SOUTH AFRICA · SPORT
Key Facts
—On a roll: South Africa’s women have won three in a row at the 2026 T20 World Cup after losing their opener to Australia.
—Record total: They posted 208 for 1 against the Netherlands, a South African best at a Women’s T20 World Cup.
—Brits’s day: Opener Tazmin Brits made an unbeaten 114 in that win, sealed by 88 runs.
—Kapp delivers: All-rounder Marizanne Kapp took 2 for 27 and scored 81 not out to beat India by six wickets.
—Standing: The Proteas sit second in their group with eight points from four matches.
—The catch: Their semi-final place hinges on other results going their way.
South Africa’s women’s cricket team is on the cusp of the last four. Three straight wins, a record total and a string of standout performances have put the Proteas within reach of a semi-final at the 2026 Women’s T20 World Cup — if the results break their way.
South Africa’s women’s cricket finds form
After losing their opening match to Australia, South Africa’s women rattled off three wins in a row. Each came in a different way, which is what good tournament teams do.
The run has lifted them up the group table and into genuine contention. For a side often tipped as nearly-women, the timing could hardly be better.
How the Proteas got here
South Africa came into the tournament among the contenders without being favourites. A loss to Australia in the opener could have derailed them.
Instead it sharpened them. The three wins since have come against very different opponents and conditions, the mark of a side peaking at the right time.
A record against the Netherlands
The headline performance came against the Netherlands. South Africa piled up 208 for 1, their highest total at a Women’s T20 World Cup, and won by 88 runs.
Opener Tazmin Brits anchored it with an unbeaten 114, a knock that mixed power with composure. It was the kind of innings that wins tournaments, not just matches.
The total underlined a batting line-up that can post big scores, not just chase them. Depth like that is what separates semi-finalists from the rest.
Kapp’s all-round masterclass
Against India in Manchester, it was Marizanne Kapp’s turn. The all-rounder took 2 for 27 with the ball, then made 81 not out to steer a six-wicket chase.
It was a reminder of why she is among the most valued cricketers in the women’s game. Few players shape a match at both ends the way she can.
Kapp is part of a seasoned core that has carried South African women’s cricket for years. Around her, younger players are now stepping up when it matters.
Grinding out the close ones
Not every win was a procession. Against Bangladesh at Lord’s, the Proteas had to dig in for a four-wicket victory on a tricky day.
Those gritty results often matter most. A team that can win without playing its best is a dangerous one in a knockout.
Tournaments are often decided by the games a team has no right to win. The Proteas have banked one of those already.
The maths of qualification
South Africa sit second in their group with eight points from four matches. That is a strong position, but not yet a settled one.
Their place in the semi-finals depends partly on other results, with net run-rate a lurking threat. The team has done its job; now it must wait.
Net run-rate, boosted by that 88-run win, gives them a cushion if results stay tight. Every boundary in the group stage can matter at the death.
Why it resonates at home
South African sport has had a buoyant run, and the women’s cricketers are riding that wave. A deep World Cup campaign would extend it.
It also lands in a broader story: African women’s teams claiming space on the global stage, from the cricket field to the football pitch.
For a country that loves its sport, a deep run by the women would be more than a cricket story. It would be a moment of shared pride.
A golden run for South African sport
The cricketers are not alone. South African teams and athletes have enjoyed a buoyant spell across several sports, lifting the national mood.
A women’s team going deep at a World Cup adds to that story. It also draws new fans to the women’s game at home.
What comes next
The immediate focus is the knockout maths, then, if they qualify, a semi-final against one of the tournament’s heavyweights. The Proteas have beaten big teams before.
Win or fall short, this campaign has shown a side playing without fear. That, as much as any single score, is what makes them worth watching.
Should they reach the last four, the Proteas would likely face an opponent that has beaten them before. Knockouts, though, reward whoever holds their nerve on the day.
Frequently asked questions
How is South Africa doing at the 2026 Women’s T20 World Cup?
The Proteas have won three matches in a row after losing their opener to Australia, sitting second in their group with eight points from four games. Their semi-final hopes depend partly on other results.
What was South Africa’s record score?
They made 208 for 1 against the Netherlands, their highest total at a Women’s T20 World Cup, and won by 88 runs. Tazmin Brits scored an unbeaten 114.
Who is Marizanne Kapp?
She is a South African all-rounder who took 2 for 27 and scored 81 not out to beat India by six wickets. She is among the most influential players in the women’s game.
Can South Africa reach the semi-finals?
Yes, but it is not guaranteed. Their place depends partly on other group results and on net run-rate.
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