T20 World Cup final: India beat South Africa by seven runs to claim trophy – live | T20 World Cup 2024

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“Was that a legal catch?” asks Paul Burns. “After going over, Yadav never got a foot down inside the rope before taking it.”

Here is one of the best defensive plays ever and it may have single-handedly won the T20 World Cup Final for India.

Pay attention to where Suryakumar Yadav’s feet are the whole time – if the ball, and the player with the ball in his hand cross the boundary that you can see here… pic.twitter.com/K84AfOOEKd

— Daman Rangoola (@damanr) June 29, 2024

The umpires did check it at the time, so i think all is above board.

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“To steal someone’s phrase,” taps David Bertram, “Cricket bloody hell.”

Eoin Morgan is in plain-speaking mode. “South Africa spectacularly fell apart.” he says. “I thought with the momentum that was there today, they were there, they took the game to the brink and then acted like a frightened rabbit, you have to stick to the process.”

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Player of the tournament: Jasprit Bumrah

No competition! “You try to focus on the job, I don’t have a lot of words, the emotions are taking over. I usually don’t cry after a game, but we thought we were in trouble but to come back is an amazing feeling. My son is here, my family is here and so glad I was able to do that for India. i was trying to keep myself in a bubble, all tournament I just felt really clear and calm.”

India’s Jasprit Bumrah (centre, with his arms raised) celebrates after dismissing South Africa’s Reeza Hendricks, the first of his two wickets in the final. Photograph: Ramón Espinosa/AP
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Player of the match: Virat Kohli for his 76

This was my last T20 World cup. One day you feel like you can’t get a run, god is great, I’m just grateful I was able to get the job done for the team when it mattered most. I knew it was now or never, the last T20 game I will play for India, it was the game that helped me judge the situation. Time for the next generation to take over, going to take the team forward, will keep the flag waving high.”

India’s Virat Kohli plays a shot during his 76 run innings. Photograph: Ricardo Mazalán/AP
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Interview, interviews, interviews. Axar Patel: “This means everything to me, when I come to this World Cup, the feeling that I have to do something for India and finally I do it. Im trying to keep it simple and trying not to think it was a final, just playing on merit. I think Rahul and Rohit, you can see, he is an amazing man. I wasn’t expecting to be promoted today, I didn’t et to think about my batting and that wasn’t for me.” Dravid stands quietly on the sidelines, taking it all in. Jay Shah, BCCI secretary, seems to help plant an India flag in the pitch and pose by it before taking a call on his mobile.

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“Sorry to spam your inbox today.” It’s a pleasure Bhawesh. “So stressful these last few overs and my friends in India and USA won’t pick my call, haha. Such a great game. So happy India ended up on the winning side today. I guess getting Bumrah earlier paid off and South Africa wanted to see him through, a totally reasonable plan. Well supported by other bowlers One has to feel for South Africa though. They made it to final this time, they will win it soon. Love their team. Tough luck today for them.

“Dancing is on tonight!”

Diamonds on the soles of your shoes. Enjoy!

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Rohit, after stealing a quiet few seconds for himself, brings his team over to shake hands with South Africa. Hardik is completely overwhelmed, he and David Miller share the embrace of two men who’ve come through high tension – though on different sides of the cruel divide.

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India beat South Africa by seven runs to win the T20 World Cup!

20th over: South Africa 169-8 (Maharaj 2, Nortje 1) Tears, hugs and exhaustion on both sides. Bad luck to South Africa, who almost had it in the bag, but congratulations to this astonishing Indian side who just kept believing.

Joy abounds amongst the India players. Photograph: Ash Allen/Reuters
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WICKET! Rabada c Suryakumar b Hardik4 (South Africa 168-8)

Rabada has to go for broke, hits hard, but he can’t get enough length on the ball and Suryakumar collects.

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19.4: Whatever Rohit and Hardik discussed, it wasn’t that. A wide. Nine needed from two.

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19.4: A leg bye! 10 needed from two. Rohit and Hadik discuss. They can’t watch in the SA dugout.

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19.3: A bye! 11 needed from three

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19.2: Rabada flays an edge for four! 12 needed from four

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WICKET! Miller c Suryakumar b Hardik 21 (South Africa 161-7)

Oh my god – that is astonishing, Miller attacks a terrible wide full toss from Hardik, sends it high, high, on the boundary Suryakumar takes the catch with right hand on the run, realises he is heading over the rope so has the peace of mind to throw it up, side steps inside the boundary boards before catching the rebound on hte legal side of the grass. Amazing!

