Sports

David Miller’s fighting century takes South Africa to 212

Published by
Khurram Habib

David Miller stood tall amid the South African batting ruins, scoring 101 off 116 balls for his first century at this World Cup, and second ever in tournament history, to steer his team from a precarious position and to one of respectability against an inspired Australia in the second semi-final at the Eden Gardens here in Kolkata on Thursday.

With cloud cover building ahead of the start of the game, and even stopping play for 45 minutes after the conclusion of 14 overs, the Australian pace bowlers, Josh Hazlewood (2/12) and Mitchell Starc (3/34) found swing, something that has eluded them on most occasions in this tournament.

The duo found edge of the bats and had the Proteas reeling at 24/4 in the 12th over with even their most successful batsman in the ongoing World Cup, Quinton de Kock failing.

This was only the third time in this tournament that the South African top four, responsible for some of the biggest totals, failed together. On the two previous occasions when they failed, against Netherlands and India, South Africa recorded their only losses of the tournament.

So this failure doesn’t bode well for them.

The going would have been tougher for them had Miller not buckled down to take the total beyond 200.

He ensured that leg-spinner Adam Zampa, the second highest wicket-taker of the tournament, went wicketless and was hammered for sixes.

Miller hit him for four of his sixes.

Heinrich Klaasen, who made 47 and shared a 95-run partnership off 113 balls with Miller, hit the Australian wrist spinner for both his sixes.

It took Pat Cummins to introduce part-time off-break bowler Travis Head to halt the partnership that had taken South Africa from 24/4 to 119/4.

Head got two off two balls, removing Klaasen with a ball that cut in to beat his defence, and then had Marco Jansen leg-before the wicket.

Miller, who may have opened his shoulders was once again forced into a rebuilding phase with bowler Gerald Coetzee as the two added 53 for the seventh wicket in front of 46,000-strong crowd. However, once Coetzee was dismissed, although wrongly according to replays, as the seventh wicket with the score on 172, Miller had to fight hard to get his team to 200.

The Proteas were eventually bowled out for 212 in 49.4 overs.

Pat Cummins finished with 3/51.

Khurram Habib

Published by
Khurram Habib

Recent Posts

Ceiling collapses in DU college during class

Porta cabin classroom collapses at DU college; administration assures structurally safe classrooms within 10 days

February 26, 2026

Delhi min temp 12.6 deg Celsius; air ‘poor’

The air quality was recorded in the "poor" category at 9 AM on Thursday, with…

February 26, 2026

Jharkhand crash: Delhi airport remains the centre for most serious safety incidents

Recent accidents and incidents highlight regulatory gaps, staffing shortages, and recurring operational risks in India’s…

February 26, 2026

Toddler rescued from kidnapper in Delhi, factory worker held

Police rescue three-year-old from kidnapper in Ashok Vihar; factory worker arrested

February 25, 2026

Three miscarriages, one miracle: Woman overcomes recurrent pregnancy loss to embrace motherhood

Doctors say early diagnosis, IVF and specialised high-risk care helped ensure a safe delivery despite…

February 25, 2026

Delhi: Man arrested, four juveniles apprehended for murder in Budh Vihar

Police arrest a 19-year-old and four juveniles for allegedly stabbing a 25-year-old in retaliation for…

February 25, 2026