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NZ captain Santner wants ‘perfect game’ to halt unbeaten S Africa

  • South Africa remain the tournament’s only unbeaten team and their seven wins ​in a row include a seven-wicket thumping of New Zealand in the group stage
Published March 4, 2026 Updated March 4, 2026 11:23am
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KOLKATA: New ​Zealand captain wants his team to piece together their first “perfect game” ‌of the Twenty20 World Cup when they face in-form South Africa in Wednesday’s semi-final at Eden Gardens with a wound fresh in their minds.

South Africa remain the tournament’s only unbeaten team and their seven wins ​in a row include a seven-wicket thumping of New Zealand in the group stage.

While ​that loss still rankled, Santner said the familiarity bred from that clash left ⁠little room for surprises.

“We haven’t probably played the perfect game throughout this tournament. I ​guess that’s a good thing for us,” Santner told reporters on Tuesday.

“I guess we can put ​it all together, put us in a pretty good position.

“I think there’s no real hiding or secrets about what South Africa are going to bring for us. We know they’re going to probably roll out the ​same team… they probably know what we’re going to do as well.”

Having played all three ​Super Eights games in Sri Lanka, New Zealand are wary of how the pitch at the Eden Gardens ‌would ⁠behave and are braced to adjust.

While 2024 runners-up South Africa appear more balanced on paper, Santner said the contest will hinge on who reads conditions fastest.

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“It’s all up to the surface and adapting as quick as we can…they have kind of all bases covered,” he said. “That’s why ​they’re undefeated.”

Both teams are ​chasing a first men’s ⁠white-ball World Cup and Santner promised a full-throttle effort to reach Sunday’s final.

“We know the heartbreak of South Africa two years ago. I ​think again, they’re playing some very good cricket, as they’ve shown throughout ​this tournament.”

“We ⁠know South Africa are going to be a threat, as they’ve shown.

“We’re just going to go there and try to put some pressure on them at different stages of the game, and they’re ⁠going ​to do the same for us.”

New Zealand fast bowler ​Matt Henry, who had returned home on paternity leave, will rejoin the squad on Tuesday night and Santner could not ​confirm if he would play in the semi-final.

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