India’s Suryakumar Yadav throws the ball up before crossing the boundary … Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images
Then takes a catch to dismiss David Miller. Photograph: Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty Images
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19th over: South Africa 161-6 (Miller 18, Maharaj 1) chasing 177 16 needed from 6 What can Arshdeep leave for Hardik to play with? (forgive me, Bumrah is now bowled out) Maharaj can’t squeak a run from the first two, a single from the third, then Miller nurdles two. A single from the fifth puts Maharaj on strike – will he just try to survive the last ball to leave Miller on strike. In the crowd, they watch through spread fingers. A brilliant bit of fielding from Arshdeep as he leaps in follow through to field the ball. Excellent over and high fives all round.

“I’m surprised there’s been so little mention of the special tournament playing condition in the event of India going 1-0 down in the play-off final series this weekend?” Are you being mischievous Brian Withington?

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18th over: South Africa 157-6 (Miller 18, Maharaj 1) chasing 177 20 needed from 12 Miller shadow boxes at Bumrah’s first ball, bum sticking out like a unsupported shelf. The second a dot, a single from the third. Can he breakthrough? Yes he can, of course he can – a ball of beauty. Maharaj somehow gets the bat down on the fifth, and the sixth is squeezed for a single. High, high, tension.

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WICKET! Jansen b Bumrah 2 (South Africa 156-6)

Through the gate! Jansen thinks he’s got it covered but Bumrah wings the ball through the gap and flicks the leg-stump bail like the ash of a cigarette.

India’s Jasprit Bumrah (centre) celebrates after South Africa’s Marco Jansen (left) is clean bowled. Photograph: Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images
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17th over: South Africa 155-5 (Miller 17, Jansen 2) chasing 177 22 needed from 18 Hardik changes the game with that wicket, from boundaries every ball to four singles from the over.

“Guess we are not winning this one either!” writes Bhawesh Kumar. “Happy for South Africa if they win. They have had their heartbreaks!” Still time Bhawesh, still time.

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WICKET! Klaasen c Pant b Hardik 52 (South Africa 151-5)

Klaasen stretches for a wider delivery from Hardik but the feet don’t move and he can only squeak an edge through to Pant. He can’t believe what he’s just done. Off he must go.

India’s Hardik Pandya, right, is congratulated by teammates after taking the wicket of South Africa’s Heinrich Klaasen. Photograph: Ramón Espinosa/AP
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Fifty for Klaasen!

16th over: South Africa 151-4 (Klaasen 52, Miller 15) chasing 177 Bumrah, but is it too late? An lbw appeal, but it is an inside edge. A yorker of perfection, but Klassen keeps it out. They survive, and Klaasen reaches an astonishing innings-turning 50 from 23 balls. A pause, as Pant gets his knee (strategically?) strapped. 26 needed from 24 balls.

South Africa Heinrich Klaasen thwacks the ball on his way to his half-century. Photograph: Deepak Malik/Shutterstock
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15th over: South Africa 147-4 (Klaasen 49, Miller 14) chasing 177 Dismayed faces in the crowd. Hands on hips for Rohit as Klaasen ploughs through Axar Patel – 24 from the over: Four over Axar’s head, then six onto the roof, six over long-on, four flying through the off side. Throw in a couple of wides and South Africa now need just a run a ball.

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14th over: South Africa 123-4 (Klaasen 27, Miller 14) chasing 177 Kuldeep’s last over, without his usual mischief today. Miller carves him away for four, and next ball pulls him for six. Fourteen from the over, Miller immediately hits his stride.

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13th over: South Africa 109-4 (Klaasen 26, Miller 1) chasing 177 Arsheep comes back and de Kock flicks him over fine leg with a swivel on the back foot for four. But he’s blind to the immediate field change as fine leg shuffles back, repeats the shot and must be on his way. Twist follows turn.

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WICKET! de Kock c Kuldeep b Arshdeep 39 (South Africa 106-4)

de Kock tries to replay the shot that had brought him four the previous ball, but the fielder has been moved, and Kuldeep is waiting, takes with both hands!

