Proteas begin West Indies T20 series as World Cup preparation intensifies

By Adnaan Mohamed

The streamers has barely settled on the pitch, yet the cricketing carousel is already spinning at full tilt. Less than 48 hours after the SA20 final, seven players are back in harness, this time in national colours as South Africa and the West Indies begin a trimmed three-match T20 series, a final nets session before the T20 World Cup spotlight switches on.

Originally slated for five games, the series was shortened to avoid colliding with the World Cup support window. Make no mistake, though this is no gentle loosener. Both teams are still bruised from the last global showpiece. South Africa reached the final and had one hand on the trophy before India snatched it away by seven runs. West Indies fell at the Super Eights hurdle, undone by the Proteas. The hunger to go one better burns like a fresh new ball on a green pitch.

For South Africa, the backdrop is complicated. Results in 2025 were uneven – 12 losses in 18 matches and no series wins – often due to injuries and players juggling formats.

All-format coach Shukri Conrad will still want a series victory inked next to his name, even if this contest is labelled “preparatory”.

Management, however, have opted for rotation. Quinton de Kock, Marco Jansen and Tristan Stubbs—fresh from lifting the SA20 trophy with Sunrisers Eastern Cape against Pretoria Capitals—have been rested for Tuesday’s first T20 in Paarl. Lhuan-dre Pretorius and Eathan Bosch step in as short-term replacements.

The series is a dress rehearsal for the T20 World Cup starting next week in India, where rhythm matters as much as results.

Markram’s joy for Stubbs and empathy for Maharaj

Aiden Markram Photo: CSA

Proteas T20 captain Aiden Markram, who knows the Sunrisers’ dressing room intimately, was glowing about Stubbs’ match-defining final.

“He’s one of the guys in the team everyone wants to see do well. He’s that sort of person, and he grafts hard, he’s the ultimate pro.

And when you put the hard work in and don’t get the results you can get quite down on yourself, even your peers feel sorry for you. Then to come out and play a knock like that last night [Sunday], you can only be happy for him. It’s great to do it in final.

And when you do well in big games you take that confidence to the next one.”

Stubbs’ unbeaten 63 off 41 balls, alongside Matthew Breetzke’s 68 off 49, powered the Sunrisers’ chase of 159 with balls to spare – an innings stitched together like a perfectly timed partnership.

On the losing side stood Keshav Maharaj, Capitals skipper and Proteas stalwart. Markram understood the sting.

“As a person he’s an all-in type of guy, and it would have hurt him. He’s not an emotional kind of guy.

It’s just that he cares and puts a lot of love into it, then you come up just short, and the way the game unfolded as well, I understand why he’s hurting.

When I see him I’ll put an arm around him, get him riled up. I chatted to him a bit last night and said the trophy you want to win is the one in a few weeks time and that’s what we’ll go for now, and he’s all in for that.

We’ll try get him over last night as quick as we can and get him looking forward to the world cup as quick as we can.”

Now the whites are folded away, the national caps pulled on, and the scoreboard reset to zero. The real exam looms, but first, three high-tempo auditions under Paarl’s lights.

South Africa squad vs West Indies (T20s)

Aiden Markram (capt), Corbin Bosch, Dewald Brevis, Lhuan-dre Pretorius, Rubin Hermann, George Linde, Keshav Maharaj, Kwena Maphaka, Lungi Ngidi, Anrich Nortje, Kagiso Rabada, Ryan Rickelton, Jason Smith, Eathan Bosch

Sunrisers Eastern Cape crowned SA20 kings

By Adnaan Mohamed

The Sunrisers Eastern Cape confirmed their dominance of the Betway SA20 by clinching a third title in four seasons with a six-wicket win over the Pretoria Capitals in a dramatic final at Newlands on Sunday.

A sold-out Cape Town crowd watched Tristan Stubbs and Matthew Breetzke produce an unbroken fifth-wicket partnership to overhaul the target with four balls to spare.

Their heroics were required after Dewald Brevis had earlier delivered one of the finest innings the grand old ground at the foot of Table Mountain has witnessed.

Brevis sets the stage

Walking in with the Capitals reeling at 1/2, Brevis launched a fearless counter-attack, smashing a sublime 101 off 56 balls (eight fours, seven sixes). It was a statement innings from the league’s record signing, lifting Pretoria to a competitive 158/7.

Dewald Brevis

For much of the chase, that total appeared enough to hand the Capitals their maiden SA20 title as the Sunrisers slid to 48/4 and the required rate ballooned.

