from 55 balls. Sri Lanka need to go back in time and post 120.

10th over: South Africa 47-2 (de Kock 17, Stubbs 9) Matheesha Pathirana, an even more extreme Malinga tribute act, comes into the attack. He’s a very promising bowler, still only 21, and he beats de Kock with consecutive zingers outside off stump. The second of those was timed at 93mph, which hints at how awkward he must be to face.

Despite those near misses, there are four singles and a wide from the over. That’s more than enough for South Africa in this peculiar run-chase.

9th over: South Africa 42-2 (de Kock 15, Stubbs 7) Another tight over from Shanaka, who has conceded six from three. Wickets are Sri Lanka’s only hope, though, and South Africa know that: with one or two exceptions they are dealing in low-risk singles.

8th over: South Africa 39-2 (de Kock 8, Stubbs 5) Stubbs inside-edges Mathews this far short of the keeper Kusal, who did well to change direction and plunge to his left. I don’t think it was a chance.

I was just starting to wonder whether Sri Lanka had a chance of an astonishing victory when de Kock pulled Mathews vigorously over square leg for an 85-metre six. South Africa needed that.

7th over: South Africa 30-2 (de Kock 7, Stubbs 3) Stubbs has spent the last two months walloping sixes in the IPL. This is a completely different challenge, almost a different form of the game. He’s beaten by a superb off-cutter form Shanaka that just bounces over middle stump, and South Africa continue to inch towards their peculiarly awkward target of 78.

6th over: South Africa 27-2 (de Kock 6, Stubbs 1) de Kock is beaten again on the inside by Thushara, whose Malinga-like action makes him even more awkward to face when the bounce is inconsistent. Stubbs is also beaten and then gets off the mark from his seventh delivery.

South Africa are okay for now, but two quick wickets would give them all kinds of fear.

5th over: South Africa 23-2 (de Kock 5, Stubbs 0) He’s dropped him! Stubbs forces outside off stump at Shanaka and edges to Mendis, who puts down a pretty straightforward chance to his right.

That would have made things pretty interesting, to say the least. What hell kinda crazy T20 games are we watching here?

Stubbs is not out It did flick the pad, which is why the keeper Kusal Mendis was so excited.

Sri Lanka review for caught behind against Stubbs!

It was given as a wide down the leg side, and my hunch is that it’s not out.

WICKET! South Africa 23-2 (Markram c Kamindu b Shanaka 12)

If only Sri Lanka had made 120. They’ve picked up another wicket, with Markram caught at slip off the new bowler Dasun Shanaka. He tried to turn Shanaka to leg and got a thick leading edge to slip, where Kamindu Mendis took a fine low catch.

4th over: South Africa 23-1 (de Kock 5, Markram 12) A wide outswinger from Thushara is driven majestically over extra cover for six by Markram. He looks more fluent than de Kock, who is beaten by a full inswinger. De Kock has 5 from 11 balls, Markram 12 from 12.

3rd over: South Africa 14-1 (de Kock 5, Markram 3) Markram is beaten by a jaffa from Mathews that kicks from a good length. Talking of leng The next ball cuts back to hit him amidships, so there’s a break in play while he receives whatever treatment you can give somebody in that situation.

This New York pitch is doing a lot more than a typical T20 surface. That won’t be to all tastes, but it should make for some intriguing cricket during the World Cup.

2nd over: South Africa 13-1 (de Kock 5, Markram 2)

WICKET! South Africa 10-1 (Hendricks c Shanaka b Thushara 4)

Nuwan Thushara, a roundarm swing bowler, starts with a no-ball, which means a free hit. De Kock drags that for two before inside-edging an inswinger past leg stump.

Reeza Hendricks falls next ball, edging a routine catch to first slip after pushing at a very wide outswinger. Sri Lanka must be really frustrated that they couldn’t post even 120 here; had they done so we might have a game on.

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1st over: South Africa 6-0 (de Kock 1, Hendricks 4) Big Ange opens the bowling with his sly cutters. Apart from one wided it’s a decent start, with a tight line and enough nibble to make de Kock wary. Hendricks takes Mathews on, though, carving his first delivery to third man for four.

