In a gripping showdown at St George's Park, South Africa edged past India by three wickets, thanks to Tristan Stubbs’ composed 47 and a critical partnership with Gerald Coetzee. Chasing India’s 124 for 6, South Africa seemed to be in deep trouble at 66 for 6, but Stubbs’ mature innings, alongside Coetzee’s late flourish, ended India’s 11-match winning streak and evened the series.
Stubbs has been on a remarkable streak, having recently hit his maiden centuries in both Tests and ODIs. Although his 47 didn’t mark a century, his poise under pressure showcased his growth as a player and lifted a struggling South African side.
South Africa, having won only once since their T20 World Cup final appearance in June, finally displayed a solid performance in the field, restricting India with disciplined bowling. Their seamers dominated the opening overs, taking India’s top three out cheaply for a mere eight runs combined, while Hardik Pandya’s 39 provided India’s only consistent scoring. Varun Chakravarthy’s incredible 5/17 brought India close to victory, but South Africa held their nerve in the end, with Stubbs and Coetzee’s eighth-wicket stand securing the win with an over to spare.
Coetzee Shines with the Bat
Primarily focused on improving his bowling, Coetzee also made a statement with his batting. Coming in at a tense 86 for 7 with South Africa needing 39 off 26 balls, Coetzee struck a towering six off Arshdeep Singh and followed it up with back-to-back boundaries off Avesh Khan, reducing the chase to a manageable 13 from 12 balls.
Varun’s Spin Prowess Confounds South Africa
Despite South Africa’s progress in facing spin, Varun Chakravarthy’s mastery proved too much. He dismantled the top order with a series of deceptive googlies, bowling out both Aiden Markram and Reeza Hendricks. Varun completed his five-wicket haul in his final over, dismissing Heinrich Klaasen and David Miller, nearly tilting the match in India’s favour.
South Africa set the tone early with Marco Jansen dismissing Sanju Samson for a duck, after Samson’s two consecutive centuries in earlier matches. Andile Simelane then claimed his debut wicket with a fast yorker that trapped Suryakumar Yadav LBW, leaving India reeling at 15 for 3. David Miller’s spectacular catch to dismiss Tilak Varma further tightened South Africa’s hold.
With South Africa keeping India’s scoring rate low, Hardik finally broke through in the 18th over, slamming Jansen for a boundary and six, finishing with a 37-run partnership with Arshdeep Singh. However, his efforts fell short as South Africa’s fielding and disciplined bowling had already tilted the game.
South Africa’s strong performance, capped by Stubbs’ calm and Coetzee’s finishing touch, sets the stage for a thrilling remainder of the series.