Rossouw rampage sets up England-South Africa T20I series decider
Rossouw rocks England with the bat
In what is a career renaissance for Rossouw at the international level, the left-hander looked in ominous form in his country's colours, falling just short of three figures in his 55-ball effort.
After a six-year gap in T20I cricket, mostly down to focussing his efforts on domestic cricket on Kolpak deals in England, Rossouw was dismissed early in the first match of the series, though he was not to be denied runs in his second game back.
The No.3 picked his battles, circumspect against the towering left-arm pace of Reece Topley and off-spin of Moeen Ali, but pouncing on opportunities given by the rest of the attack.
Taking on the leg-spin of Adil Rashid, Rossouw fancied his chances against the quick bowling of Richard Gleeson and Chris Jordan, hitting a total of 15 boundaries in his quick-fire knock.
Rossouw missed out on the century after failing to make contact on a wide Jordan yorker off the final ball of the innings, though was adjudged Player of the Match for his efforts in setting up a South African victory.
South Africa's bowlers do the job
Any thought of an English batting blitz in response was thwarted through the middle overs, with three wickets moving the hosts out of contention.
Tabraiz Shamsi was the man responsible for the spiral, taking the wickets Jason Roy, Moeen Ali and Sam Curran in the space of 15 deliveries, finishing with 3/27 off his four overs.
Match Highlights: South Africa v Bangladesh
After a wicket in his second over with the new ball, Andile Phehlukwayo claimed Liam Livingstone and Adil Rashid in a three-wicket performance of his own (3/39), with Lungi Ngidi (2/11) cleaning up the tail.
Every Protea bowler tasted success, with Kagiso Rabada (1/35) and Keshav Maharaj (1/37) also in on the act.
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What have we learned ahead of the T20 World Cup?
With less than three months away from the ICC Men's T20 World Cup, there's no question both teams in the series have one eye on Australia.
For South Africa Rossouw's return and the emergence of both Tristan Stubbs and Dewald Brevis means there is now competition for places at the tournament, only boosting their chances after a poor campaign last year in UAE.
Jos Buttler hinted at the toss that he wanted to give his side practice in chasing targets, though the efforts with the bat show the side look a fair way off being a finished product.
Taking over from the retiring Eoin Morgan, Buttler remains the biggest threat with the bat, while Ben Stokes will likely slide back into the team, focusing on the shorter of the white-ball formats after ODI retirement earlier this month.