Dewald Brevis belted South Africa’s highest Twenty20 individual score with a blistering 125 not out from 56 balls as the tourists stayed alive in the three-match series after a 53-run victory over Australia in Darwin on Tuesday.
Australia’s decision to bowl backfired as South Africa powered to a massive 218-7 on the back of Brevis’ maiden century in international cricket.
The defeat is Australia’s second-highest margin loss in T20Is. The 22-year-old rescued South Africa from a shaky 57-3 and dominated a 126-run partnership with Tristan Stubbs (31).
“I’m extremely grateful, just happy to be out here on the winning side,” said Brevis, who surpassed Faf du Plessis’ 119 against the West Indies in 2015.
His knock was also the highest score against Australia in T20Is, surpassing Ruturaj Gaikwad’s unbeaten 123 in 2023.
As Brevis walked off unbeaten to big applause from the boisterous Darwin crowd of almost 9,000 fans, Glenn Maxwell made a beeline from long on to give the youngster a well-deserved handshake and pat on the back.
Playing just his ninth T20 international, Brevis smashed eight sixes to leave Australia’s powerful batting line-up with an uphill task.
Nicknamed ‘Baby AB’ in reference to South Africa legend and his hero AB de Villiers, much has been expected of Brevis since his IPL debut as an 18-year-old in 2022.
In his ninth T20I, Brevis delivered on his promise.
Australia’s daunting chase was made more difficult after the early wickets of opener Travis Head (five) and Cameron Green (nine).
Australia’s hopes rested with in-form Tim David, fresh off his match-winning 83 in their 17-run victory in the series-opener at the same venue.
Promoted to number four, David started with a trio of boundaries and then bludgeoned several massive sixes, including one that landed on the roof.
But David’s 24-ball assault ended on 50 when he hit spearhead Kagiso Rabada straight to cover.
Australia’s chase ran out of steam, bowled out for 165 in the 18th over with quicks Corbin Bosch and Kwena Maphaka picking up three wickets each.
“Chasing that down was always going to be tough and we needed a few partnerships, which we couldn’t do,” Australia captain Mitchell Marsh said.
Without several key batsmen for this tour, South Africa had struggled to fire in the opening game.
Captain Aiden Markram signalled his intent with a sublime boundary off the first ball of the innings, rattling quick Josh Hazlewood.
But Markram (18) fell tamely to a fired-up Maxwell, who celebrated another wicket when he had Lhuan-dre Pretorius (10) stumped to leave South Africa in trouble. Likened to legendary South Africa batsman AB de Villiers, Brevis turned the innings on its head to power past his previous highest T20 international score of 41.
Brevis received a life on 56 when substitute fielder Matthew Kuhnemann fumbled on the boundary off the bowling of an increasingly frustrated Maxwell.
Brevis made Australia pay and in a flash he was saluting the crowd after reaching his century with a boundary off his 41st delivery.
Maxwell and quick Ben Dwarshuis picked up two wickets apiece in an unusually ragged effort in the field for Australia, whose nine-match T20 win streak ended.
The series-decider will be played in the Queensland city of Cairns on Saturday.
Although Australia’s heavy hitting has been on full flow recently, their reliability came under question in the first T20I, and doubts will continue to linger after the second T20I.
Agencies
Brief scores:
South Africa 218/7 in 20 overs (Dewald Brevis 125*, Tristian Stubbs 31; Ben Dwarshuis 2-24, Glenn Maxwell 2-44) beat Australia 165 all out in 17.4 overs (Tim David 50; Corbin Bosch 3-20, Kwena Maphaka 3-57) by 53 runs