February 8, 2026. MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai. 11:00 AM IST.
Four of New Zealand’s key players had been ruled out. Devon Conway illness. Michael Bracewell calf. Ish Sodhi unavailable. Kyle Jamieson unavailable. Mitchell Santner confirmed at the toss: “We were a little disjointed. But we’re ready.”
Afghanistan won the toss and chose to bat. They deployed four spinners on a Chennai Chepauk pitch that historically assists spin from over 14. They had beaten New Zealand in the 2021 T20 World Cup by 84 runs NZ bowled out for 75, Rashid Khan 4/9, Fazalhaq Farooqi 4/17.
New Zealand still won. By 5 wickets. With 13 balls remaining.
Match Overview at a Glance
Complete Playing XIs: Both Teams
Afghanistan Playing XI
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Afghanistan’s selection insight: Four frontline spinners Rashid, Mujeeb, Nabi, Sharifi plus Omarzai as a pace allrounder. Afghanistan batted 7 deep with batting ability to No. 8. Farooqi and Sharifi are the only two pure seamers. This is AFG’s spin-dominant T20I strategy optimised for a Chennai pitch with a daytime game.
New Zealand Playing XI
Devon Conway, Michael Bracewell, Ish Sodhi, Kyle Jamieson all missing. Santner is NZ’s only frontline spinner. Ravindra provides part-time left-arm spin as a secondary option.
Afghanistan Innings Scorecard: 182/6 (20 overs)
Batting
| Batter | Runs | Balls | 4s | 6s | How Out |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk) | 49 | — | — | — | |
| Ibrahim Zadran | — | — | — | — | |
| Azmatullah Omarzai | 38 | — | — | — | |
| Mohammad Nabi | 25* | — | — | — | Unbeaten |
| Total | 182/6 | 20 ov |
Bowling (NZ)
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Afghanistan’s 182/6 analysis:
Gurbaz’s 49 off the top order set the tone he attacked the powerplay before Henry dismissed him. Omarzai’s 38 accelerated the middle overs. Nabi’s unbeaten 25* drove the death-over total above 180.
Afghanistan’s 182/6 was built across three distinct batting contributions not one dominant innings. This is the most dangerous type of T20I total: distributed run-scoring means no single wicket breaks the innings. Henry’s 3 wickets removed three different role-players (not all the same phase), and yet Afghanistan still reached 182.
Afghanistan’s 182/6 on the Chepauk pitch which typically assists spin shows that Afghanistan’s batting in 2026 has evolved beyond spin-track reliance. In the 2021 T20 WC, Gurbaz scored 80 off 56 on a UAE pitch. In 2026, Afghanistan again posted 180+ at Chennai. Their batting depth (seven genuine contributors up to Nabi at No. 7) means their total-building ability is now independent of pitch conditions.
New Zealand Chase Scorecard: 183/5 (17.5 overs)
Batting
Fall of wickets:
- 1/14 (Finn Allen, 1.3 ov — Farooqi)
- 2/14 (Rachin Ravindra, 1.4 ov — Farooqi)
- 3/88 (Glenn Phillips, 9.2 ov)
- 4/124 (Tim Seifert, 12.5 ov)
- 5/155 (Mark Chapman, 15.4 ov)
Bowling (Afghanistan)
| Bowler | Overs | Wickets | Runs | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fazalhaq Farooqi | 4 | 2 | — | 2 early wickets in 1.4 overs |
| Rashid Khan | 4 | — | — | Captain, defensive overs |
| Mujeeb Ur Rahman | 4 | — | — | Mystery spin contained |
| Mohammad Nabi | — | — | — |
14/2 After 1.4 Overs: The Near-Collapse That Changed Nothing
NZ needed 183 in 20 overs. By ball 10, they were 14/2. Both Allen and Ravindra dismissed by Farooqi in successive deliveries. Chasing 183 at 14/2 with Afghanistan’s spin-heavy attack yet to bowl their main overs is on paper a position from which NZ should lose.
Farooqi’s double-strike in the 2nd over was the match’s most dangerous single phase. Had a third wicket fallen in the powerplay, NZ would have been under 50/3 with Rashid, Mujeeb, and Nabi all to bowl at least 2 more overs each. The precedent 2021, NZ 75 all out would have been highly relevant.
The Recovery: Glenn Phillips 49 + Tim Seifert Partnership
From 14/2, Glenn Phillips and Tim Seifert built a partnership that took NZ to 88/3. A 74-run stand that moved the required rate from steep to manageable.
Phillips 49: Aggressive middle-order batting, attacking spin in the 4–9 over window. Phillips’ ability to hit Mujeeb and Nabi over the infield picking the gaps rather than going aerial was the tactical adjustment that broke Afghanistan’s spin stranglehold.
