Quinton de Kock's 90 from 46 deliveries helped South Africa to a 200-plus total • BCCI
South Africa 213 for 4 (de Kock 90, Ferreira 30*, Varun 2-29) beat India 162 (Tilak 62, Baartman 4-24, Jaansen 2-25, Ngidi 2-26, Sipamla 2-46) by 51 runs
If India defied losing the toss and getting the worst of the conditions, theoretically, in Cuttack, South Africa did the same in New Chandigarh to come roaring back into the T20I series, which is now locked 1-1 with three matches to go.
India captain Suryakumar Yadav noted at the toss that the outfield was already dewy when the players were going through their pre-match warm-ups. It was a no-brainer to chase. But Quinton de Kock put India under pressure with a 46-ball 90 studded with seven sixes, and Donovan Ferreira finished brilliantly with an unbeaten 16-ball 30, taking South Africa to an imposing total of 213 for 4.
Imposing, but not dew-proof; certainly not given how India's bowlers had struggled with the conditions and bowled 15 wides -- including seven in one Arshdeep Singh over -- and 13 full-tosses.
But the dew never got a chance to test South Africa, as their new-ball bowlers made the best possible use of early movement to take three wickets in the first four overs. These included the Test-match-style dismissals of both India openers.
It was all steeply uphill from 32 for 3, and India never really challenged the visitors, with Tilak Varma's 34-ball 62 standing out for its fluency and enterprise on a difficult night for his team. South Africa bowled India out with five balls still remaining, with Ottneil Baartman hastening their end with three wickets in the 19th over.
De Kock keeps clearing the ropes
This pitch wasn't a complete featherbed, with the ball occasionally stopping on the batters and making them mistime shots. Two members of South Africa's top three, Reeza Hendricks and Aiden Markram, scored 37 off 36 balls between them.
The other member, however, was in an entirely different mood, taking full toll of anything remotely too short, too full, or especially too straight. De Kock kept clearing the ropes whenever he had half a chance, particularly with his pulls and pick-up shots square and behind square on the leg side.
This put India's bowlers under tremendous pressure. They couldn't attack de Kock's stumps, because that ran the risk of being whisked over the leg side, and they couldn't afford to give him width either. This pressure led India to attempt yorkers and wide yorkers frequently, and the pressure combined with the dew to produce errors in the form of wides and full-tosses.
Arshdeep suffered the most from this, sending down seven wides in the 11th over -- all to de Kock - and nine in all.
Ferreira and Miller finish in style
Jitesh Sharma's alert run-out of de Kock -- who wandered out of his crease instinctively after bottom-edging the ball towards the keeper -- in the 16th over, followed by Axar Patel's dismissal of Dewald Brevis in the 17th threatened to stall South Africa at a critical stage of their innings. But Ferreira and David Miller made sure they cleared 200 by a good margin, putting on an unbroken 53 off 23 balls for the fifth wicket.
The highlight of the partnership was an 18-run final over during which Ferreira hit Jasprit Bumrah for two sixes: a full-toss drilled straight, and a good short ball that followed the batter's premeditated movement pulled authoritatively over the leg side.
In all, Bumrah conceded four sixes, the most he has gone for in a T20I.
Ngidi and Jansen make the new ball talk
Given all the dew around, it was imperative that South Africa made the new ball count. They did that emphatically. Ngidi set things in motion with a first-over jaffa to Shubman Gill, squaring him up in defence with one that straightened from a good length and having him caught at slip. Jansen followed up in the next over with the mirror-image dismissal of Abhishek Sharma; angling in, straightening, squaring up the batter and catching the outside edge.
Abhishek's wicket was particularly crucial, since he'd already hit two sixes, in just eight balls.
Suryakumar followed the openers to the dressing room in the fourth over, sending a thin edge to the keeper -- confirmed after South Africa reviewed the not-out decision -- while looking to steer Jansen behind point.
Tilak stands out in the rubble
India never threatened to make a match of it, particularly with Axar Patel -- promoted to No. 3 -- and Hardik Pandya struggling for fluency, scoring 41 off 44 balls between them.
But there was one bright spot for the home team in the form of Tilak, who looked in excellent rhythm right from the time he walked in, and combined that with his awareness of the field to find the boundary frequently even while his partners got stuck. Against Ferreira's 110kph offspin rockets, for example, he made room to use the pace and steer him behind point, off the stumps. Then, against George Linde's left-arm spin, he collapsed his back knee smartly to reverse-sweep over backward point for six. A slog-swept six off an Ngidi slower ball took him to a 27-ball half-century in the 14th over.
Jitesh, who came in at No. 7, also made good use of the V behind the wicket, scoring 27 off 17, but the result was already certain by the time he walked in, with India needing 96 off 34 balls at that point.