India Women were 59 for 2 after 7.5 overs in the first T20I against South Africa Women, but the innings had already lost some of the force that Shafali Verma and Smriti Mandhana had given it at the start. India had reached 48 for 2 by the end of the Powerplay, after the openers put on a flying start before South Africa pulled things back.
Mandhana was caught by Laura Wolvaardt off Ayabonga Khaka, who had been brought on as a replacement bowler and delivered the breakthrough South Africa needed. Khaka had already ended Mandhana’s stay, and Harmanpreet Kaur was left at the crease after both openers were out. India still moved past 50 during the passage of play, but the tempo had changed sharply from the first four overs.
That shift mattered because South Africa had little room to spare after India’s early burst, and the response from Nadine De Klerk and Nonkululeko Mlaba kept the pressure on Jemimah Rodrigues and Harmanpreet. The visitors had started with intent, but the wickets slowed them just as the innings was beginning to stretch beyond the Powerplay.
For India, the next phase now depends on whether Harmanpreet can turn that early platform into a total South Africa cannot reel in. For South Africa, the comeback has already changed the match from a chase of damage limitation into one where every over from here carries real weight.