South Africa recovered from their opening defeat in emphatic style, beating New Zealand by 18 runs in the second T20I at Seddon Park on Tuesday. Belligerent batting, finessed fielding and an Ayabonga Khaka masterclass carried the Proteas to a series-levelling win with five balls to spare, restoring both momentum and confidence after a shaky start to the tour.
Winning the toss and electing to bat put the visitors in control from the outset. An opening stand of 62 between Sune Luus and Tazmin Brits laid the foundation for an innings worlds apart from their weekend stumble, even with the familiar middle-order wobble lurking in the wings.
Brits’ brisk 53 off 49, an unbeaten 41 off 33 from captain Laura Wolvaardt, and a rampant 28 off nine from Kayla Reyneke pushed South Africa to a competitive 177 for 5. That came despite the next three batters failing to reach double figures, threatening to drag the innings back down Disappointment Boulevard before Reyneke’s late surge yanked it firmly in the opposite direction.
Enter player of the match Reyneke, who described her late innings burst as “pretty sick” in the best possible way. “Batting with Wolvaardt was a dream come true. I am just happy to get a win for the team,” the 20-year-old said afterwards.
Her clarity under pressure was evident in the final over against Sophie Devine. “It is not the name, but the bowler. Just watch the ball and clear the boundary. It gives me a confidence boost, but there are three games left, so we take it game by game.”
Her captain was equally impressed. “It is hard to come in and go at it, so it was lovely to see Reyneke do that. It is good to know we have that kind of power through the line up,” Wolvaardt said, noting the shift in intent across the innings.
“Really nice to bounce back. Much better performance overall. Great batting intent and we hit our plans with the ball. The PowerPlay was not our best, but we pulled it back nicely by bowling stump to stump.”
Despite outscoring South Africa in the PowerPlay (49/0 to 63/2), the White Ferns never quite found the rhythm required to chase down the target. Their early advantage felt cosmetic once the field spread and the Proteas’ spinners entered the contest.
Amelia Kerr briefly threatened to tilt the chase with a lively 32 off 18, sweeping and threading gaps with her usual precision, but Masabata Klaas’ stump-to-stump discipline cut that surge short. Her 39-run stand with Sophie Devine would prove to be the hosts’ highest of the innings and, in hindsight, their only real flicker of sustained momentum.
From there, New Zealand’s reply drifted rather than drove. Devine tried to anchor, but even she found little room to free her arms as Khaka and Nonkululeko Mlaba tightened the screws with suffocating accuracy. Singles dried up, boundary options vanished, and the middle order were forced into risk before they were ready.
The result was a steady procession of miscued strokes, lbws and edges that never threatened to build the partnerships the chase demanded or unsettle South Africa’s increasingly confident bowlers.
New Zealand captain Amelia Kerr admitted afterwards that the target had slipped beyond their comfort zone. “If you can keep teams to 160 or under, you feel in the game, but it was a really good wicket. One seventy was a little under par. We lost key moments today.
Through the middle they bowled well and we did not quite rotate strike or find the boundaries we wanted. Flip that around and it is a different story. Great prep heading into the World Cup, but unfortunate we were on the other side today.”
By the final five overs, the equation had ballooned beyond reach. South Africa’s attack was operating like a well-rehearsed unit, varying pace, dragging lengths back and forcing increasingly desperate strokes from a batting line-up running out of ideas.
Khaka’s superb 4 for 27 and Mlaba’s 3 for 27, supported by wickets for Annerie Dercksen and Nadine de Klerk, embodied what Wolvaardt later described as “bowling to our plans a lot better” and served as a pointed correction to the shortcomings of the first match.
The fielding matched the discipline with the ball. Dercksen charged in from the boundary to run out Brooke Halliday with a direct hit that looked powered by pure adrenaline. Sinalo Jafta’s low take off the faintest of edges sent Maddy Green packing, another reward for Khaka’s precision.
And then there was the catch that was not a catch, with Luus opting not to claim it because she was not in full control of her momentum - A moment that summed up the composure, honesty and bouncebackability expected of this side.
A performance stitched together by intent, clarity and execution, South Africa’s response to their opening defeat was as convincing as it was necessary. The series is level, the momentum has shifted, and the Proteas have reminded everyone, including themselves, exactly what they look like when their plans click and their nerve holds.
NEW ZEALAND: Georgia Plimmer, Isabella Gaze (wk), Amelia Kerr (capt), Sophie Devine, Brooke Halliday, Maddy Green, Izzy Sharp, Suzie Bates, Jesus Kerr, Rosemary Mair, Bree Illing
SOUTH AFRICA: Tazmin Brits, Sune Luus, Laura Wolvaardt (capt), Annerie Dercksen, Chloe Tryon, Nadine de Klerk, Kayla Reyneke, Sinolo Jafta (wk), Masabata Klaas, Ayabonga Khaka, Nonkululeko Mlaba

