Thursday, March 05, 2026 | Ramadan 15, 1447 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
22°C / 22°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI
x
Additional flights from Muscat to help stranded passengers in the GCC
Oman to facilitate flights for stranded travellers: FM
Oman Air announces additional flights to 5 cities
Explosion reported off tanker near Kuwait, crew safe, UKMTO says
A fuel tank was subject to an incident: OOMCO
How the war is choking off the world’s oil and gas
Day 5: Latest developments in the war
Oil traffic through Strait of Hormuz down 90%: Kpler

South Africa won’t dwell on T20 World Cup exit, Markram says

minus
plus

 


 Given their form going into ⁠Wednesday's T20 World Cup semi-final, South Africa expected to compete better against ​New Zealand but are philosophical ​about their nine-wicket defeat in a format where momentum can swing quickly.


South Africa had won all seven of their games going into the last-four clash, with five of those wins coming in Ahmedabad, but stumbled when faced with a different set of conditions in ⁠Kolkata, where the ball did not come onto the bat as smoothly.


They ⁠set New Zealand a below-par 170 to win and their opponents easily chased it down with 43 deliveries remaining on the back of Finn Allen’s unbeaten 33-ball 100.


It ‌marked yet another World Cup failure for ​the South Africans, who ⁠are still seeking a first title, but captain Aiden ​Markram said there was no other ‌option but to look ahead to the next tournament.


"We'll reflect as a group," Markram said. "But I’m very ​proud of these guys. They played some really good cricket throughout this competition and it was just an unfortunate evening, really.


"The halfway point, we really felt like we had a sniff. But then, as it goes in T20 cricket, their powerplay ‌got off to a flyer, and you can't protect every boundary. They ​got away, and then from there it was really hard to pull ​it ‌back.


"All ⁠you do is you break down the game and try to find the areas that could have been better. And you get back on the ​horse and you try and improve as a group ⁠and as individuals. ​And hopefully that puts you in good stead for the future."


South Africa’s next assignment is a five-match T20 series in New Zealand starting on March 15, though only three of the World Cup squad, spinners Keshav Maharaj ​and George Linde, and all-rounder Jason Smith, will take part.


New ​Zealand will meet the winner of Thursday's second semi between co-hosts India and England in the final on Sunday.


 



SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon