Key Points

AB de Villiers pinpointed South Africa's failure to bowl cutters as the main reason for their heavy defeat. He explained that England's bowlers understood the pitch conditions better and adapted quickly. The Proteas persisted with full-length pace bowling despite the ball flying everywhere. This tactical error allowed England to post a record 304/2 and secure a massive 146-run victory.

Key Points: AB de Villiers Blames South Africa Cutter Bowling for England T20 Thrashing

  • England posted record 304/2 total in T20I against South Africa
  • Proteas bowlers failed to adapt with cutters on Nottingham pitch
  • De Villiers criticized team's slow tactical adaptation
  • England secured massive 146-run victory to level series
3 min read

AB de Villiers reveals key reason behind South Africa's thrashing in 2nd T20 against England

AB de Villiers reveals South Africa's failure to bowl cutters led to England's record 304/2 total and 146-run T20 victory, analyzing tactical errors in Nottingham.

"Didn't realise in that first 10 overs that cutters are actually the hardest ball to hit - AB de Villiers"

New Delhi, September 14

Former South Africa's batting sensation AB de Villiers attributed the Proteas' struggles in the 2nd T20 against England to their inability to effectively bowl "cutters", which he believes were the most challenging deliveries to hit on the Nottingham pitch.

England stormed back in style to level the three-match T20I series against South Africa, posting a mammoth 304/2 in 20 overs before skittling the visitors for just 158 in 16.1 overs. The hosts won by a record 146 runs, their biggest victory margin in T20Is, and set up a decider in Nottingham on Sunday.

"There's that one 304 for two monumental total. I think we just sort of woke up a little bit late there with the ball in hand. Didn't realise in that first 10 overs that cutters are actually the hardest ball to hit. 304 for two, and it's game over because their bowlers would have sat on the side and they would have watched that last six or seven overs where then only the Proteas started to bowl some cutters and realised hold on, there's your delivery for the day," AB de Villiers said on his YouTube channel.

De Villiers believed England knew precisely how to bowl in the second innings, and there are no excuses for South Africa as they kept pace on pitching it up the whole time.

"England miles ahead there, knowing exactly what to bowl in that second innings. No excuses for South Africa. They're all experienced players, most of them at least, and should be quicker to adapt to conditions, and they just kept pace on pitching it up the whole time. Ball flying all over the park and never really went to those fast grippers into the deck, which was the go-to delivery for the day," he added.

England's 304/2 now stands at the top, eclipsing India's 297/6 against Bangladesh in Hyderabad in 2024 and 283/1 against South Africa in Johannesburg the same year.

"England obviously prepared for that and made it really tough for our batters who consistently had to look for boundaries with that tough delivery, the cutter, and if you're going to do that, you're going to lose wickets, which they ended up doing. The only sort of blessing in a way is we lost with four overs to spare still. So had we strung together some partnership, maybe partnerships, maybe we would have got to like a 250 and it would have been an okay loss in a way," he concluded.

England's dominance with the bat saw them shatter multiple records. Their 304/2 was their highest ever total in T20 internationals, surpassing the 267/3 against West Indies in Tarouba in 2023, and also marked their first time breaching the 300-run barrier in the format. It was the third-highest total in T20I history, behind Zimbabwe's 344/4 against Gambia in 2024 and Nepal's 314/3 against Mongolia in 2023. This was only the second instance of a Test-playing nation crossing 300.

The top scorer in South Africa's chase was Aiden Markram, who scored 41. Jofra Archer was the top bowler for England with 3/25. For South Africa, all the bowlers were hammered; Bjorn Fortuin was the sole wicket taker for the Proteas with 2/52. With the series now tied at 1-1, Nottingham will host the decider on Sunday.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone who follows cricket globally, it's surprising to see such experienced bowlers failing to adapt. England's preparation was clearly superior. The Proteas need to learn from this humiliation before the World Cup.
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Ananya R
304/2 is just insane! 😳 England's batting was phenomenal, but South Africa's bowling was equally poor. When will teams learn that you need smart bowling, not just fast bowling? Our Indian bowlers like Bumrah and Chahal have mastered this art.
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Vikram M
AB de Villiers' analysis is always so insightful. He's right about the cutters - that's what makes bowlers like Bhuvneshwar Kumar so effective in these conditions. South Africa's think tank needs to wake up!
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Michael C
While I agree with AB's technical analysis, I think there's also a mental aspect here. The Proteas looked defeated after that batting onslaught. Sometimes the pressure of chasing 300+ gets to teams psychologically.
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Priya S
This is why I love T20 cricket - it exposes teams that aren't adaptable. England showed how modern cricket should be played. Hope our Indian team is taking notes for future encounters! 🇮🇳

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