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Match Details

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PR vs SEC, 7th T20, SA20 League 2025-26 live

team important image
PR
150-5(19.4)
Paarl Royals won by 5 wickets 🏆
SEC
(20.0)149-10
team image
D Miller Logo
D Miller Jersy

71

(38)

4s: 4
6s: 5
SR:186.84
+
D Potgieter Logo
D Potgieter Jersy
4s: 0
6s: 0
SR:0.00
L Gregory Logo
L Gregory Jersy

1-30

(3.4)

Lewis Gregory

1-30(3.4)
Econ: 8.18
P'ship : 1(0)
Last Wkt : Keagan Lion-Cachet 45(40)
Over 17
1
1
0
1
1
4
 
= 8
Over 18
0
1
1
4
0
0
 
= 6
Over 19
1
4
4
0
2
4
 
= 15
Over 20
1
0
0
W
wd
 
= 2

Player of the Match...

David Miller Logo
David Miller Jersy
David Miller
Paarl Royals
71(38)

Commentary

All
Highlights
Overs
W
6s
4s
Inn 1
Inn 2
Milestone
So, the Paarl Royals showed character. David Miller showed class, leading from the front when it mattered most. Lion-Cachet played the perfect supporting role. The Eastern Cape had phases. They had control. But T20s punish hesitation. One loose ball. One wide. One partnership conceded. And the table shifts. That’s the game. That’s the league. 

Until then, I am Dev Rajawat, signing off, along with my co-commentator Ninaad Dixit and scorer Yogesh Kumar. A special thanks to AkshayaKrishna Polya for chipping in between. That’s it from our side. Thanks for joining. But cricket doesn’t sleep. Plenty is happening around the world. Switch tabs, follow the fun. Goodbye from this tab! TAKE CARE! BREATHE AND SMILE! CIAO!
David Miller (Player of the Match and Paarl Royals Captain): "It feels good to be on the board. It was a strong performance today. The guys really showed up, bowled exceptionally well, and restricted them to that total. We played the conditions nicely, so I’m really pleased with the group.

With the ball, it was more about adapting on the day rather than doing anything drastically different. This was the second or third game on the same wicket, so yorkers weren’t as effective. We had to move away from that and use the surface better - slower balls into the wicket, good pace balls hitting the deck, and generally staying straight and attacking the stumps. Those small adjustments made a difference.

Fielding was another big improvement. We weren’t great in the previous game, but today we were much sharper. We might have conceded a couple of twos, but overall, the intensity was much better, and it felt like a proper bounce-back performance.

When I came in at 30 for 3, the main thing was just to watch the ball as closely as possible and give myself a chance. We were under pressure, so the focus was on building something, somewhere, and trying to get a partnership going. Keagan was phenomenal in his first game for us. He might have been dotting up early, but the partnership was progressing well. I kept telling him to stay in it, even though it can be frustrating at the start. Once he got a couple away, his confidence grew, and it was really enjoyable batting with him. The way he handled that situation was impressive.

At the end with Delano, there was no need to overcomplicate things. We only needed one run off two balls. I just told him to watch the ball and get the bat on the ball. He’s an experienced player, so I backed him to finish it off, and that’s exactly what he did.

It’s a great way to end 2025, and now we head back home for the next game. We really appreciate the support our fans give us, and hopefully, we can put in another strong performance in front of them. Really looking forward to that."
PLAYER OF THE MATCH - DAVID MILLER
Dispatch of the Day - Jordan Hermann
Saver of the Match - Delano Potgieter
Game Changer of the Match - David Miller
Raining sixes award - David Miller
Time for the Post-Match Presentations...
Tristan Stubbs (Sunrisers Eastern Cape Captain): "The guys did really well. They got the momentum going but we lost a few wickets at the wrong time. Whenever we tried to pull the trigger we lost wickets. We maybe got away with it in the last game but not today. The guys fought really well, we gave it our all. We probably had our chances, we put our all, we bowled well but Davey played a very good knock."
8:10 PM IST, 4:40 PM LOCAL TIME: Sometimes, pressure doesn’t break you
 it teaches you how to breathe again. What a contest. What a chase. Paarl Royals held their nerve to hunt down 150 with two balls to spare, winning by five wickets after being under the pump for most of the innings. Sunrisers Eastern Cape will feel this slipped away. A strong second-innings position. Control in patches. But one partnership. One wide. One moment. And the game tilted. David Miller stood tall. Lion-Cachet stood with him. And the Royals walked away with belief, points, and a finish that will be replayed again and again.

How did the chase begin? Carefully. Almost nervously. Just 8 runs off the first over, and 18/0 after three. Calm on the surface. Chaos underneath. Marco Jansen then flipped the script in the fourth over - 2 runs, 2 wickets, 2 reviews, none going Eastern Cape’s way. Asa Tribe and Pretorius gone. The Royals slipped to 30/2 at the end of the Powerplay, with Nortje adding more pain soon after. This wasn’t a smooth chase. This was survival.

Did things improve immediately? Not at all. Anrich Nortje thundered in during the seventh and struck twice - Verreynne and Rubin Hermann dismissed. Just like that, 35/4. At drinks, the Royals were 48/4 after 9 overs. Required rate climbing. New batters settling. Eastern Cape buzzing. Every dot felt louder. Every single felt smaller. This was the phase where the match threatened to drift away from the Royals entirely.

So who stopped the slide? The skipper. Obviously. David Miller decided this wasn’t going to be another story of regret. He began rotating strike. Then finding gaps. Then clearing ropes. The fifth-wicket partnership slowly stitched the innings back together. Royals reached 50 in 9.2 overs, then 100 in 14.6 overs. Miller brought up his fifty off just 28 balls, timing it perfectly. Pressure shifted. Eastern Cape suddenly looked defensive. Momentum changed hands.

What was needed now? Composure. And more intent. Miller kept going. Lion-Cachet kept nudging. The pair added 100 runs for the fifth wicket - a match-defining stand. At 16 overs, Royals were 119/4. Still work to do. But belief was sky-high. Even as chances went down - a missed run-out, a shelled catch - the Royals kept marching. The game was no longer about survival. It was about timing the finish.

What happens when sport turns cinematic? This. 50 needed off 30. Then 23 off 18. Then 2 off the final over. Miller took a single first ball. Lion-Cachet faced the heat. Two dots. Then out on the third. Tension everywhere. One run needed. Lewis Gregory ran in. And bowled
 a wide. Game. Set. Royals. A finish that needed no boundary. Just nerves. And a mistake.

So, where did Eastern Cape lose this? Let’s rewind. They began well. Despite de Kock falling early, Bairstow attacked - 33 off 20, four fours, two sixes. 46/2 in the Powerplay looked solid. The 52-run stand between Hermann and Stubbs pushed them past 100 in 12.5 overs. But timing mattered. Stubbs fell at the wrong moment. And the innings never recovered its rhythm after that.

Why did 170 become 149? Death bowling. Simple. Mokoena ripped through the lower order with a 4-fer. Baartman supported with 3 wickets. From 111/4, the Eastern Cape collapsed to 149 all out. Wickets fell in clusters. No final flourish. No late acceleration. Reviews were lost. Momentum vanished. On a decent surface, this felt 20 runs short. And it proved costly.
Commentary