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Jagruti Shah
<h1>JP Duminy Hat-Trick - Sri Lanka bowled out for 133</h1>

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All-rounder JP Duminy took a cap trap as South Africa put one foot in the World Cup semi-finals by rejecting Sri Lanka for 133 in their last eight conflict at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Wednesday.

Offering to win their first ever knockout match at a World Cup, the Proteas bowlers uprooted both openers inside the initial five overs and never facilitated up the weight from that point.


Duminy (3-29) rejected Sri Lanka captain Angelo Mathews (19) with the last wad of the 33rd over and came back to send back Nuwan Kulasekara (1) and ODI debutant Tharindu Kaushal (0) with the initial two conveyances of the 35th.

The ninth World Cup cap trap left the 1996 champions reeling at 116-8 after the misfortune four wickets for only two runs in three overs and when Kumar Sangakkara was rejected soon a while later, the composition was on the divider.

Sangakkara, who had been searching for a fifth progressive century, scored a deliberate 45 from 95 balls yet was compelled to divert from the shackles as the wickets tumbled around him and holed out to profound third man off paceman Morne Morkel.

A substantial shower showed up out of nowhere as though to grieve what looks like being the last one-day innings of one of the diversion's extraordinary batsmen and the players fell off the pitch for a 23-moment downpour break.

It just deferred the certain, in any case, and Lasith Malinga (3) was the last man to leave, pounding the ball to David Miller at spread off South Africa's other principle turn danger Imran Tahir.

Tahir took 4-26, including the wicket of Mahela Jayawardene to leave an alternate resigning Sri Lanka batting awesome with a count of four runs in his last innings in the 50-over arrangement.

Sri Lanka, who won the throw and decided to bat, were never ready to score at a pace that would have put weight on the South Africans and test their mental intention.

While Sangakkara was at the wrinkle, however, they would have fancied their shots of putting on a count for their bowlers to safeguard.

When he withdrew and the downpour cleared, be that as it may, the semi-last arrangement in Auckland against New Zealand or West Indies one week from now would now appear to be South all Africa's.
 
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