logo
Tim David's explosive 83 powers Australia to victory over South Africa in Darwin T20

Tim David's explosive 83 powers Australia to victory over South Africa in Darwin T20

DARWIN, Australia (AP) — Tim David bludgeoned eight sixes in his robust 83 and led Australia to a 17-run win over South Africa in the first T20 on Sunday as international cricket returned to Darwin after 17 years.
David's aggressive knock off 52 balls pushed Australia to 178 all out after the home team had lost five big hitters inside the first seven overs.
Opening batter Ryan Rickelton (71) and Tristan Stubbs (37) kept South Africa in the hunt, but Josh Hazlewood's (3-27) twin strike in the 15th over and Glenn Maxwell's spectacular catch of Rickelton in the final over limited the Proteas to 161-9 and earned Australia its ninth successive win in T20.
Stubbs and Rickelton revived South Africa hopes with a 72-run stand after the visitors had lost three wickets inside the batting powerplay and slipped to 48-3.
Captain Aidan Markram, returning to lead the side after being rested for the triangular series in Zimbabwe, struck three boundaries in Hazlewood's first over before he was caught in the covers in the same over.
Lhuan-dre Pretorius (14) attempted an inside out shot against Glenn Maxwell's offspin and was caught at wide long off while Ben Dwarshuis (3-26) dismissed power-hitter Dewald Brevis for just two runs off six balls.
Rickelton and Stubbs started picking up the pace in the second half of the run-chase as leg-spinner Adam Zampa struggled to grip the wet ball. But Hazlewood's return slowed South Africa, which lost four wickets for just three runs.
Stubbs got a faint inside edge to Hazlewood's slower ball before George Linde was caught at slips by Maxwell without scoring. Zampa then bagged the wickets of Corbin Bosch and Senuran Muthusamy off the final two balls of his four-over spell to finish with 2-33.
Earlier, Kwena Maphaka (4-20) became the youngest bowler among the full ICC member countries to bag a four-wicket haul at the age of 19 years and 124 days. But David's phenomenal hitting, which included some of his sixes landing on the roof of the stadium, gave Australia a respectable total to defend.
Captain Mitchell Marsh started the three-match series with a first ball six to Lungi Ngidi over long off but Australia lost a flurry of wickets inside the first six overs of the powerplay with Kagiso Rabada (2-29) striking for the wickets of both openers and Maphaka also denting the middle-order.
Travis Head (2) sliced a catch to Maphaka at short third man only a ball after he got dropped by Linde at point. Maphaka then took a well-judged running catch to dismiss Marsh at square leg.
Despite losing two early wickets Australia didn't hold back. Cameroon Green made a quickfire 35 off 13 balls but skied a catch to wicketkeeper Rickelton and Linde struck off his first ball when Josh Inglis couldn't clear the fielder at point.
But some scrappy fielding also cost South Africa with Stubbs dropping a sitter of David in the outfield soon after the batter had completed his half-century.
David put on 59 runs with Dwarshuis (17) before Maphaka struck twice in his final over. He first had David finally caught by Stubbs at long-on and then Zampa flicked the fast bowler straight to square leg.
Nathan Ellis made 12 off 11 balls but was run out off the final ball as South Africa bowled out Australia for the first time in a T20.
___
AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Emma Raducanu wants crying baby removed during epic 23-minute game
Emma Raducanu wants crying baby removed during epic 23-minute game

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Emma Raducanu wants crying baby removed during epic 23-minute game