Kuldeep Yadav is waiting by the boundary and gratefully takes Quinton de Kock’s into his hands. Photograph: Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty Images
Arshdeep Singh is congratulated by his teammates after taking de Kock’s wicket. Photograph: Matthew Lewis/ICC/Getty Images
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12th over: South Africa 101-3 (de Kock 35, Klaasen 23) Klaasen brings up the 100 with a six off Kuldeep – six crafted with a fast eye and unmoving feet, lofted over cover with a shrug.

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11th over: South Africa 93-3 (de Kock 34, Klaasen 16) Jadeja – headband, sunglasses. Klaasen smashes him straight and long over the sightscreen for six. Touch of the Klusener about his simplicity of hitting. Jadeja sprints to field off his own bowling, a touch of anxiety to India in the field now. 12 from the over.

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10th over: South Africa 81-3 (de Kock 29, Klaasen 7) Brief breathing space for India with three dots off Hardik’s first over, but then Klaasen flambes six, flat and straight over point. A no ball brings a free hit which Pant takes behind the stumps. At the half way stage, South AFrica are marginally ahead. But Bumrah.

“Good afternoon,” hello Bhawesh Kumar!

“The last time I sent you an email, it was probably 4 am or something in Cambridge, MA, and India was playing Australia in the World Cup final. I was anxious about India losing the game. This time around, the viewing time is much more reasonable, and as I am starting to get worried by this dangerous-looking partnership, Axar Patel clean bowlds Stubbs. My heart is starting to beat normally again. Hoping this time India wins the game. I will go dancing tonight if that happens :)“

Fifty fifty at this stage as to whether your dancing shoes remain in the cupboard…

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9th over: South Africa 71-3 (de Kock 29, Klaasen 0) Stubbs starts the over by slog-sweeping Axar brilliantly, but must leave the arena with the job less than half done.

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WICKET! Stubbs b Axar 31 (South AFrica 70-3)

Stubbs takes a huge stride outside off stump, ready to sweep, eager for more, but misses completely and can just watch as the stumps are rearranged. Axar punches the air, the crowd roars and at the non-striker’s end de Kock tuns in frustration.

South Africa’s Tristan Stubbs reacts after being bowled out by India’s Axar Patel. Photograph: Ramón Espinosa/AP
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8th over: South Africa 62-2 (de Kock 28, Stubbs 24) Continuing to roll along nicely, 13 off the previously unplayable Kuldeep, including a huge six, slog-swept onto the solar panel by de Kock!

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7th over: South Africa 49-2 (de Kock 21, Stubbs 18) India were 49-3 at the same stage. Seven from Axar’s over, including a slog-sweep for four from Stubbs. South Africa not overawed here.

Hello Alfred Hartford: “I’m a cricket fan from New Zealand presently in London and gratefully following your match feed in The Guardian.

“I’d love to know which Indian bowlers SA plan to attack. Good luck with that!

“Hope SA stay in the chase until the final overs when we’ll see the incomparable Bumrah whirling his dervishes!”

Famous last words but this looks like it will go down to the wire.

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6th over: South Africa 42-2 (de Kock 20, Stubbs 12) Kuldeep with the final over of the power play, long fringe blowing in the strong wind. Pant and de Kock share a laugh, then de Kock, wriggling for position in the crease, cuts Kuldeep for four from his final ball. South Africa definitely still in it at this stage.

“Hi Tanya, I think Markram let slip a “poes”, the grittier South African version of your British c-word.” Thank you for that excellent bit of lip-reading Lauren Hess!

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5th over: South Africa 32-2 (de Kock 15, Stubbs 7) After a cracking more-than-cameo with the bat, it is Axar’s turn with the ball. Relative riches for South Africa as both batters pick up four plus a couple of singles.

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4th over: South Africa 22-2 (de Kock 10, Stubbs 2) An exorbitant eight from Bumrah’s second: de Kock finding a boundary in the gap past slip.

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3rd over: South Africa 14-2 (de Kock 3, Stubbs 1) Rohit is persuaded to review a “caught behind” – I don’t know the stats on this but my impressions is Rohit is a terrible judge of these things – and India duly lose their review – nothing showing on ultra edge.

