this story is from June 29, 2019

South Africa vs Sri Lanka: South Africa dent Sri Lanka World Cup hopes

Highlights

  • Sri Lanka were struggling after defeats to New Zealand and Australia and two washouts before reviving their World Cup chances with a shock win against hosts England last week.
  • But, with six points from seven games, Sri Lanka have now slipped behind England, Bangladesh and Pakistan in the race to qualify from the round-robin phase.
Faf du Plessis and Hashim Amla leave the field after their win against Sri Lanka. (AFP Photo)Faf du Plessis and Hashim Amla leave the field after their win against Sri Lanka. (AFP Photo)
WORLD CUP
DURHAM: It took a journey all the way to this beautiful, northern-most cricketing venue in England, for South Africa to finally rediscover their spark which was missing all through in the 2019 World Cup so far. Sadly, though, it's now a case of too little, too late for them.

SCORECARD | WORLD CUP SCHEDULE | POINTS TABLE

On Friday at the picturesque Riverside ground in Chester-le-Street, hosting its first match of the tournament, they produced their best with both the bat and the ball to annihilate Sri Lanka by nine wickets. After their bowlers, led by the recalled Dwayne Pretorius (3-25) and all-rounder Chris Morris (3-36) bundled out Sri Lanka for 203 in 49.2 overs, the old firm of skipper Faf du Plessis (96 not out, 103b, 10x4, 1x6) and Hashim Amla (80 not out, 105b, 5x4) slammed half-centuries, adding 175* for the second wicket in 202 balls to complete a nine-wicket romp, with 12.4 overs remaining, for their team.

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The defeat - 17th in the last 19 games against South Africa for them- severely dents Sri Lanka's chances of progressing in the tournament, even after they had bounced back into contention by upsetting England a week back at Headingley.

World Cup: South Africa thump Sri Lanka by 9 wickets

Faf du Plessis and Hashim Amla take the Proteas home
Massive partnership turns match one-sided
Lanka's ordinary campaign continues
Near perfection from South Africa
Kagiso Rabada's golden start
Perera and Fernando steady the Lankan innings
Play stopped by bees!
Malinga takes an inconsequential wicket

Faf du Plessis and Hashim Amla take the Proteas home

Hashim Amla and Faf du Plessis powered South Africa to a nine-wicket win over Sri Lanka, dealing a huge blow to the Asian side's hopes of reaching the World Cup semis. (AFP Photo)

Massive partnership turns match one-sided

Amla (80) and captain Du Plessis (96) put on an unbeaten 175 for the second wicket as South Africa cruised to victory in the 38th over, finishing on 206/1. (Reuters Photo)

Lanka's ordinary campaign continues

Sri Lanka were struggling after defeats to New Zealand and Australia and two washouts before reviving their World Cup chances with a shock win against hosts England. (Reuters Photo)

Near perfection from South Africa

South Africa rarely put a foot wrong after electing to field, bowling out Sri Lanka for 203. Dwaine Pretorius and Chris Morris picked three wickets each while Kagiso Rabada took two. (Reuters Photo)

Kagiso Rabada's golden start

Sri Lanka had a disastrous start to their innings when skipper Dimuth Karunaratne was caught at slip by Du Plessis off the first ball of the match, delivered by Rabada. (Reuters Photo)

Perera and Fernando steady the Lankan innings

Kusal Perera and Avishka Fernando took the score to 67 for one in the 10th over before Fernando (30) mistimed a shot which was easily taken by Du Plessis. (AFP Photo)

Play stopped by bees!

A swarm of bees briefly interrupted play towards the end of the innings, forcing the players and umpires to lie flat on the ground. (Reuters Photo)

Malinga takes an inconsequential wicket

Veteran paceman Lasith Malinga struck in the fifth over of South Africa's innings, bowling Quinton de Kock for 15, but it only proved a minor hiccup. South Africa finished the match in 37.2 overs, with 9 wickets in hand. (Reuters Photo)


They are now left standing at seventh spot, with six points in seven games, and must beat both the West Indies, at this same venue on Monday, and India, in the last league match of the tournament on July 6, to entertain any hopes of making it to the semis.


Sri Lanka's loss also means good news for Pakistan, England and Bangladesh, who are all tussling for the two semifinals spots that are up for grabs.


Meanwhile, the consolation win helped the Proteas move over the West Indies to the eighth spot, just above Afghanistan, with five defeats and two wins in eight games. At last, they found some inspiration and spunk to churn out a performance that would ease the pain of their fans.
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