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The players are back on the field. Let’s play darts.

It’ll be interesting to see how South Africa go about their runchase. Ordinarily you’d want to get it done inside 10 overs for net run-rate purposes but there’s an argument for playing more cautiously, especially as they will be batting on this pitch in future games.

Hard to know what to make of that. South Africa bowled with laser focus, helped by a relatively capricious pitch, and Sri Lanka struggled from the first ball. They hit only three fours and three sixes in the whole innings. None of them came off Anrich Nortje, who left a miserable IPL behind with a ferocious spell of 4 for 7.

WICKET! Sri Lanka 77 all out (Thushara run out 0)

Theekshana tries to keep the strike by turning for a very tight second, and the non-striker Thushara is well short when Nortje’s throw is collected by the bowler Jansen.

Brilliant stuff from South Africa, who have skittled Sri Lanka for their lowest T20 score.

19th over: Sri Lanka 76-9 (Theekshana 6, Thushara 0) Theekshana turns down a single off Baartman, a surprising decision that is justified when he slugs Baartman wide of mid-on for four. He takes a single off the last ball to keep the strike.

Baartman ends a fine World Cup with figures of 4-1-9-1. Before today, only three South Africa men had bowled their four overs for less than 10 runs in a T20 international, the last in 2013. Nortje and Baartman have joined the list.

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18th over: Sri Lanka 71-9 (Theekshana 1, Thushara 0) I’d have to double check but I think Sri Lanka’s lowest T20 score is 82 against India at Vishakapatnam on 14 February 2016.

Rabada can’t take the last wicket but he does end with a wicket maiden and figures of 4-1-21-2.

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WICKET! Sri Lanka 71-9 (Pathirana c Markram b Rabada 0)

It’s bad, you know. Pathirana chips a slower ball from Rabada straight to mid-on to leave Sri Lanka nine down and facing their lowest ever T20 total.

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17th over: Sri Lanka 71-8 (Theekshana 1, Pathirana 0) Baartman is far too good for the No9 Theekshana, bowling a Test-match length and beating the edge two or three times. There’s only one loose ball, a leg-side wide.

“Am I the only person,” begins Richard McKeary, “with a certain early 1990s Simpsons-based earworm from following the OBO today?”

You’re not. In fact I was just marvelling at how good the top 10 was when that particular song was top of the hit parade. Look at it!

16th over: Sri Lanka 70-8 (Theekshana 1, Pathirana 0) The IPL 2024 is a thing of the past: Anrich Nortje has taken career-best figures of 4-0-7-4. Welcome back.

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WICKET! Sri Lanka 70-8 (Mathews c Baartman b Nortje 16)

Four wickets for Anrich Nortje! A slower ball is followed by a sharp bouncer that Mathews top-edges straight to fine leg. That ends a useful knock of 16 from 16 balls, and the fact we’re describing it as ‘useful’ speaks volumes.

15th over: Sri Lanka 68-7 (Mathews 16, Theekshana 0) The commentator Russel Arnold makes the point that South Africa have three games in New York, so this both a statement of intent and a useful fact-finder. They’ve been very impressive, almost domineering.

WICKET! Sri Lanka 68-7 (Shanaka b Rabada 9)

Suddenly you’re seeing me just the way I am Sri Lanka are dealing in sixes. Mathews makes it three in as many overs by cuffing Rabada over midwicket.

Shanaka tries for another by making room to smear Rabada across the line. He misses, Rabada hits.

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14th over: Sri Lanka 61-6 (Mathews 9, Shanaka 9) Shanaka top-edges a pull off the new bowler Jansen that goes all the way for six. Every little helps, but realistically Sri Lanka need ten an over from here to have any chance.

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13th over: Sri Lanka 53-6 (Mathews 8, Shanaka 1) After taking a few balls to get his eye in, Mathews drives a classical straight six off Maharaj. Seven from the over, so Maharaj finishes with figures of 4-0-22-2.

