South Africa 93 for 3 (Esterhuizen 45*, Santner 1-8) beat New Zealand 91 all out (Neesham 26, Mokoena 3-26, Coetzee 2-14, Baartman 2-22) by seven wickets
Only Keshav Maharaj, who is also South Africa’s stand-in captain, played in the T20 World Cup semi-final that South Africa lost to New Zealand 11 days ago and they fielded four debutants. That result has quickly become a thing of the past as both sides look to the future with experimental sides.
All South Africa in the Powerplay
South Africa’s quicks took down half of the New Zealand side in the first six overs as they made use of a hint of swing and challenging lengths. Coetzee struck first in an over where he tried short and full but eventually hit a hard length and Devon Conway mis-hit him to short midwicket. Then, Coetzee found movement and got one to angle into Tom Latham and hit him on the front pad. It took Baartman only two legal deliveries to underline why there was such a fuss about him missing out on the T20 World Cup squad. He went full and straight and Tim Robinson could only mis-hit him to mid-on and then made a mess of debutant Nick Kelly’s stumps with a ball that completely shattered his defences. The bowlers weren’t having all the fun, though. When Bevon Jacobs sent Baartman into the covers and took off for a single, Rubin Hermann swooped in and ran him out at the non-striker’s end with a direct hit. New Zealand were 36 for 5 after the Powerplay.
Nqobani gets Neesham – and his first in international cricket
On debut, 19-year old Mokoena shared the new ball and immediately showed what kind of threat he could pose. He found Latham’s outside edge but it beat both the wicketkeeper and deep third. He didn’t have to wait too long to dismiss one of New Zealand’s big names, though. In his third over, he took pace off to Neesham, who was early into his slog sweep and was caught behind to give Mokoena his first for South Africa. Later in the over, Mokoena turned on the heat and used pace and bounce to get rid of Zak Foulkes. He also ended the New Zealand innings when he bounced out McConchie, who tried to smash the ball over long-on but only got as far as Rubin Hermann. Mokoena finished with figures of 3 for 26.
Santner gets Smith, who can’t catch a break
Jason Smith, who was picked ahead of Tristan Stubbs for South Africa’s T20 World Cup squad but only got one game at the tournament, had an ideal opportunity to show what he could do in this match. He was in to bat in the fifth over, with South Africa on 28 for 2 and 64 runs away from victory. Finishing the game would have been top of mind but New Zealand’s Santner had other ideas. He tempted Smith with flighted deliveries and got the outside edge but the chance went past Neesham at slip. Then, Santner beat Smith with a slower ball and tested him with variations of pace. Smith scored five runs off the first eight balls he faced, and 10 off 13, when he had to face Santner again. He lunged forward to a delivery that turned away and his back foot was on the line when Latham whipped the bails off. When Smith was dismissed, South Africa still needed 37 runs.







