The match in a tweet: T H R I L L E R!
A world-record partnership of 161 by Warner and Maxwell help Australia chase down 205 from the final ball!
The Bull
He was raging. In his new role at No.4, Warner provided the patience, the power and the performance to hand Australia a remarkable win. The vice-captain was savage on anything dropped short, climbing all over any attempted bouncer and sending it beyond the boundary. But Warner did best was supress the spin of Imran Tahir. Tahir was outstanding on Friday night on a dry, turning deck in Durban, but on a road at the Wanderers, the leg-spinner wasn't nearly as effective and Warner made him pay. The 29-year-old clubbed Tahir almost exclusively on the leg-side, and to be more accurate, between long-on and mid-wicket. He finished with 37 runs from the 14 balls he faced from the leggie, taking three fours and as many sixes with him. It took another special delivery from Rabada to end his stay on 77 from 40 balls, but the damage was done.
The Big Show
He hates that nickname, but Maxwell produced his best knock for Australia in T20 cricket when his side needed it the most. With a daunting target ahead of him when he walked to the crease in at 3-32 in the sixth over, Maxwell was on song from ball one, clobbering anything within his hitting zone, which is vast to say the least. Known for his innovative stroke play, Maxwell was relatively orthodox for most of his innings, hitting with the spin and picking the gaps. But with his mojo flowing, you knew the party tricks would come out sooner rather than later, and what a trick it was – a reverse-ramp flip that flew one bounce into the third man fence. He produced one more audacious shot – this one a more textbook, if you can call it that, reverse sweep off Chris Morris – before his brilliant innings ended going for another boundary, out for 75 off 43 balls.
www.cricket.com.au/news/match-report/aus...ne-watson/2016-03-07?