Credit: Tennis Channel Emma Raducanu took issue with a crying baby during her three-hour epic against world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka at the Cincinnati Open. In a chaotic eighth game of the deciding final set Raducanu was distracted by noises from the stands as she struggled to hold serve. That game also featured 13 deuces. This is how it played out. Raducanu earns first game points Raducanu, who has served impressively up to this point, moves to 40-15 when she hits a first serve down the T and finishes off the short return with a backhand winner. Little did we know that this would be the start of a titanic service game. First break point saved Sabalenka keeps herself in the game and makes it deuce. She earns her first chance to break when Raducanu slices a backhand into the net. Raducanu responds to that error with a first serve ace down the T. Clutch play at a critical time. Raducanu and crowd want baby removed from stadium After squandering her sixth opportunity to hold serve, Raducanu gets ready to serve but pauses and walks to the back of the court because a baby is crying in the stands. Raducanu looks at the umpire and says, 'It's been like 10 minutes.' Umpire: 'It's a child. Do you want me to send the child out of the stadium?' Raducanu doesn't have to reply because the spectators around her do so, saying, 'Yeah.' Raducanu smiles, wipes her shoulder with a towel and prepares to go again. Second break point saved At this point, Raducanu is struggling to get first serves into play and hold off Sabalenka. She saves her first break point but faces another and hits a top-spin second serve into Sabalenka's backhand. Sabalenka stretches Raducanu wide with her backhand return but the Briton digs the ball back into play and it lands on the baseline. Sabalenka is slow to react and sends her forehand long. Sabalenka hits the ball away in frustration and looks wistfully at the baseline where Raducanu's ball landed. Third break point saved Raducanu is again forced to rely on her second serve. Sabalenka goes after it with a forehand return, which immediately puts Raducanu on the defensive as she replies with a sliced backhand. Raducanu recovers her ground, getting good length on her next backhand and Sabalenka goes long with a backhand of her own. She glances at her support box and slumps her shoulders as the game moves to deuce for the 11th time. On we go! Fourth break point saved Sabalenka refuses to let this game go and gets her fourth chance to break with a backhand winner down the line. The last few points have seen Raducanu mix the speed and angle to get more first serves in. And it works again for her with a kick serve into the bottom left corner of the service box. Sabalenka is forced to slice a backhand return into play and that allows Raducanu to step inside the baseline and hit a deep backhand. Off balance, Sabalenka sends her backhand reply long. Raducanu roar A Sabalenka forehand return into the net makes it the 13th deuce. On her 11th attempt and with the clock ticking past 23 minutes for the game, Raducanu finally holds with a first serve down the T, which Sabalenka gets a racket onto but can't get over the net. The emotion comes pouring out of Raducanu with a clenched fist in the direction of her coach Francis Roig, a huge roar and a look of defiance. Despite the defeat, Raducanu seems to be finding her best form just in time for this month's US Open at Flushing Meadows, where she triumphed in 2021. The 22-year-old Briton outscored Sabalenka in total points won, 125-123. 'I'm really happy to see her healthy. I can see she's improving,' Sabalenka said of Raducanu. 'Happy to get through this match. I really hope tomorrow I have a day off.'

Somerset County Cricket Club church service
Somerset County Cricket Club church service

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Somerset County Cricket Club church service

The 2025 Somerset CCC annual Church Service will be taking place at the Cooper Associates County Ground on Sunday August 17th ahead of the Metro Bank One Day Cup match against Warwickshire. This match will see the Club celebrating their 150th birthday with a number of special events! Gates will open at 9:20am for those wishing to attend the service, which will begin at 9:30am. Those attending the service are asked to enter via the Brian Rose Gates. The speaker this year is Rev. Jonathan Philpott who is Mission Development Advisor for the Diocese of Bath and Wells and who also plays club cricket in Somerset (alongside his son). Club Chaplain Rob Walrond said: 'It's wonderful to be having the Annual Cricket service at the beginning of the day celebrating 150 years of Somerset CCC, and to be doing so with members of St. James' Church which has been physically connected to the boundary of the Club through all this time. It will be a Service giving thanks for everything that Somerset Cricket has been and will continue to be.' Those attending the service will sit in Block One of the Somerset Stand. Somerset CCC Memberships or matchday tickets are required to gain entry to the church service.

Test cricket could 'bankrupt' nations
Test cricket could 'bankrupt' nations

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Test cricket could 'bankrupt' nations

The traditional Test calendar could lead to bankruptcy for certain nations, Cricket Australia chief Todd Greenberg warned as he called for a slimmed-down schedule. Greenberg wants quality prioritised over quantity to ensure a viable future for red-ball cricket. The International Cricket Council (ICC) recently set up a working group to discuss the Test format and the potential to introduce a two-tier system. "Scarcity in Test cricket is our friend, not our foe," said Greenberg. "I don't think everyone in world cricket needs to aspire to play Test cricket, and that might be OK. "We're literally trying to send countries bankrupt if we force them to try to play Test cricket." 'England and India provide most intense, dramatic and emotional finale' Is Test cricket financially sustainable? Is two-tier Test system 'greedy' or will it help cricket survive? Greenberg wants to see marquee series such as the Ashes between England and Australia - the 2025-26 series gets under way in Australia in 100 days' time - receive greater investment. The pulsating five-match series between England and India this summer was Test cricket at its finest. However, Australia won each of their three Tests in the West Indies by at least 133 runs, while New Zealand cruised to a comfortable series victory in Zimbabwe - winning one of the Tests by an innings and 359 runs. "We need to make sure we invest in the right spaces to play Test cricket where it means something and has jeopardy," Greenberg added. "That's why the Ashes will be as enormous and profitable as it is - because it means something." The emergence of shorter forms of the sport has proved difficult for Test cricket, with T20 franchise leagues and The Hundred offering lucrative player contracts in domestic cricket, and adding further congestion to the global calendar.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store