Durban’s Super Giants held their nerve when it mattered most in a thrilling two-run SA20 victory over the Pretoria Capitals at Kingsmead on Friday.
The Super Giants had posted 209-4 due to healthy contributions from New Zealand captain Kane Williamson (60*) and Wiaan Mulder (45* off 19 balls) before the Capitals made most of the running by reducing the target to 21 off 19 balls with six wickets remaining in the dugout.
But that’s when the Afghanistan pair of Noor Ahmad (2-34) and Naveen-ul-Haq (1-35) put the squeeze on to reduce the target to 14 required off the final six deliveries.
Noor already picked up the big wickets of Capitals opening pair Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Will Jacks before captain Keshav Maharaj also removed the dangerous Liam Livingstone in the penultimate over.
This left Naveen-ul-Haq with 14 runs to defend in the final over with Capitals teenager Steve Stolk on strike.
Stolk managed to rotate, leaving Kyle Verreynne to strike a boundary that brought the equation down to four required off the final delivery.
But Naveen-ul-Haq had ice running through his veins to restrict Stolk to a leg-bye which set off a cacophony of noise from the Super Giants faithful.
HIGHLIGHTS: Durban’s Super Giants vs Pretoria Capitals (SA20)
The Capitals’ run-chase seemed well on course after an explosive 154-run opening partnership between Gurbaz and Will Jacks in 12 overs.
Jacks has thoroughly entertained the SA20 crowds the past two seasons with his dynamic stroke-play already, but it was a first appearance for the Afghanistan superstar Gurbaz.
The little right-hander plays with absolutely no fear and peppered all parts of the Kingsmead terraces.
He was equally destructive against pace and spin by initially attacking England seamer Chris Woakes before employing the sweep shot with devastating effect against DSG captain Keshav Maharaj.
𝐀 #𝐁𝐞𝐭𝐰𝐚𝐲𝐒𝐀𝟐𝟎 𝐝𝐞𝐛𝐮𝐭 𝐭𝐨 𝐫𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐦𝐛𝐞𝐫 🔥
Rahmanullah Gurbaz was simply sensational with the bat 🏏🚀@PicknPay | #SummerOfCricket pic.twitter.com/raRSo2kTOS
— SuperSport 🏆 (@SuperSportTV) January 10, 2025
Gurbaz eventually fell for 89 off 43 balls (three fours, seven sixes) when he was caught on the edge of the boundary off the bowling of his compatriot Noor before Jacks followed for 64 off 35 balls (three fours, five sixes).
Earlier, the Super Giants had also unleashed an exciting new opening pair in Matthew Breetzke and Bryce Parsons to kickstart the new season.
Coach Lance Klusener was particularly keen to see how Parsons would fare after retaining the season two rookie.
Parsons, making his SA20 debut, repaid the faith by setting Kingsmead alight with a boundary-filled 47 off 28 balls (five fours, two sixes) that formed part of a 67-run opening stand with Breetzke in just 6.3 overs.
Breetzke simply picked up from where he left off last season with 33 off 20 balls (five fours, one six). The Proteas opener struck some flamboyant boundaries through the leg-side, especially the one where he lifted his back leg in SA20 commentator Kevin Pietersen style.
The introduction of Senuran Muthusamy into the attack after the powerplay, however, brought a halt to the runaway DSG train with the left-arm spinner tempting Breetzke with a looping delivery to drive straight to Rilee Rossouw.
It was the first of three wickets for Muthusamy (3-21) on the night with the Capitals all-rounder showing all his experience and tactical nous of how to bowl on a Kingsmead surface.
With Parsons and Quinton de Kock falling to Muthusamy and then Liam Livingstone also getting the big wicket of last season’s MVP Heinrich Klaasen for a duck, the Capitals had put the squeeze on and were reigning in the Super Giants.
They would have had further reward when Jimmy Neesham lured his former Black Caps skipper Williamson into driving aerially into the covers – only to see Gurbaz put down the chance on the boundary.
It was the let off that Williamson and DSG required, and they certainly made the Capitals pay.
Joined by Mulder at that point, the pair regained the lost momentum with some clean striking of the white ball.
Initially it was all flowing off Mulder’s bat with the Proteas all-rounder stroking two successive maximums over the cover boundary.
This allowed Williamson to belatedly find his rhythm, but once he did it was all class from the Kiwi legend, which ultimately proved the difference on a hugely entertaining evening at Kingsmead.
Photo: Rogan Ward/Sportzpics