The Proteas Women will look to extend their recent knockout hold over England when the two sides meet in the second semi-final of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 at the Oval in London, England, starting at 7:30pm on Thursday, 2 July 2026.
South Africa, ranked fifth in the world, reach the last four on the back of a nervy win over Bangladesh at Lord’s, and are now chasing a return to the Home of Cricket for Sunday’s final. Standing in their way is an opponent they have grown used to beating when it matters most.
The Proteas knocked England out of the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025 and the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2023, both at the semi-final stage. Laura Wolvaardt was the star of the more recent victory, compiling a commanding 169 in a thumping win in Guwahati, and that record has given the South Africans quiet confidence heading into another knockout meeting.
“I think this is a team that really is able to rise to the big occasions.”
Proteas Women Captain, Laura Wolvaardt
The captain also knows her side has more in the tank. South Africa have found ways to win throughout the tournament without producing their best cricket, a point echoed by senior all-rounder Marizanne Kapp, who sees the group stage as the foundation for a peak still to come.
England, ranked world number two, will be strengthened by the return of captain Nat Sciver-Brunt, who missed her side’s last three group games with a calf injury before being passed fit.
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In her absence, Charlie Dean led England to three further wins, including victories over West Indies and defending champions New Zealand, while Sophia Dunkley seized her chance with the bat, scoring 120 runs in three innings.
The hosts will also enjoy the backing of a near sold-out crowd at the Oval, a factor the Proteas expect to embrace rather than fear, drawing on the experience of a squad that has featured in the closing stages of recent global tournaments.

Wolvaardt has made clear that her side sees the partisan support as part of the occasion rather than a burden.
South Africa’s bowling has underpinned their campaign, with early wickets in the powerplay and disciplined death overs repeatedly pulling games back in their favour. Added depth and power in the batting order has given the side belief that it can close out tight contests more comfortably in the knockout rounds.
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For Wolvaardt, the semi-final also offers a chance to rediscover her own touch. The opener made 44 against Australia and 45 against the Netherlands but is still searching for her first half-century of the tournament, and she is hopeful the bigger score is close.
“We’re not close to playing our best cricket and hopefully we’ve been saving it for that semi-final.”
Proteas Women All-Rounder, Marizanne Kapp
Kapp, the most experienced member of the squad, has been carefully managed by Cricket South Africa between major tournaments and continues to deliver in the biggest moments. At 36, she remains central to the Proteas’ hopes and insists the team is ready to embrace the pressure of a World Cup semi-final at a packed Oval.

South Africa carry the added motivation of lifting a nation that draws so much of its unity from sport, with the team long clear that winning a World Cup for the country remains the ultimate goal.
The winner at the Oval will secure a place in Sunday’s final at Lord’s, the venue where South Africa launched their semi-final push and where the Proteas Women now hope to write the biggest chapter in their history.
Proteas Women ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 Squad
Laura Wolvaardt (captain)
Tazmin Brits
Nadine de Klerk
Annerie Dercksen
Shabnim Ismail
Sinalo Jafta
Marizanne Kapp
Ayabonga Khaka
Suné Luus
Karabo Meso
Nonkululeko Mlaba
Kayla Reyneke
Tumi Sekhukhune
Chloé Tryon
Dané van Niekerk
Main Photo Caption: Laura Wolvaardt captains the Proteas Women in their ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 semi-final against the hosts at the Oval, with a place in Sunday’s Lord’s final and a maiden global title on the line. Photo: Cricket South Africa
Photo 2 Caption: Marizanne Kapp carries hard-earned knockout experience into South Africa’s biggest match of the campaign. Photo: Getty Images via ICC
Photo 3 Caption: England provide the last barrier for a confident, fifth-ranked side chasing history in London. Photo: Getty Images via ICC
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