BIRMINGHAM – It was a victory that arrived with a massive sigh of relief rather than a roar of dominance. South Africa successfully resuscitated their 2026 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup campaign at Edgbaston, grinding out a tense two-wicket win over Pakistan.
While the scoreboard records a crucial first two points on the board for the Proteas in Group A, it masks a roller-coaster encounter that saw South Africa ruthlessly dismantle Pakistan’s top order, squander a commanding position, and ultimately stumble over the finish line.
Kapp Sparks an Early Demolition
Choosing to bowl first, the Proteas could not have dreamt of a more explosive start. Veteran all-rounder Marizanne Kapp delivered a masterclass in opening bowling, striking with the very first ball of the match by trapping Muneeba Ali leg-before. Five balls later, a beautiful delivery held its line to shatter Gull Feroza’s stumps, leaving Pakistan reeling at 3/2.
Kapp (3/23) returned in her next over to remove Ayesha Zafar, while Ayabonga Khaka induced a chop-on from Natalia Pervaiz. With Shabnim Ismail (1/15) keeping things incredibly tight at the other end, the pressure completely unhinged Pakistan’s running between the wickets. A comedy of communication errors resulted in four farcical run-outs, and by the 10th over, Pakistan had collapsed to a seemingly terminal 50/8.
“Lovely way to start the game with a wicket on the first ball. Kappie was excellent… so nice to have them bowling up front to set up the innings.”
— Laura Wolvaardt, South Africa Captain
The Sana Fightback
Just as South Africa looked poised to wrap up the innings quickly and give their Net Run Rate a massive boost, Pakistan captain Fatima Sana staged a magnificent counter-attack.
Sana played a lone hand of pure defiance, anchoring a world-record ninth-wicket World Cup partnership of 71 runs alongside Tuba Hassan (23). Sana finished unbeaten on a brilliant 55 off 38 balls, launching a brutal final-over assault against Nadine de Klerk that leaked 19 runs. From the depths of despair, Sana dragged Pakistan to a defendable, hard-fought 126/9.
Dercksen’s Onslaught and the Middle-Order Jitters
South Africa’s chase began in sluggish fashion, crawling to 20/1 in the fourth over after Suné Luus fell early. However, Annerie Dercksen single-handed shifted the momentum.
Showing total disregard for the sluggish, spinning Edgbaston surface, Dercksen launched a devastating counter-offensive. She brutally targeted Rameen Shamim’s fifth over, plundering 21 runs, including two massive sixes. Dercksen blasted her way to a 32-ball half-century, completely shifting the pressure back onto the bowling side.
When Dercksen fell for a magnificent 52 off 35 balls, quickly followed by Kapp (10), South Africa looked safe at 76/4. Yet, true to the theme of the day, the Proteas made heavy weather of the finish.
Pakistan’s spinners, led by Sadia Iqbal and a fiery spell from Sana (), began choking the runs. Chloe Tryon and Kayla Reyneke fell cheaply as panic crept into the South African dugout. Nadine de Klerk became the vital anchor, scoring a gritty, composed 37 off 28 balls to keep the scoreboard ticking.
A Sigh of Relief
The drama peaked in the 17th over when Sana struck twice, removing De Klerk and Sinalo Jafta to leave the Proteas eight wickets down with the scores level. In a fitting end to a chaotic match, Pakistan’s discipline deserted them at the final hurdle, gifting South Africa the winning run via a stray down-leg wide.
While captain Laura Wolvaardt conceded the performance was “a little scratchy,” the points are secured. The road only gets steeper from here; the Proteas travel to Manchester to face a world-class Indian side at Old Trafford on Sunday, 21 June. To challenge the group favourites, the middle order will need to replicate Dercksen’s clinical edge and eliminate the tactical collapses that nearly cost them dearly today.
Brief Scores
- Pakistan Women: 126/9 in 20 overs (Fatima Sana 55*, Tuba Hassan 23; Marizanne Kapp 3/23, Shabnim Ismail 1/15)
- South Africa Women: 127/8 in 16.5 overs (Annerie Dercksen 52, Nadine de Klerk 37; Fatima Sana 3/16, Sadia Iqbal 2/17)
- Result: South Africa Women won by 2 wickets.
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