South Africa powered their way to an emphatic 80-run victory over Scotland, boosting their Net Run Rate with the tournament's highest score of 166/5. On a scorching afternoon in Dubai, quickfire knocks from Laura Wolvaardt, Tazmin Brits, and Marizanne Kapp set the stage, leaving Scotland unable to match the daunting target. Nonkululeko Mlaba led the bowling attack, claiming 3 for 12 as Scotland’s hopes of reaching the semifinals were officially extinguished.
The foundation for South Africa’s triumph was laid by their opening duo, Wolvaardt and Brits. Wolvaardt had an early reprieve when Katherine Fraser dropped a simple catch with the batter on just two runs. She quickly capitalised on the lifeline, hitting a boundary off the very next ball. Wolvaardt’s aggressive approach continued as she dispatched Rachel Slater for more boundaries and greeted off-spinner Olivia Bell with a towering six and a four.
While Wolvaardt dominated early on, Brits found her rhythm later, smashing Slater for consecutive boundaries through extra cover in the final over of the PowerPlay. That 18-run over propelled South Africa to a strong start at 60/0 after six overs. Wolvaardt’s innings also saw her surpass Lizelle Lee as South Africa’s highest run-scorer in the T20 format.
Wolvaardt’s fiery knock ended in the eighth over when Fraser redeemed herself by taking the South African captain’s wicket, with Bell completing the catch. Scotland briefly tightened their grip, allowing only 23 runs in the next four overs. Darcey Carter’s first delivery then removed Anneke Bosch, but that only brought the explosive Kapp to the crease.
Kapp wasted no time, immediately stepping out to Maqsood and smashing consecutive boundaries. After Brits was dismissed, Kapp took full control, using her footwork to devastating effect and hitting six boundaries before falling in the 18th over. South Africa added 44 runs in the final five overs, setting a total far beyond Scotland’s reach.
Scotland’s reply began with promise as Sarah Bryce struck an authoritative boundary, but their chase unraveled quickly. Bryce was caught and bowled by Chloe Tryon in the third over, sparking a collapse. Tryon soon dismissed Bryce’s sister, Katherine, in a similar manner, while Ayabonga Khaka removed Saskia Horley, leaving Scotland struggling at 34 for 3 by the end of the PowerPlay.
As wickets tumbled, Mlaba took charge with her left-arm spin, climbing to the top of the tournament’s wicket-taker rankings. She bowled Ailsa Lister and Darcey Carter, reducing Scotland to 45 for 6. Katherine Fraser’s resistance at one end was short-lived, as she became Mlaba’s third victim. South Africa wrapped up the win with some brilliant fielding, sealing a comprehensive victory.
Brief scores:
South Africa 166/5 in 20 overs (Marizanne Kapp 43, Tazmin Brits 43, Laura Wolvaardt 40; Kathryn Bryce 1-31)
Scotland 86 in 17.5 overs (Nonkululeko Mlaba 3-12, Nadine de Klerk 2-15)
South Africa won by 80 runs.