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Laura Wolvaardt Vows to Bounce Back after Australia Outclass SA in World Cup Opener

The Proteas Women began their ICC Women’s T20 World Cup campaign with a sobering 65-run defeat to Australia, bowled out for 107 in pursuit of 173, at Old Trafford in Manchester, England, on Saturday, 13 June 2026.

For long passages in the field there was plenty for Laura Wolvaardt’s side to build on, with a revived new-ball partnership making early inroads, but a batting collapse in the chase left South Africa with ground to recover in a punishing Group 1.

Asked to bowl after Australia won the toss, the Proteas Women struck early through the reunited pairing of Marizanne Kapp and Shabnim Ismail. Kapp drew first blood in the opening over, Georgia Voll caught by Kayla Reyneke for a duck on her T20 World Cup debut, and Ismail removed the dangerous Beth Mooney to leave Australia 52 for 2 at the end of the powerplay.

Phoebe Litchfield then wrested the game away with a brilliant counterattack, racing to a fifty from just 24 balls before Ayabonga Khaka had her caught by Wolvaardt. Khaka and left-arm spinner Nonkululeko Mlaba pegged Australia back through the middle overs, Mlaba accounting for both Ellyse Perry, for 36, and Ashleigh Gardner, while Nadine de Klerk produced a sharp catch and the wicket to send back Georgia Wareham for 32.

Kapp was the most economical of the South African bowlers, conceding just 29 from her four overs, while the returning Ismail bowled with genuine pace in front of a crowd of 7,543 at Old Trafford. Ismail briefly left the field with a finger injury during the innings but was passed fit to bat later in the day. South Africa’s discipline at the death restricted Australia to 172 for 8, Khaka, Mlaba and De Klerk each claiming two wickets, leaving a competitive total on a used surface that the Proteas Women believed was within range.

The chase, though, unravelled almost from the outset. Sophie Molineux, captaining Australia for the first time at a T20 World Cup, struck in the opening over to remove Suné Luus, and Kim Garth bowled Annerie Dercksen cheaply to leave South Africa 7 for 2.

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Wolvaardt and De Klerk rebuilt with care, De Klerk striking 25 before Wareham bowled her, and the captain anchoring the innings with a composed 44. But once Wareham held a fine catch at cover off Molineux to end Wolvaardt’s stay, the innings fell apart. 

The Proteas Women lost their last six wickets for a handful of runs as Australia’s spinners turned the screw, Wareham finishing with three wickets to add to her 32 to claim the Player of the Match award, and Molineux and Alana King taking two apiece as South Africa folded for 107.

Wolvaardt was honest in her assessment afterwards, while taking heart from her bowlers. “Tough day today. I thought restricting them to that score wasn’t bad. Disappointing day, but they bowled really well,” Cricinfo reported the SA skipper saying.

She was encouraged by the new-ball effort that had given South Africa their platform. “Been a long time since we bowled like that in the powerplay, so it was nice to see, and with a couple of other bowlers stepping up,” Wolvaardt said.

The reverse carried an extra edge given recent history between the sides. South Africa reached the final at each of the past two editions, in 2023 and 2024, and had knocked Australia out at the most recent tournament, which lent Australia’s emphatic response a pointed quality as they signalled their intent to reclaim top billing in the women’s game.

The result leaves the Proteas Women at the foot of Group 1 on net run rate, having played one and lost one, with Australia top after their statement win. 

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With only the leading sides advancing from a tight pool, South Africa know their remaining fixtures against Pakistan, India, the Netherlands and Bangladesh now carry added weight, both for points and for the net run rate that may ultimately separate the contenders.

Wolvaardt, for her part, was adamant the campaign would not be defined by one afternoon. “Long way to go and we’ll put this game behind us,” she said. 

The Proteas Women’s next assignment comes against Pakistan at Edgbaston in Birmingham on Wednesday, 17 June 2026, as they chase the run of results that would reignite their pursuit of a first global title.

The Proteas Women Group Results and Fixtures at the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 in England and Wales

Sat 13 June: Australia beat South Africa by 65 runs (Old Trafford, Manchester)
Wed 17 June, 19h30: South Africa vs. Pakistan (Edgbaston, Birmingham)
Sun 21 June, 15h30: South Africa vs. India (Old Trafford, Manchester)
Thu 25 June, 19h30: South Africa vs. Netherlands (Bristol County Ground, Bristol)
Sun 28 June, 11h30: South Africa vs. Bangladesh (Lord’s, London)

All times are SAST.

The Proteas Women Team Sheet against Australia at the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 in England and Wales

1. Laura Wolvaardt (Captain)
2. Suné Luus
3. Annerie Dercksen
4. Nadine de Klerk
5. Marizanne Kapp
6. Chloé Tryon
7. Kayla Reyneke
8. Sinalo Jafta (Wicketkeeper)
9. Shabnim Ismail
10. Ayabonga Khaka
11. Nonkululeko Mlaba

Substitutes

12. Tumi Sekhukhune
13. Dané van Niekerk
14. Karabo Meso
15. Tazmin Brits

The Australia Team Sheet

1. Beth Mooney (Wicketkeeper)
2. Georgia Voll
3. Phoebe Litchfield
4. Ellyse Perry
5. Ashleigh Gardner (Vice-Captain)
6. Georgia Wareham
7. Annabel Sutherland
8. Nicola Carey
9. Sophie Molineux (Captain)
10. Kim Garth
11. Alana King

Substitutes

12. Megan Schutt
13. Lucy Hamilton
14. Grace Harris
15. Tahlia McGrath


Main Photo Caption: The Proteas Women fell to a 65-run defeat against Australia, beaten inside 17 overs in pursuit of 173, in their ICC Women’s T20 World Cup opener, at Old Trafford in Manchester, England, on Saturday, 13 June 2026. All Photos: ICC / Getty Images

Photo 2 Caption: Nonkululeko Mlaba claimed two key wickets, including that of Ellyse Perry, in a determined bowling effort for the Proteas Women.

Photo 3 Caption: Laura Wolvaardt top-scored with 44 but the Proteas Women fell well short in their tournament opener.

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