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Morris provides late heroics for South Africa in Twenty20 win

All-rounder Chris Morris conjured a victory for South Africa on Friday, taking the hosts to a three-wicket win over England off the last ball of the first Twenty20 international at Newlands.

South African batsmen Chris Morris (L) and Kyle Abbott celebrate after Morris hit the winning shot during the first of two T20 matches, helping South Africa beat England by one run, at Newlands on February 19, 2016, in Cape Town.
RODGER BOSCHAFP

 For the second week in a row all-rounder Chris Morris conjured a victory for South Africa on Friday, taking the hosts to a three-wicket win over England off the last ball of the first Twenty20 international at Newlands.

England looked set to defend a modest total as Reece Topley started the last over, with South Africa needing 15 runs to win.

Kyle Abbott stole a single to get Morris on strike. The tall Morris struck the next two balls for four and six. After a dot delivery, he hit twos off the last two balls. Topley had a chance to run out Abbott to force a tie and a super over but fumbled a throw from long-off.

Morris finished with 17 not out off seven balls. A week earlier his 62 off 38 balls was a match-winner in the fourth one-day international.

The man of the match, though, was leg-spinner Imran Tahir, who took four for 21 to restrict England to 134 for eight after the tourists were sent in to bat.

England looked set for a big total as opening batsmen Jason Roy and the in-form Alex Hales hit 38 off the first 3.3 overs before Roy clipped Kagiso Rabada to Hashim Amla at mid-wicket.

Tahir came on to bowl after the six-over power play had yielded 50 runs for Roy's wicket. He struck with his fourth ball when Hales top-edged a sweep to backward square leg. JP Duminy held the catch despite being knocked to the ground by Rabada, who was also running for the ball.

Tahir followed up by dismissing Ben Stokes, Eoin Morgan and Moeen Ali. The latter two wickets were off successive balls and he narrowly missed a hat-trick when a googly went over Chris Jordan's middle stump.

South Africa made a confident start, with Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers putting on 31 for the first wicket. But England bowled well on a slow pitch and no batsman was able to dominate.

All-rounder Ben Stokes and leg-spinner Adil Rashid were impressive in the middle overs, taking one for 19 and one for 24 respectively.

It seemed to be England's match when Chris Jordan dismissed David Miller and David Wiese in the penultimate over.

But that merely set the stage for Morris. The Delhi Daredevils, who paid over $1 million for his services in the 2016 Indian Premier League, will feel they have made a good purchase.