Stubbs flips the script

The momentum shifted dramatically in the 18th over when Stubbs tore into Gideon Peters, plundering 21 runs to revive the chase. Newlands sensed a twist as 12 runs followed off Lungi Ngidi’s penultimate over, before Stubbs delivered the decisive blow with two consecutive sixes off Bryce Parsons, to send the Orange Army into raptures.

Tristan Stubbs Photo: SA20

Sunrisers coach Adrian Birrell hailed both the spectacle and his team’s composure.

“I am really proud and thrilled. It was a hell of a final. For Dewald to play like he did and for us to hold them to 158. And then needing 13 an over for the last four-five overs,” Birrell said.

“I’m very proud. Four finals in a row is a fantastic achievement. I’m very proud of every player and the whole squad. Some players haven’t played and we’ve got a very good bench that could have played in other teams, perhaps, but I’m very proud to get here today and we’ve got to be giving ourselves a chance.

“You want to win the trophy but you want to do it the right way and set an example for the younger generation.”

‘Funny things happen under pressure’

Stubbs, leading the side to a championship in his first season as captain, admitted the tension never truly disappeared.

“So stoked, can’t explain it. Don’t know what we did or how we did it. Me and Matty out there, we were calm but probably were panicking too. We know we bat so well together. Kept looking for an over to get momentum,” Stubbs said.

“Came in the 16th over and we ran with it. Funny things happen under pressure. Have really enjoyed this month. Have had a great group to work with. We plan really well for games. It’s a great run management by Aidi (coach Adrian) and the team. And we have a good Orange Army that backs us wherever we go.”

Capitals left to reflect

For the Pretoria Capitals, it was a familiar heartbreak. Having now lost two SA20 finals to the Sunrisers, including the inaugural decider in 2023, captain Keshav Maharaj admitted the defeat would linger.

“It is disappointing to say the least. Two batters were in and got set,” Maharaj said.

“You feel the hurt of coming so close. The starts we get from both bat and ball is something we have to look at.

“Boys will hurt for a bit. I’m not someone who dwells on the negatives. But we have to rectify the mistakes if we have to win trophies as a unit.”

As the sun set behind Table Mountain, the numbers told the story: four finals, three titles, and a team that continues to thrive when the pressure is greatest.

Betway SA20 Season 4 award winners

2026 Player of the Season Quinton De Kock of Sunrisers Eastern Cape during the final of the Betway SA20 season 4 between Pretoria Capitals (PC) and The Sunrisers Eastern Cape (SEC) held at the Newlands Cricket Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa on the 25th January 2026

Photo by Shaun Roy / Sportzpics for SA20

  • Player of the Season: Quinton de Kock (Sunrisers Eastern Cape)
  • Batter of the Season: Quinton de Kock (Sunrisers Eastern Cape)
  • Bowler of the Season: Ottneil Baartman (Paarl Royals)
  • Rising Star: Jordan Hermann (Sunrisers Eastern Cape)
  • ABSA Moneyball Saver: Marco Jansen (Sunrisers Eastern Cape)
  • It’s Raining Sixes: Dewald Brevis (Pretoria Capitals)
  • Spirit of Cricket: Sunrisers Eastern Cape
  • Groundsman of the Year: Braam Mong (Newlands)

Jason Smith over Tristan Stubbs: Inside SA’s bold call for the T20 World Cup

By Adnaan Mohamed

South Africa’s T20 Cricket World Cup squad announcement made one thing clear: the selectors are prioritising structure and balance over star power. No decision underlined that more than the inclusion of Jason Smith ahead of Tristan Stubbs.

On paper, it is a difficult call to justify. Stubbs is one of South Africa’s most proven T20 batters in recent seasons. His performances in the IPL, where he has averaged over 50 with a strike rate above 170, place him among the most effective middle-order players in the global game.

He is also already established in South Africa’s T20I setup and has experience across all three formats. With the World Cup taking place in India and Sri Lanka, leaving out a batter who has thrived in Indian conditions is a significant gamble.

Tristan Stubbs (Source: @mufaddal_vohra/x.com)

However, World Cup selection is about fit, not form alone. The choice of Jason Smith suggests the selectors believe this tournament will demand flexibility and game management rather than constant aggression. Smith is not in the squad to outscore opponents in ten balls; he is there to control innings when conditions or situations require restraint. On slower surfaces, or against high-quality spin, that role becomes increasingly valuable.