“I couldn’t quite decide what I was watching a little earlier - was the Adelaide pitch two-paced; was the Sri Lankan batting awful; was the South African bowling exceptional,” says Brian Withington. “Imagine my delight in discovering that there was a Guardian OBO to shed light on proceedings. Scrolling back quickly I found my question about the pitch had been duly posed (over 6) … and ducked! What’s going on, Rob?”

I think the pitch has spooked Sri Lanka a bit, and that 140 would have been a really tricky target. South Africa have been intimidatingly good though.

12th over: Sri Lanka 46-6 (Mathews 2, Shanaka 1) In the recent IPL Nortje went at 13.36 runs per over and took seven wickets in six games. Today he has figures of 3-0-6-3.

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WICKET! Sri Lanka 45-6 (Asalanka c Hendricks b Nortje 6)

Asalanka flicks Nortje straight to deep backward square, where Hendricks takes his second catch of the day to give Nortje his third wicket. Yikes.

11th over: Sri Lanka 44-5 (Asalanka 6, Mathews 1) Asalanka survives a run-out review after being sent back by Mathews - He’d have been gone with a direct hit – and then edges Maharaj just past slip. Sri Lanka will do well to reach three figures at this rate.

“It seems very hard to figure out what’s a good score on these pitches,” says Ramesh Natarajan. “Also, The Spin seems to be a perfect name for the Guardian WT20 2024 newsletter.”

It’s taken over 20 years but we got there in the end.

Drinks break

“Big ground, sandy outfield,” says Prashanth Sampath. “Fours won’t be easy to come by but got to plug the twos and threes.”

There will be some interesting games on this pitch; you can picture Virat Kohli scoring a load of twos. I wonder if Sri Lanka would bowl first if they had their time again.

WICKET! Sri Lanka 40-5 (Kusal c Stubbs b Nortje 19)

A mistimed pull from Kusal off Nortje lands safely. He’s barely midded a thing, but he’s still there and while that’s the case South Africa won’t feel totally comfortable in the box seat. At his best Kusal can take anyone to the cleaners – as South Africa know from his spectacular 42-ball 76 at the 50-over World Cup.

Today, alas, he’ll have to settle for a 30-ball 19. He hooks the last ball before the drinks break towards deep backward square, where Tristan Stubbs takes a really well-judged catch. South Africa are rampant!

9th over: Sri Lanka 36-4 (Kusal 16, Asalanka 3) Asalanka survives the hat-trick ball.

WICKET! Sri Lanka 32-4 (Sadeera b Maharaj 0)

Keshav Maharaj is on a hat-trick! Sadeera Samawickrama is bowled first ball, beaten on the inside by a lovely delivery that straightens to hit off stump. Sri Lanka are in a heap.

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WICKET! Sri Lanka 32-3 (Hasaranga st de Kock b Maharaj 0)

This is turning into a rout. The captain Hasaranga tries to make something happen by charging Maharaj, but he slogs all round the ball and is stumped by de Kock.

8th over: Sri Lanka 31-2 (Kusal 14, Hasaranga 0) Nortje had a pretty miserable IPL, but there weren’t many pitches like this in India.

WICKET! Sri Lanka 31-2 (Kamindu c Hendricks b Nortje 11)

Anrich Nortje, the quickest of the South African bowlers, strikes in his first over. He had already beaten Kusal Mendis with three successive deliveries when a pick-up shot from Kamindu Mendis went straight to deep square. South Africa are bullying Sri Lanka, and it’s mightily impressive.

7th over: Sri Lanka 30-1 (Kusal 13, Kamindu 11) Time for left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj. Kamindu reverse sweeps confidently for two, but Kusal continues to struiggle with his timing. Six from the over: four singles and that two.

“I’m getting a feeling of deja vu,” says Vinod Ganesh. “Adelaide 2022, vs Netherlands. Similar pitch. Ned 150+. SA couldn’t chase it.”

6th over: Sri Lanka 24-1 (Kusal 11, Kamindu 7) Kamindu clunks a drive for a single off Baartman. That’s one of a number of mistimed strokes, so maybe the pitch is a bit two-paced. As if I’d know!