Hello Teresa Ewart: “Just finished watching the TDF – and onto the cricket… Good grief! Are they playing music between each ball? In what world does that make sense? Surely it makes it hard to concentrate? They “do stuff” between balls don’t they?” So true! I think the players are trained to just zone out though. Similarly I have no idea how those TDF riders keep going along a tiny path between packed shouting crowds with men run alongside them with flares.

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WICKET! Markram c Pant b Arshdeep 4 (South Africa 12-2)

Stretches to drive, weight on the back foot, gets a thick edge and a diving Pant collects low to his right. Markram tips his head back and slumps away.

India’s Arshdeep Singh (right) celebrates the dismissal of South Africa’s captain Aiden Markram (left). Photograph: Ricardo Mazalán/AP
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2nd over: South Africa 11-1 (de Kock 1, Markram 4) Markram in early, but sends his first ball from Bumrah for four wiht some panache. Just watching Bumrah’s wicket again, Hendricks played with a straight bat but the ball laughed and passed by on its merry way. Just brilliant.

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WICKET! Hendricks b Bumrah 4 (South Africa 7-10

Just a perfect out-swinger. Shrugs out a shoulder and knocks the top of off stump.

Reeza Hendricks’ bails go flying courtesy of India’s Jasprit Bumrah. Photograph: Ricardo Mazalán/AP
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South Africa need 177 to win

1st over: South Africa 6-0 (Hendricks 4, de Kock 1) They don’t give you much kettle time in this world cup. Five from the first over, Arshdeep’s last delivery a slower ball which Hendricks licks past cover point for four.

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Kohli makes his mark at last – whether it was a masterpiece or too slow, we shall find out! Time for me to make a quick cup of tea, back shortly.

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WICKET! Jadeja c Maharaj b Nortje 0 (India 176-7)

20th over: India 176-7 (Hardik 5) Nortje, men on the boundary. Dube manages one four, over the ducking bowler, under the diving fielder at mid-on. Two wickets in the over, finishing with a huge leading edge from Jadeja, which Maharaj runs to collect. India have the highest ever score in a World Cup final – what can they do with it?

South Africa’s Keshav Maharaj prepares to take the catch to dismiss India’s Ravindra Jadeja. Photograph: Ricardo Mazalán/AP
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WICKET! Dube c Miller b Nortje 27 (India 174-6)

Dube throws himself at a full toss, sending it down the ground, and Miller catches a bullet, slipping as he does.

India’s Hardik Pandya (centre) reacts as his teammate Shivam Dube (left) is caught out. Photograph: Ramón Espinosa/AP
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19th over: India 167-5 (Hardik 4, Dube 22) Jansen with the penultimate over – not a man who oozes confidence. South Africa think they’ve had Kohli caught behind, but it turns out to be a no ball. Kohli swings wildly at the free hit and misses – he fancies it was a wide but is told no. Kohli then pings a full toss through backward square for four, then six straight and sweet as you like, before being caught. That wicket could keep the final total more manageable for South Africa. Ah – but then Hardik immediately picks up four from a top-edge over the keeper.

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WICKET! Kohli c Rabada b Jansen 76 (India 163-5)

Just when he’d got going! Serious, innings-building effort. Trying for a second six in the over but caught at long on.

India fans applaud as Virat Kohli (foreground) walks off the field after losing his wicket during the T20 World Cup final against South Africa. Photograph: Ricardo Mazalán/AP
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18th over: India 150-4 (Kohli 64, Dube 22) Rabada’s first ball is greeted with a huge straight six from Kohli. The next goes for two, with Kohli sprinting wolf-like, prey in his sights. Four more swung with with dancing wrists to the rope. A big fat wide. Not Rabada’s best work: 16 from the over.

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Fifty for Virat Kohli!

17th over: India 134-4 (Kohli 50, Dube 21) Nortje, clever bowling, Kohli nurdles but can’t reach the rope – his first fifty of this World Cup – off 48 balls. I’m not sure he raises his bat. Dube uses the wind to reach the rope off the last ball.

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16th over: India 126-4 (Kohli 48, Dube 15) Shamsie is back, the brass band a tooting, drums pounding at the Kensington Oval. Dube goes again, very wide stance, swings Shamsie powerfully for four. Time, I think, to put the foot down.

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15th over: India 118-4 (Kohli 46, Dube 9) Dube gives himself a couple of balls to get his eye in then swings the fragile-looing Jansen for six. A handful of singles.

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