South Africa’s recent struggles in ICC tournaments have often followed a familiar pattern: strong starts undone by middle-order collapses or an inability to adapt when conditions shift. Smith offers a different profile. He can bat in multiple positions, rotate strike, and provide stability when the run rate tightens. These are not headline skills, but they are often decisive in knockout matches.

The broader squad composition reinforces this approach. Tony de Zorzi’s selection despite a hamstring issue, Ryan Rickelton’s omission despite strong domestic form, and Kagiso Rabada’s inclusion despite fitness concerns all point to a group built with specific roles in mind. The selectors appear willing to accept short-term risk in pursuit of a balanced, adaptable XI.

That does not remove the downside of leaving Stubbs out. T20 cricket remains a format where individual brilliance can outweigh careful planning. There will be matches where South Africa could use the immediate impact and power Stubbs provides. If Smith struggles to score quickly enough or fails to influence games, the decision will be questioned sharply.

In selecting Jason Smith, South Africa have made a clear statement. They are backing composure, versatility, and tactical discipline over explosive potential. It is a conservative call in a format that rewards boldness, but one rooted in a clear reading of conditions and tournament pressure. Whether that reading is correct will define the success or failure of their World Cup campaign.

South Africa Men’s Squad – ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026
Aiden Markram (captain, Momentum Multiply Titans), Corbin Bosch (Momentum Multiply Titans),
Dewald Brevis (Momentum Multiply Titans), Quinton de Kock (DP World Lions), Tony de Zorzi (World
Sports Betting Western Province), Donovan Ferreira (Momentum Multiply Titans), Marco Jansen
(Momentum Multiply Titans), George Linde (World Sports Betting Western Province), Keshav
Maharaj (Hollywoodbets Dolphins), Kwena Maphaka (DP World Lions), David Miller (Hollywoodbets
Dolphins), Lungi Ngidi (Momentum Multiply Titans), Anrich Nortje (Hollywoodbets Dolphins), Kagiso
Rabada (DP World Lions) and Jason Smith (Hollywoodbets Dolphins).

Management
Shukri Conrad (Head Coach), Khomotso Volvo Masubelele (Team Manager), Ashwell Prince (Batting
Coach), Piet Botha (Bowling Coach), Kruger van Wyk (Fielding Coach), Albie Morkel (Specialist
Consultant), Runeshan Moodley (Strength and Conditioning Coach), Matthew Reuben (Performance
Analyst), Sizwe Hadebe (Physiotherapist), Dr Salih Solomon (Team Doctor), Kyle Botha (Logistics and
Masseur), Lucy Davey (Media Manager) and Brian Khonto (Security Officer).

Group D Fixtures
Monday, 09 February at 15:30 SAST
South Africa vs Canada – Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad
Wednesday, 11 February at 07:30 SAST
South Africa vs Afghanistan – Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad
Friday, 14 February at 15:30 SAST
New Zealand vs South Africa – Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad
Tuesday, 18 February at 07:30 SAST
South Africa vs United Arab Emirates – Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi

Betway SA20 Season 4: A Summer of Sixes, Stars and Succession

By Adnaan Mohamed

South Africa’s summer blockbuster is ready for its opening scene. Betway SA20 Season 4 strides to the crease on Boxing Day at Newlands, where cricket royalty and fearless young guns will collide in a festive showdown packed with promise.

The countdown gathered pace in Cape Town as League Commissioner Graeme Smith addressed the media alongside a who’s who of SA20 captains: Aiden Markram, Faf du Plessis, Kagiso Rabada, David Miller, Keshav Maharaj and Tristan Stubbs. The message was clear: the league is no longer finding its feet, it’s sprinting between the wickets.

“I’m very excited. I think from our perspective, it has been three great seasons building up to where we are now,” Smith said.

“We are really looking forward to a great summer of cricket. The players on my left and right, having spoken to them this morning, are also really looking forward to performing well over the next coming weeks.”

Smith believes SA20 has become fertile ground for South Africa’s next wave of talent.

“We’re starting to see an influx of talent performing well. It’s an incredible opportunity for those youngsters to be exposed to the quality of the game, to learn and to use the League as a platform for them.

“It’s not just the 15 players that play for South Africa in the year, but another 60-odd players that have developed.”

A new chapter begins for Aiden Markram, who swaps Sunrisers Eastern Cape success for fresh challenges at Durban’s Super Giants.

