Key events
4th over: South Africa 37-0 (Wolvaardt 24, Brits 10) Excellent from Carson, who pulls the initiative back – conceding just three singles from her second over.
3rd over: South Africa 34-0 (Wolvaardt 23, Brits 8) Wolvaardt is the leading scorer in this tournament, with more fours than anyone – and here is another as she picks Tahuhu off her boots and sends her lfying for four. And another! Slammed over deep mid wicket Tahuhu regains control with a final dot ball.
3rd over: South Africa 24-0 (Wolvaardt 14, Brits 7) Jonas with her slingshot action. She drags one down, just spitting distance from the bowling crease, and Wolvaardt tucks in with a flamed backfoot drive. New Zealand struggling to grip the ball in the humidity.
2nd over: South Africa 14-0 (Wolvaardt 7, Brits 4) It’s baby-faced Carson at the other end, who has been so effective this tournament. Starts with two dots but Wolvaardt tucks into the fourth, swivels and punchily pulls her down for four. Amelia Kerr is back on the field but is visibly uncomfortable with cramp and is given another rehydration drink on the rope.
New Zealand need 159 to win
1st over: South Africa 7-0 (Wolvaardt 1, Brits 3) Mair with the new ball – not the best start, three wides winging down the leg side.
Tea turned to coffee in the kitchen. The players are already out, the chase nearly on.
Hello Guy Hornsby! “Well that’s a brilliant innings from New Zealand, Tanya. They seemed to time the reverse bell-curve perfectly with that big start, then accumulating in the middle and really taking down multiple bowlers at the end. 150 felt a great total, so I’m willing to say this feels 10 over par to get. Kerr and Halliday really timed they’re acceleration well and they took surprisingly lot of runs off Khaka. This should be fascinating, because while South Africa have the firepower, NZ have a strong spin attack. Game very much on!”
I fancy it is too many as well – but South Africa have pulled more than a few surprises in recent years… and Wolvaardt and Brits have runs in their souls.
Time to grab a very quick cup of tea. Advantage New Zealand I think. Hello there Tim Hare!
”Following your coverage from Brittany. What an amazing weekend for NZ- America’s Cup, Test win in India, Silver Ferns hosing the Aussies in Wellington and now going very well in the T20 final. Got to love a country that punches so far above its weight in so many sports.”
Agreed. This one of many things to love New Zealand for.
New Zealand 158-5 – South Africa will need a record total in a T20 women’s final to win!
20th over: New Zealand 158-5 ( Green 12, Gaze 3) What a fabulous final flourish – 16 from the last over including an beautifully struck up and over six by Green when Khaka misses her yorker, which flies over the rope at midwicket. South Africa huddle on the pitch, but no side has ever chased down that many in a women’s T20 World Cup final.
19th over: New Zealand 142-5 ( Green 1, Gaze 1) Eleven from the penultimate over -but the big prize in Kerr gone.
WICKET! Kerr c Brits b Mlaba 43 (New Zealand 141-5)
Kerr tips her head back in dismay – but she’d already farmed ten from Mlaba’s first four balls. A nice catch from Brits low down, almost slipping, hunting at deep midwicket.
18th over: New Zealand 131-34(Kerr 33, Green 1) Can New Zealand keep the momentum now Halliday is gone. Can Kerr pick up the pace?
“Hi Tanya.” Hello there Simon McMahon.
Was good to see Alistair Cook and Neetu David, both newly inducted into the ICC Hall of Fame, carrying the trophy before the start. Hoping for a close, exciting game, either of these sides would be worthy champions…”
Ah, that’s why he’s there! And agreed – here’s to a thriller.
WICKET! Halliday c Bosch b Tryon 38 (New Zealand 127-4)
A huge roar as Bosch at backward square leg steadies herself and accepts the gift swept up and away by Halliday. The end of a cracking innings that gave New Zealand its momentum back. Tryon is poker-faced – job not nearly yet done.
17th over: New Zealand 125-3 (Kerr 31, Halliday 36) Kapp is back, but starts with a no ball – uncharacteristically undisciplined. There have been a few extras in this innings. Kapp nearly has Halliday with a low full toss that evades her bat but skips (inexplicably) past the stumps. Kapp finishes with 0-25 from her four overs.
