India 201 for 7 (Suryakumar 100, Jaiswal 60, Maharaj 2-26) beat South Africa 95 all out (Miller 35, Kuldeep 5-17) by 106 runs
Jaiswal came back from his duck at St George’s Park with an entertaining fifty off 34 balls and was outpacing his captain until the 13th over. With pace proving too tempting for the batters, Andile Phehlukwayo opted for a slower ball but Suryakumar picked it up early and sent it over long-on for six. He sent the next delivery through short third for four and then hit Phehlukwayo for back-to-back sixes over wide long-on and midwicket to bring up fifty in 32 balls – fewer than Jaiswal – and demonstrated his ability to take advantage of scoring regions other than his favoured one over the ‘keeper’s head. His next fifty runs came off 23 balls as he joined Rohit Sharma and Glenn Maxwell as the only batters to score four hundreds in T20Is.
All but over either side of the Powerplay
Markram and Heinrich Klaasen are the kind of batters who could score at more than 10 runs an over to win a T20I match but needed to navigate through a wily Indian attack. Arshdeep Singh’s slower ball had Klaasen sweeping hard but not well enough to get past deep midwicket and he was caught by Rinku Singh on the boundary. Arshdeep now has 26 T20I wickets this year, the joint-most among Full Member bowlers alongside Mark Adair. Ravindra Jadeja, leading the team Suryakumar off the field nursing a bruised leg, brought himself on immediately after the Powerplay, his first ball gripped in the surface and Markram top-edged a pull to Jaiswal. South Africa were 42 for 4 in the seventh over and their challenge was all but complete.
Jadeja should have had David Miller in his next over, when he found the outside edge with a delivery that went straight on and Jitesh Sharma took the catch behind the wicket but Miller was given not out on-field and DRS was not working at the time. Replays later showed Miller had hit the ball and should have been out for 18. He went on to score 35 but India got their revenge with the other batters. Donovan Ferreira, Phehlukwayo and Maharaj were dismissed in each of the next three overs as Miller could only watch the series win move further away. He was the last batter dismissed, in the 14th over.