“It’s exciting being with the new team,” Markram said. “The competition is such a great time of year in South Africa. I’ve said it now quite a few times, but guys really enjoy it. The fans love it.”

No player embodies SA20’s growth more than Tristan Stubbs. Once a Rising Star, the Gqeberha local now captains Sunrisers Eastern Cape.

“I’m really excited and just keen to get going. We sort of followed a similar blueprint to the first year. A lot of the team is based around local boys who know PE, live in and around PE. Just being a PE boy brings that culture and that extra fight to play for the team in front of a home crowd,” Stubbs said.

At Joburg Super Kings, Faf du Plessis is embracing a youthful revolution.

“I feel there was a shift in his (Fleming) style when it comes to looking at younger players and backing younger players,” Du Plessis said.

“This year especially we have a very young squad… That’s the nature of the beast of SA20.”

David Miller expects raw hunger to be the difference-maker.

“There’s going to be a lot of energy, enthusiasm from the youngsters… This is the month to enjoy the season and have a lot of fun and play extremely competitive cricket at the same time.”

New leadership also arrives in Centurion, where Keshav Maharaj eyes Highveld challenges.

“Every novel opens with a new chapter, so I’m really looking forward to it,” Maharaj said.

Defending champions MI Cape Town, meanwhile, lean on chemistry as Kagiso Rabada sharpens the attack.

“Familiarity is a key thing. You need to bond with your teammates,” Rabada said.

With opening-night tickets already sold out, SA20 Season 4 is shaping up as a summer where every ball matters, and the future of South African cricket swings freely.

Betway SA20 Season 4 tickets on sale!

Fans have an opportunity to secure the hottest seats in town with tickets for Season 4 of Betway SA20 going on sale today. The anticipated fourth season will take place in a new festive window between 26 December 2025 and 25 January 2026, giving holiday-goers and those on staycations access to non-stop cricket action and entertainment. 

The opening match at Newlands on Boxing Day between defending Champions MI Cape Town and Durban’s Super Giants promises electrifying fireworks to start the season. The clash will set the tone for an exciting lineup of opening-week fixtures in Pretoria, Paarl, Durban, Gqeberha, and Johannesburg. All tickets can be purchased on www.SA20.co.za
and at all stadium ticket offices.

Following last season’s record-breaking attendance figures and ticket sales, the League returns with even more energy, thrilling matchups, and unforgettable fan experiences across the six stadiums in the country. Returning with an even bigger bang, fans can expect something for everyone: world-class cricket, IG-worthy vibes, dance-cam moments and more.  

“The opening of ticket sales is a true marker that Season 4 is around the corner,” Betway SA20 League Commissioner, Graeme Smith said. “It has been encouraging to see the demand for tickets during the exclusive pre-sale window, with the opening match and the Final at Newlands already drawing a lot of interest and demand. We’re looking forward to
being a part of everyone’s festive season plans.”

With all six 19-player squads confirmed following a record-breaking auction, the attention moves to the star quality of local and international players who will be lighting up the stage. Fans will be treated to some of world cricket’s superstars, with Kagiso Rabada, Jos Buttler, Dewald Brevis, Tristan Stubbs, David Miller and Faf du Plessis bringing their experience and flair to the competition. 

Off the field, the 20th Players will be giving fans a front-row voice and bringing them closer to the incredible action like never before. Each of the six 20th Players represent a city where the six teams are based and will lead the fan movement in their region through their diverse voices and entertaining online personalities.  Join Anele Mdoda (Gqeberha), Leandie du Randt (Pretoria), Moshe Ndiki (Johannesburg), Nadia Jaftha (Cape Town), Schalk Bezuidenhout (Durban) and Vafa Naraghi (Paarl) as they lead the chorus to get fans to put their hands up in the air in the stands and online.

From behind-the-scenes moments, social media takeovers, matchday fit-checks, competitions and activations, the 20th Players bring the Betway SA20 experience to life; keeping fans connected both in stadiums and online.

Tickets for all fixtures are available through SA20’s official ticketing partner, Ticketpro, via www.SA20.co.za and at the six stadium ticket offices.

After last season’s unprecedented demand, fans are encouraged to secure their seats early and follow @SA20_League on social media for updates on matches, giveaways, and exclusive 20th Player content. All news and fixtures can also be found at www.sa20.co.za

Notes:
For more information, follow #BetwaySA20 on all social media platforms.
Twitter: @SA20_League
Facebook: @SA20League
Instagram: @sa20_league
TikTok: @sa20_league
YouTube: @SA20_League

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