16th over: New Zealand 117-3 (Kerr 29, Halliday 31) A drop! Not easy, as Kerr slams the ball straight back to the bowler and Khaka instinctively reaches for it but can’t hold on. To add to their woes, South Africa are four minutes behind the clock.
15th over: New Zealand 110-3 (Kerr 23, Halliday 26) New Zealand suddenly mounted and charging. Halliday neatly dismisses a slightly frazzled looking de Klerk past point for four. A back foot no ball then brings a free hit – which Kerr makes the most of: up and over mid off for four more. Click clack.
14th over: New Zealand 97-3 (Kerr 20, Halliday 21) A first boundary since the sixth over! Halliday the woman – who follows up her haul over deep square leg with another next ball, this time to long-on – fluffed on the rope by de Klerk.
13th over: New Zealand 85-3 (Kerr 19, Halliday 10) Mlaba returns. The outfield is not fast, the ball sticking like glue as Halliday cuts to the rope and the fielders are able to chase it down. The crowd is filling up.
12th over: New Zealand 79-3 (Kerr 17, Halliday 6) New Zealand staying busy, running well between the wickets, rotatig the strike, being bold, Halliday top-edges a switch hit. Five from Luus’s over.
11th over: New Zealand 74-3 (Kerr 15, Halliday 3) No boundaries since the power play for New Zealand and lots of pressure now on Kerr. On comms they suggest her strengths lie in massaging the bowling – leaving the big hitters to strike the rope.
WICKET! Devine lbw de Klerk 6 (New Zealand 70-3)
Respect to de Klerk for both the wicket and the review! She persuades Wolvardt to go upstairs – and the tech gives it out, Devine misses her pull and is hit above the knee -but the ball would have hit the top of the stumps. Big wicket that one.
10th over: New Zealand 70-2 (Kerr 14, Devine 6) New Zealand not finding it easy to get stuck into Tryon’s slow left arm. But they keep plugging away and rinse eight from the over. At the half way point in this innings they pause for DRINKS, ice packs and a change of gloves.
9th over: New Zealand 62-2 (Kerr 12, Devine 1) Kapp is brought back, determination oozing from every pore. A rare onfield smile as the ball fails to come out of her hand in delivery. She dries her hand on a cloth. I think it must be very humid out there – we’ve already seen the batters pause for drinks breaks.
8th over: New Zealand 57-2 (Kerr 10, Devine 0) What can Devine and Kerr do from here? Three handy wides from the over.
WICKET! Bates b Mlaba 32 (New Zealand 53-2)
Bates dipped like a doughnut by a quicker ball, shuffling around the crease, goes to paddle one round the corner, but loses her stumps. She throws her bat in the air in dismay. Great energy at the top of the innings though.
7th over: New Zealand 50-1 (Bates 25, Kerr 8) The cameras aren’t quite making it clear how full, or otherwise the ground it. Lots of noise anyway. New Zealand farm seven from the over.
6th over: New Zealand 43-1 (Bates 25, Kerr 8) A double change as Mlaba replaces Khaka. A striking figure, her short hair dyed blond – a neat nose ring. A leading edge from Bates drops just short of point But Bates makes the most of a leg-side offering, kneeling and shovelling four. End of the power play – with this the most runs conceded by South Africa in the power play this tournament.
5th over: New Zealand 36-1 (Bates 18, Kerr 8) A bowling change, as Tryon replaces Kapp. Wolvaardt, who looks permanently worried, bites her lip. Some running-between-the-wickets confusion for the first time, but South Africa can’t capitalise as Kapp fumbles slightly in her pick up. Excellent over.
4th over: New Zealand 34-1 (Bates 17, Kerr 7) Khaka keeps it tight, New Zealand farming ones and twos, till the last ball when Bates pulls past the diving mid off to the rope. Alastair Cook is here, watching with his young family.
3rd over: New Zealand 24-1 (Bates 10, Kerr 4) New Zealand’s aggressive intent continues, though with less to show from it. A no ball from Kapp – but no sweeties as Kerr is bowled from the free hit.
