South Africa Crush India by 76 Runs in T20 WC Thriller Behind Jansen's 4-22

South Africa delivered a crushing 76-run defeat to India in the T20 World Cup Super Eights, powered by a superb bowling display led by Marco Jansen's 4-22. After recovering from 20/3 through David Miller's 63, South Africa posted 187/7, a total India never threatened as they collapsed to 51/5. Keshav Maharaj (3-24) and Corbin Bosch provided key support with the ball, executing a disciplined plan that exposed India's batting frailties. The heavy loss serves as a major reality check for the defending champions, severely impacting their net run rate as they fight to stay in semi-final contention.

Key Points: SA Thrash India by 76 Runs in T20 WC | Jansen Takes 4-22

  • Marco Jansen's 4-22 wrecks India
  • David Miller's 63 anchors SA recovery
  • India slump to 51/5 in chase
  • SA bowlers exploit pitch & dimensions
  • Defeat dents India's NRR & semi-final hopes
3 min read

T20 WC: Jansen picks 4-22 as South Africa annihilate India by 76 runs in Ahmedabad

Marco Jansen's 4-22 leads South Africa to a dominant 76-run victory over India in the T20 World Cup Super Eights. Match report and key highlights.

"South Africa's emphatic victory was built on tactical discipline and execution - Match Report"

Ahmedabad, Feb 22

Left-arm fast-bowling all-rounder Marco Janse picked 4-22 as South Africa produced a ruthless bowling display to thrash India by 76 runs in their Super Eights clash of the Men's T20 World Cup at the Narendra Modi Stadium on Sunday. The defeat coming in front of 90,954 fans in a sea of blue was India's first loss in an ICC event since the 2023 ODI World Cup final at the same venue

After being reduced to 20/3 inside four overs on a slow black soil pitch, the Proteas staged a remarkable recovery through David Miller and Dewald Brevis. Miller struck a fluent 63 off 35 balls, while Brevis made 45 - their 97-run partnership steadying the innings before Tristan Stubbs smashed 44 not out to lift South Africa to 187/7.

Jasprit Bumrah was the standout for India with 3-15, supported by Arshdeep Singh's 2-28, but the rest of the attack struggled to contain the Proteas counterattack. India's chase never gained momentum, as they slumped to 51/5. Shivam Dube offered resistance with 42, but the asking rate spiralled beyond reach as India were bundled out for 111 in 18.5 overs.

Apart from Jansen taking 4-22, Keshav Maharaj claimed 3-24, and Corbin Bosch chipped in with two wickets while captain Aiden Markram had one scalp in the opening over. South Africa's emphatic victory was built on tactical discipline and execution - their bowlers varied pace smartly, exploited dimensions of the ground, and never allowed India's batters to settle.

For India, the result was a reality check, exposing frailties in their batting line-up and leaving the defending champions to win their remaining matches against Zimbabwe and West Indies to stay in contention for semi-finals, especially with their net run rate now at -3.8.

India were on the backfoot from the word when Ishan Kishan attempted a wild slog against Aiden Markram, and top-edge was caught by cover, as South Africa's match-up plan worked well. Marco Jansen then accounted for a waltzing Tilak Varma with extra bounce, as the left-handed batter also burnt a review.

Abhishek Sharma briefly counter-attacked with a ramp shot for six and a drive for four off Kagiso Rabada to get off the mark after bagging three ducks. But his innings ended at 15 when Jansen's knuckle ball deceived him and top-edge was caught by mid-wicket running to his right and avoided a collision with mid-on.

Markram rotated his bowlers smartly, ensuring India's batters never settled into rhythm. India promoted Washington Sundar to stabilise the innings, but the move backfired as all he could do was to give an outside edge behind off Corbin Bosch.

In his next over, Bosch struck again when Suryakumar Yadav miscued a whip to short mid-wicket, leaving India in tatters at 51/5 in 9.1 overs. The asking rate climbed steadily, as Ngidi's variations further tightened the screws, leaving Shivam Dube and Hardik Pandya struggling for momentum.

That pressure got to Pandya, when he aimed to break free off Maharaj, but was caught by long-off. India continued to slide quickly when Maharaj had Rinku Singh holing out to long-on for a two-ball duck, while Arshdeep Singh was dismissed via a hop and grab catch by long-on. Dube's late flourish with a few towering hits proved to be inconsequential, as South Africa had already sealed the contest in their favour.

Brief Scores: South Africa 187/7 in 20 overs (David Miller 63, Dewald Brevis 45; Jasprit Bumrah 3-15, Arshdeep Singh 2-28) against India 111 all out in 18.5 overs (Shivam Dube 42, Hardik Pandya 18; Marco Jansen 4-22, Keshav Maharaj 3-24) by 76 runs

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Watching from the US. That was a masterclass in bowling from SA. Jansen and Maharaj were brilliant. India's top order collapse was the real problem. Hope they bounce back strong for the remaining matches.
A
Ananya R
Yaar, what a disappointing performance! 90,000+ fans in the stadium and the team gives this? The shot selection was horrible. Ishan Kishan's dismissal set the tone for a disaster. Only Dube showed some fight. 😔
V
Vikram M
Respectful criticism: The team management needs to answer for some decisions. Why promote Sundar when you have specialist batters? The strategy seemed reactive, not proactive. SA out-thought us completely.
D
David E
That net run rate of -3.8 is a massive concern now. The match against Zimbabwe is a must-win by a big margin. The pressure is really on.
P
Priya S
Heartbreaking loss at our home ground. But we must support the team through thick and thin. Every champion team faces setbacks. Let's believe they will come back stronger! #TeamIndia

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50