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Miller rewrites T20 history books

Miller wrote his name into the annals of the shortest format.

David Miller wrote his name into the annals of the shortest format when he smashed the fastest-ever century in the history of T20 International cricket, setting the Standard Bank Proteas up for an 83-run victory in the final match of the Bangladesh tour at Senwes Park on Sunday.

The victory gave the Proteas a 2-0 victory in the KFC T20 International Series and enabled them to complete a clean sweep across all three formats.

Miller made his century off just 35 balls, a stunning 10 balls quicker than the previous best by his fellow Protea, Richard Levi. In the process he became the fourth South African to score a T20 International century after Levi, Morne van Wyk and Faf du Plessis. He also came within one hit of matching Yuvraj Singh’s performance of hitting 6 sixes in a single over.

He dispatched the first five balls from Mohammad Saifuddin into the capacity crowd but could not get his bat under the sixth and had to settle for a single.

With 31 runs coming from that over, he moved from 51 to 100 off just 13 deliveries during a blitz which included 6 sixes and 2 fours.

MADE CRICKET HISTORY: David Miller during the second KFC T20 match between South Africa and Bangladesh at Senwes Park.
Photo: Gordon Arons

Unhappily for Bangladesh, he was dropped before he had scored a run but thereafter it wasn’t just Miller Time, it was Miller Day.

Up until his onslaught it looked as though Hashim Amla would be the one to become South Africa’s fourth centurion as he helped himself to 85 off 51 balls (11 fours and a six) before being caught in the deep, but then Miller took over (101 not out off 36 balls, 7 fours and 9 sixes).

At one stage Bangladesh looked well in the match when they restricted the Proteas to 45/2 in the 6 power play overs and 78/3 after 10, but that proved to be just the calm before the storm.

Bangladesh captain Shakib Al Hasan, who opened the bowling on a slow-paced pitch, took 2/24 in his four overs but he was then trumped by South African captain JP Duminy in the same role when he took 2/23.

Bangladesh simply lost too many wickets as they chased a near impossible target, losing four top men in the power play overs.

Wickets continued to fall at regular intervals as the required run rate gradually got out of hand, soaring to 23 in the last five overs. Even during the height of the Miller onslaught with wickets in hand, the Proteas managed 90 in the last five overs.

It goes without saying that Miller was named KFC Man of the Match and KFC Man of the Series.

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