Specifically speaking about the matchup between South Africa and Australia, the Proteas had never beaten Australia in the previous eight tournaments. It was the easiest thing to do for Australia to come close to reaching their eighth straight T20 World Cup final. But then again, “hull wheat knee what on’s wheat knee.”
As a team that continues to show its emotions, it was easy to see what this occasion meant to South Africans during the national anthem. All-rounder Marizanne Kapp kept her eyes closed and her bowling hand gripping the Proteas logo with all her might during the beautiful performance at the Dubai International Stadium. Nadine de Klerk fought back tears and young Annelie Derksen sang like a seasoned opera singer in her first ICC knockout.
What happened next was not something a weak person should do. South Africa sent back Grace Harris with just two overs on the day, and Georgia Wareham’s pre-tournament hopes of a good third place did not materialize. McGrath made his orders with his team once again in serious trouble, but they never got going. Beth Mooney crossed the 3000-run mark in this format, but was unable to accelerate in the middle overs, which is her strength.
The border is dry. The dot balls piled up and everything the six-time World Cup champion tried fell flat. Even when the likes of Ellyse Perry and Phoebe Litchfield tried to push the score higher, Australia were limited. Australia faced as many as 45 dot-ball opening batsmen, unprecedented for a team at this level, and could only manage 134/5 in 20 overs.
When it comes to batting, the Proteas did what the world has seen Australia do against any opponent. Dominating in the powerplay, running between the wickets like his life depended on it, counter-attacking with clean whistle shots and putting pressure on the opposition in a way that drops his shoulders and gives him even more motivation to finish. put on. Finish the match and put your opponent out of their misery.