New Zealand 194 for 6 (A Kerr 105, Khaka 3-32, Sekhukhune 3-32) beat South Africa 102 for 9 (Dercksen 23, Tahuhu 3-15, A Kerr 2-6, Devine 2-8) by 92 runs
Amelia lights up Christchurch
Walking in at the second-over mark, the day could’ve been vastly different for Amelia. Off her first ball, she offered Ayabonga Khaka a difficult catching chance. After surviving the drop, she turned slightly watchful, scoring only six runs in her first ten balls.
But after the powerplay, Amelia freed her arms to take down Nadine de Klerk for boundaries over fine leg and backward point in the seventh over, and regularly found the rope over the next few overs. Her two slog sweeps off Sune Luus in the tenth over lifted New Zealand to 72 for 3 in ten overs.
From a slow start, Kerr powered on to her half-century in 34 deliveries in the 13th over, and went on turbo mode thereafter. She lived dangerously through her edged cuts down to deep third or her scoops past the keeper’s left and enjoyed another reprieve in the 17th over when she was dropped off Tumi Sekhukhune’s bowling even though it was later deemed a no-ball.
Amelia gave New Zealand a strong finish by destroying de Klerk in the 18th over with a six over midwicket and back-to-back fours over mid-off and point. She then powered on to her second T20I century with a hat-trick of fours in the 19th, bowled by Masabata Klaas. Eventually, a miscued shot off Khaka in the 20th over ended her innings. By then, though, New Zealand’s score looked imposing, and they set South Africa 195 to win.
A strangle from NZ’s bowlers
It was a promising start for South Africa, taking nine runs off the first over, but Chloe Tryon chipped Tahuhu to mid-off in the second over. The other opener Sune Luus then holed out to Patel’s offbreak. Tahuhu induced the leading edge from Anneke Bosch’s bat while Laura Wolvaardt got a faint edge to the keeper trying to pull Devine. When de Klerk was out to an Amelia googly, they were tottering at 57 for 5 and the game’s result seemed a foregone conclusion.
Dercksen did hit four fours in her 18-ball 23 but she struggled against Amelia’s variations with the ball and eventually miscued a slog to the deep. Karabo Meso then got a golden duck as Devine induced an inside-edge onto the stumps. Devonshire then dismissed Kayla Reynene with a mis-hit down the ground and when Tahuhu picked off Klaas for the ninth wicket in the 17th over, it appeared South Africa would be rolled over soon.
However, the tenth-wicket partnership of 13 between Khaka and Sekhukhune that lasted 3.2 overs ensured the visitors were not all out, a very small consolation amid a big defeat.