2nd over: New Zealand 20-1 (Bates 7, Kerr 4) Bates get in on the act, swiping Khaka to the midwicket boundary. Plimmer falls –good strong catch from Luus 0 but Kerr comes in and immediately is on the attack too, pulling four from her first ball. This is A PLAN.
WICKET! Plimmer c Luus b Khaka (New Zealand 16-1)
Plimmer goes big one too many times and Luus is waiting…can she hold on? The seconds still, but she does, to South African sprinting delight.
1st over: New Zealand 9-0 (Bates 1, Plimmer 8): My my! Young Plimmer has the bit between her teeth – aggressive from the first ball, a boundary from the fourth as Plimmer hauls Kapp to the rope., four more as she lays into a shorter ball, swivels and pulls with gumption.
The players are out, Marizanne Kapp has ball in hand, here we go!
This is Devine’s last match as New Zealand’s T20 captain, and Suzie Bates today overtakes Mithali Raj to become the most capped player in women’s international cricket.
Here come the umpires, here come the teams for the anthems, hand in hand with the children mascots. The Kiwis are in fine voice tonight and Sophie Devine grins wolfishly at the end.
Now South Africa’s turn, hands across their chests, with the best anthem in cricket.
New Zealand XI
New Zealand XI: Suzie Bates, Georgia Plimmer, Amelia Kerr, Sophie Devine (capt), Brooke Halliday, Maddy Green, Isabella Gaze (wk), Lea Tahuhu, Rosemary Mair, Eden Carson, Fran Jonas
Unchanged from the semi-final.
South African XI
South Africa XI: Laura Wolvaardt (capt), Tazmin Brits, Anneke Bosch, Marizanne Kapp, Chloe Tryon, Sune Luus, Annerie Dercksen, Nadine de Klerk, Sinalo Jafta (wk), Nonkululeko Mlaba, Ayabonga Khaka.
Unchanged all tournament.
“It feels to me like a chasing ground,” says Nasser. It’s growing dark, it’s over 30 degrees and the seats are filling up…
Ninety-seven chances have gone down in this competition. Why. Why???? Mel Jones has been asking. “Some people say it is about the lights, some about the pressure. I think we have to go back to basics over the next four year cycle in catching and fielding.”
New Zealand wanted to bat anyway – and they too keep the same side from the semi-final. Sophie Devine says that she has exchanged messages with the men’s team over in India, who just won for the first time in India for over 36 years.
South Africa win the toss and will field!
Laura Wolvaardt: “I think it has worked really well for us throughout the tournament. I think we have batting resource we haven’t even used yet, though I hope the top order can do the job.”
South Africa keep the same side.
And this is a super read on where South Africa and New Zealand sit (as well as the now knocked out West Indies.)
I love this from Suzie Bates:
“We’re the grandmas of this team, still standing. Leah [Tahuhu] with her bionic knees, Sophie having dealt with a lot of stuff as captain, and me keeping on going – it’s really a special moment. There have been tough times, we have been through ups and downs, but that we have made the final is special. We look after each other.”
Preamble
Hello! This is it. A T20 World Cup final – but not just any T20 World Cup Final. A T20 World Cup final without Australia, without England, without India – for the first time in the history of the women’s T20 competition.
But, as big as the news has been about England and India’s underwhelming performances, (see Raf Nicholson here):
And Australia’s shock defeat (see Megan Maurice here):
The real news is the rise of New Zealand and South Africa. Both surprise finalists, both on the rise from the “middle group” of women’s cricket teams – who have seemed so far away from the big three. But not so now.
Sophie Devine’s New Zealand started the tournament after a disastrous year of results. Their rebuilding phase had not brought any tangible benefits, and Devine worried to women’s cricket podcast “Powerplay” that young girls were gravitating towards netball or rugby union instead. But once they hit the tournament, everything started to come together, with the tournament’s leading wicket taker Amelia Kerr the shining light.
South Africa, who knocked out England to reach the final in the last competition have been hovering on the edge of the big time, “Two finals in two years, we must be doing something right” in the words of Laura Wolvaardt. Their strength has been that batting – topped by Anneke Bosch’s incredible 74 not out against Australia.
By this evening will be a new name on the trophy. Play starts at 3pm BST. Join us to see history made.