Kusal is beaten by successive leg-cutters from the impressive Baartman, then survives a big LBW appeal about pushing around a big off-cutter that would have bounced over the stumps. This feels like a Test match, not a T20. Kusal decides he has to do something and runs down the track to blast Baartman’s final ball over mid-off for a couple. He didn’t really time it, and the fielder was interested for a while, but he got enough on it.

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5th over: Sri Lanka 21-1 (Kusal 9, Kamindu 6) The left-handed Kamindu is beaten by an outswinger from Rabada, who has changed ends to replace Jansen, but then he picks up handsomely over square leg for a one-bounce four. That would have been six on most grounds.

It’s important Sri Lanka hold their nerve and don’t push too hard for an unrealistic score. Even something like 130 could be competitive here; we don’t know what it will do for the spinners.

4th over: Sri Lanka 14-1 (Kusal 8, Kamindu 0) Apparently Baartman is the first South African to take a wicket with his first ball at a World Cup, though Allan Donald may beg to differ.

It’s a marvellous first over from Baartman, a wicket-maiden in fact. The only run was a leg-bye.

WICKET! Sri Lanka 13-1 (Nissanka c Klaasen b Baartman 3)

Ottneil Baartman strikes with his first ball at a World Cup! Nissanka slashed a length delivery all the way down to third man, where Heinrich Klaasen crouched to take a simple catch.

3rd over: Sri Lanka 13-0 (Nissanka 3, Kusal 8) Sri Lanka’s openers look slightly wary of the pitch, which is brand new by the way. Kusal fiddles at Jansen and is beaten, then squirts a cover drive for two. A big ground and a slowish outfield aren’t in the batters’ favour, so a par score might be lower than we think.

2nd over: Sri Lanka 9-0 (Nissanka 2, Kusal 6) Kusal Mendis uses the extra bounce to uppercut Rabada’s first ball for four. He’s beaten twice later in the over, one on each side of the bat. This is a strong start from South Africa.

1st over: Sri Lanka 2-0 (Nissanka 1, Kusal 1) The left-armer Marco Jansen makes a really good start, conceding only two runs and beating Nissanka with successive deliveries. The second was a jaffa that burst from a length, and the early signs are that the pitch has plenty for the quick bowlers.

South Africa’s fast-bowling depth is such that Lungi Ngidi didn’t make the squad. They have four quicks today, including 31-year-old Ottneil Baartman, who was called up after a superb SA20. This is only his second game for South Africa.

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The teams

Sri Lanka Nissanka, Kusal (wk), Kamindu, Sadeera, Asalanka, Mathews, Shanaka, Hasaranga (c), Theekshana, Pathirana, Thushara.

South Africa de Kock (wk), Hendricks, Markram (c), Klaasen, Miller, Stubbs, Jansen , Maharaj, Rabada, Nortje, Baartman.

Sri Lanka win the toss and bat

Ravi Shastri is conducting the toss in New York, which might just be the peak of human existence. South Africa’s captain Aiden Markram calls incorrectly, so Sri Lanka have won the toss. Wanindu Hasaranga says they will bat first; no surprise given he is one of four spinners, full- and part-time, in their XI.

Markram says South Africa would have bowled, so everyone’s happy.

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Today’s game will be played on a drop-in pitch that began life in Adelaide. Simon Burnton has more.

Preamble

Start spreadin’ the news, there’s cricket today. The Nassau County International Cricket Stadium in Long Island is the venue for Sri Lanka v South Africa, an intriguing game in an open group that also includes Bangaldesh, Nepal – and the Netherlands, who have beaten South Africa at the last two white-ball World Cups.

South Africa are potential winners, with a punishing middle-order to hide from never mind die for, but the past ain’t through with them. Nor will it be until they finally win a World Cup.

Sri Lanka have the talent, personality and variety, particularly in their bowling, to cause the bigger teams problems, whether in the group stage or during the Super Eights. It should be a cracking match. And even if it’s not, it’s in New York, which is a story in itself.

The match starts at 3.30pm BST, 10.30am in New York.

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