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Black Caps T20 World semi spot on hold

  • 12 hours ago
  • 3 min read
Glenn Phillips took two vital catches, a wicket and top-scored in the Black Caps loss to England PHOTO: ICC
Glenn Phillips took two vital catches, a wicket and top-scored in the Black Caps loss to England PHOTO: ICC

England hold their nerve to edge past New Zealand by four wickets with three balls to spare in their final ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 Super 8 fixture.


The Black Caps are not confirmed of a semifinal berth yet. Their fate will be decided by the clash between Pakistan and Sri Lanka on Saturday.


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Asked to bowl first, England spinners had a field day as they restricted New Zealand to 159/7. All New Zealand batters fell to spinners as England deployed 16 overs by spin, their most ever in T20I cricket.


Seasoned campaigner Adil Rashid, who had provided England the breakthrough, finished with 2/28 while Will Jacks continued his great run in the tournament with 2/23.


It was a dream World Cup debut for leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed, who bagged the wicket of Rachin Ravindra on his very first delivery. In his three overs, he claimed two wickets and conceded 28 runs. Left-arm spinner Liam Dawson joined in the fun with the wicket of Daryl Mitchell.


After a watchful start, Black Caps openers Finn Allen (29) and Tim Seifert (35) stepped on the gas in the fourth over. Jofra Archer had started the innings with a maiden but was taken for 16 runs in his fourth over, as New Zealand raced to 54/0 in powerplay.


It set the tone for the Black Caps innings, who maintained a good scoring rate even when they lost wickets in clusters.


Glenn Phillips was back among the runs as he scored 39 off 28 -- the highest score for his team on the day. He held the innings together in the middle overs with handy partnerships with Ravindra and Mark Chapman.


A special all-round performance of 2/23 and unbeatenn 32 from 18 balls from Will Jacks was the difference as England beat New Zealand in the ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026.


New Zealand made a roaring start to their defence as Matt Henry got a wicket in his first over yet again. He had Phil Salt nick to the wicketkeeper. Jos Buttler's tough campaign continued as he fell to Lockie Ferguson in the same fashion, and England were 2/2 after just eight balls into the innings.


However, Harry Brook, who became the first captain to hit a century in T20 World Cups in the previous game, calmed some of the early nerves with back to back boundaries against Henry. The second was an extravagant scoop for six.


Glenn Phillips played a part in dismissing both Brook and Jacob Bethell, who had built a 48-run stand for the third wicket. While he had the English captain holing out at long-off, Phillips pulled off a stunning diving catch to send back Bethell.


New Zealand looked in the drivers' seat, having reduced England to 58/4.


But England's middle and lower order was up to the challenge. Tom Banton (33), Sam Curran (24), Jacks and Ahmed all came up with valuable contributions to take their team to the finish line.


Having absorbed pressure through the innings, Jacks turned the tide in the 18th over, as he took 22 runs off Phillips, New Zealand's main man up until that point. Ahmed also came up with a cameo of 19 off just seven balls, with the help of two sixes and a four to provide the final flourish.

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