What's new

ICC T20 World Cup 2026: New Zealand vs South Africa | 1st Semi-final | Kolkata | March 04 | Match Discussion

Which side will win the 1st Semi-final of T20 World Cup 2026?


  • Total voters
    6

The Bald Eagle

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Nov 25, 2023
Runs
24,477
The semifinal line-up of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 has set up a fascinating clash as New Zealand prepare to face South Africa in a high-stakes knockout encounter. Both sides have taken contrasting yet equally impressive routes through the tournament, building momentum at the right time.

South Africa arrive as one of the most dominant teams of the tournament, remaining unbeaten through the Super 8 stage, while New Zealand once again lived up to their reputation of peaking during ICC events. The semifinal also carries added intrigue because the Proteas already defeated the Black Caps earlier in the ongoing tournament, making this a rematch with much higher stakes.

Have New Zealand Ever Beaten South Africa in a T20 World Cup?
The short answer is no. New Zealand have never defeated South Africa in the men’s T20 World Cup. Across four meetings in tournament history, South Africa hold a perfect 4-0 record against the Black Caps, stretching back to the inaugural edition in 2007.

That dominance continued earlier in the 2026 edition when South Africa chased down 175 against New Zealand in Ahmedabad, winning comfortably by seven wickets. Marco Jansen starred in that victory as the Proteas reinforced their psychological advantage heading into the knockout phase.

Even in overall T20 internationals, South Africa maintain the upper hand. The two sides have met 19 times in T20Is, with South Africa winning 12 matches compared to New Zealand’s seven victories.

So while New Zealand have historically challenged South Africa in ICC tournaments across formats, the T20 World Cup remains one stage where the Proteas have consistently come out on top.

How South Africa and New Zealand Reached the Semifinals

South Africa’s journey to the semifinals has been built on balance and consistency. Their batting unit, led by aggressive top-order contributions and strong finishing power, regularly posted competitive totals, while a disciplined pace attack ensured early breakthroughs. The Proteas finished the Super 8s unbeaten, underlining their status as one of the tournament favourites.

New Zealand, meanwhile, took a slightly more dramatic path. The Black Caps relied on adaptability, managing crucial wins and navigating tight qualification scenarios to secure a semifinal berth. Known for thriving in knockout environments, they once again demonstrated composure when qualification margins became slim.

South Africa Squad: Aiden Markram (c), Quinton de Kock, David Miller, Keshav Maharaj, Marco Jansen, Anrich Nortje, Lungi Ngidi, Kagiso Rabada, Dewald Brevis, Ryan Rickelton, Jason Smith, Corbin Bosch, Kwena Maphaka, George Linde, and Tristan Stubbs.

New Zealand Squad: Tim Seifert(w), Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra, Glenn Phillips, Daryl Mitchell, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner(c), Cole McConchie, Matt Henry, Ish Sodhi, Lockie Ferguson, James Neesham, Jacob Duffy, Kyle Jamieson, Devon Conway

=======

All posters, please take note of the following guidelines for match threads on PakPassion:

1. No personal insults at other posters, players, officials, coaching staff, etc.

2. No making fun of players', officials', or coaching staff's names.

3. Do not add any references to media, their social media, or post any pictures or screenshots from other sports websites.

4. Stick to commenting on this match. There is no need to bring other countries into the match discussion, as there are plenty of other threads where those discussions can be added.
 
match is 50-50 , but the chasing team will have a slight advantage. The team batting first will need to score more than 210 runs. :kp
 
Best chance for saffers is to score 230+ and bury nz in those runs.If nz gets any thing above 200 , then saffers with their long lasting ability can screw it up. If kiwis got in to good position at any stage, they are clever enough to squeeze the saffers.
 
Best chance for saffers is to score 230+ and bury nz in those runs.If nz gets any thing above 200 , then saffers with their long lasting ability can screw it up. If kiwis got in to good position at any stage, they are clever enough to squeeze the saffers.
The issue for NZ is that SA have Ryan Rickelton and Dewald Brevis in the middle overs, where NZ's bowling is weak. In that phase, they will lose the match. The only thing they have to do is quickly remove SA's top order in the power play because only in this phase are they great.
:kp
 
New Zealand Vs South Africa Head to Head:

In T20I matches:
New Zealand - 0.
South Africa - 5.

In ICC knockout matches:
New Zealand - 3.
South Africa - 0.

:kp
 
The issue for NZ is that SA have Ryan Rickelton and Dewald Brevis in the middle overs, where NZ's bowling is weak. In that phase, they will lose the match. The only thing they have to do is quickly remove SA's top order in the power play because only in this phase are they great.
:kp

But KO's pressure is more on SA than NZ
 
New Zealand Vs South Africa Head to Head:

In T20I matches:
New Zealand - 0.
South Africa - 5.

In ICC knockout matches:
New Zealand - 3.
South Africa - 0.

:kp

Will be funny if the Kiwis once again slay them.

South Africa are due a bad game.
 
South Africa have the upper hand as they have already defeated New Zealand earlier in the tournament.

But New Zealand can spring up a surprise.
 
If my team wins the tournament, I want that to happen by defeating South Africa in the finals. So I’ll be supporting South Africa over New Zealand.​
 
South Africa captain Aiden Markram has urged his team to keep things simple and stay focused on the task at hand as they take on New Zealand in the semi-final of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 in Kolkata on Wednesday:

“With regards to being favourites or not, that's all different people's opinions,”

“(For) us as a team, (we want to) really just try to focus on putting good games of cricket together and playing that exciting brand that we've been trying to play the last 18 months or so, and if it comes off, then hopefully it's entertaining and can sort of put us into a good position."

"We are not trying to do anything different tomorrow. Keep hammering away at the things that we have done well and that have got us here and if we can execute that well again tomorrow, we stand a chance,"

“I wish cricket was that easy. New Zealand are a quality team. They've proved that over many years now, and we had a good run out against them in the group stages, but both teams have played a lot of cricket since then, and it's a completely fresh start tomorrow,”

“It being a semi-final is exciting as well, so I don't think it's as straightforward as just being able to repeat that. There are a lot of variables in this game, but the boys are very excited for the opportunity to play in a semi-final against a good team like New Zealand, and we'll try to bring our best game to the front again,”

“We get that around the group and the guys come up with plans from there and ultimately you need to execute them.

We don't try to complicate it too much. We just try to get a real feel for conditions as quick as we can and we back those plans for the innings,”
 
New Zealand Captain Mitchell Santner has backed his side to challenge the very best and expects his team to bring that belief and adaptability into the semi-final in Kolkata:

"I think it's whether you want to call it the underdogs or not. I think for us, it's everyone's goal throughout the tournament to get to the stage. We're here now and we back ourselves, you know, in one-off games against most teams, to be able to adapt as quickly as we can to what's in front of us."

“I guess it's you look it's probably two teams that have been in and around it for a long time. I guess we know the heartbreak of South Africa two years ago. I think again they're playing some very good cricket as they've shown throughout this tournament.”

“I guess the only unbeaten team you know we've been playing some some decent cricket as well.”

"It's I guess whoever turns up on the day tomorrow. Whoever, you know, assesses conditions the best they can. We know South Africa are going to be a threat, as they've shown, and we're just going to go out there and try, you know, to put some pressure on them at different stages of the game. And, they're going to do the same to us.”

“Matt is currently in the air and is landing tonight so I guess we'll see how he pulls up. It's obviously quite far away New Zealand from here but you know he'll obviously have a little run around in the morning to see if he's ready to go. So yeah now hopefully he's good to go.”
 
Back
Top