It was in 1992 that Proteas' ill-fated knockout exits started following the Kepler Wessels-led side's loss against England after it was left to chase 21 runs off the final ball post a Duckworth/Lewis rain rule that came into effect, ironically at the SCG.
The series of near-misses continued for the woeful South African side and its semi-final exit in 1999 probably was the most painful after Australia edged them out on net run-rate in a tied game.
In 2011, they suffered a surprise quarter-final defeat to New Zealand.
But tomorrow is another day and de Villiers will be looking to turn over a new page in the South African cricket calender with a well-balanced side at his disposal.
"All I can say is we're not going to choke tomorrow. We're going to play a good game of cricket and come out on top. Simple," he told reporters at the SCG today.
If the batting boasts of Hashim Amla and de Villiers then the bowling rides high on the brilliance of pace spearhead Dale Steyn.
But can they demonstrate their undeniable talent in the knockouts is a question that is bothering many a Proteas fan.
Sri Lanka on the other hand have a fine record in knockout matches. The reigning World T20 champions also appeared in the last two World Cup finals and won the tournament back in 1996.
Tournaments leading run-scorer Kumar Sangakkara (496 runs in 6 games), who has hit record four consecutive ODI tons coming into the match, is enough to invoke fear in any bowling line-up.
Opener Tilakaratne Dilshan has also been a force to reckon with two centuries in this tournament and the bowling always looks good with the ever-dependable Lasith Malinga leading the charge.