Phillips vs Mujeeb in overs 4–9 is the specific tactical battle that defined NZ’s chase. Mujeeb’s mystery spin offbreak grip, googly variation is most dangerous when batters play defensively. Phillips attacked the ball early in its flight, removing the spin differential. By the time Mujeeb completed his 4 overs, the required rate was under 10. That specific adjustment attack spin early in the flight, not wait for it to turn is the blueprint for how subcontinental batting combinations can be neutralised in the middle overs.
Seifert’s Final Push: From 124/4 to 183/5
At 124/4 (over 12.5, Seifert dismissed), NZ needed 59 from 43 balls requiring approximately 8.2 per over with Mark Chapman at No. 5 and Daryl Mitchell at No. 6.
Chapman scored until 155/5 (over 15.4) contributing 31 runs off the last 18 balls he faced while Seifert built the platform. From 155/5 with 4.2 overs remaining, NZ needed 28 off 26 balls. Mitchell and the lower order completed the chase with 13 balls to spare.
New Zealand won by 5 wickets (17.5 overs, 183/5).
Why Tim Seifert Was Player of the Match
Tim Seifert anchored a 183 chase from first wicket down (No. 2) with NZ at 14/2 in 1.4 overs.
Seifert’s value in this specific match is not just the runs he scored. It is the conditions under which he scored them:
- Devon Conway (NZ’s senior T20I anchor) was unavailable Seifert stepped into Conway’s role at No. 2
- NZ were 14/2 when he arrived at the crease the innings was in genuine crisis
- Afghanistan had Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Mohammad Nabi, and Farooqi still to bowl their main overs
- Seifert’s innings lasted from over 2 through over 12.5 a full 10-over anchor in the middle of a T20I chase
Tim Seifert is primarily NZ’s backup wicketkeeper a batter of considerable quality who typically comes in at No. 6 or 7. In this match, because of NZ’s injury crisis and Conway’s absence, Seifert was thrust into the highest-pressure batting position (No. 2, first wicket down with the team already 14/2) against a world-class spin attack in conditions specifically designed to dismiss him. He succeeded. That is the Player of the Match story that no scorecard captures.
The Context You Need 2021 T20 WC: NZ All Out for 75
Afghanistan vs New Zealand, 2021 T20 WC: NZ 75 All Out (Abu Dhabi)
November 7, 2021. Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi. ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, Super 12, Match 40.
| AFG Innings | NZ Innings |
|---|---|
| 159/6 (Gurbaz 80 off 56) | 75 all out (12.1 overs) |
| AFG won by 84 runs | NZ’s lowest T20I score at that point |
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Afghanistan won by 84 runs. Rashid Khan 4/9. Farooqi 4/17. NZ all out for 75 in 12.1 overs one of the most lopsided T20I losses in NZ’s history.
Why Afghanistan Selected 4 Spinners in 2026 at Chennai
Afghanistan’s 4-spinner selection in 2026 was built on a three-layer logic:
- Chennai Chepauk assists spin from over 12–14: the second half of T20I innings almost always produces turn at this ground
- NZ’s spin weakness is proven in 2021 data: Rashid 4/9, Farooqi 4/17, NZ 75 all out. The formula worked once. Why change it?
- NZ’s only frontline spinner was Santner: Sodhi (usually NZ’s second spinner) was absent. Afghanistan’s spinners would face minimal like-for-like bowling competition in the middle overs
Afghanistan’s 4-spinner plan in 2026 was correct in three of its four assumptions. Chennai did spin. NZ did struggle in the powerplay (14/2, Farooqi). NZ had only one frontline spinner in return. The plan failed at point 4. It assumed NZ’s middle order (Phillips, Seifert, Chapman) would play spin the same way as their 2021 batting order (which had Williamson and Conway opening). The 2026 NZ middle order was more aggressive and less technically conservative than 2021’s. Afghanistan’s plan was right. NZ’s response was better.
New Zealand’s Injury Crisis: What Each Absence Actually Meant
Four players absent. Each absence created a specific tactical gap.
Devon Conway (Illness): The Senior Left-Hand Anchor Gone
Conway averages 36+ in T20Is. He is NZ’s most technically sound T20I batter against spin specifically calibrated to play Rashid Khan’s leg-spin by using the crease to negate the googly.
His absence meant NZ had no anchor who had a specific tested plan for Rashid. Seifert (as his replacement at No. 2) was playing Rashid on instinct rather than pre-planned technique.
Michael Bracewell (Calf Injury): The Spin-Hitting All-Rounder Gone
Bracewell is NZ’s most aggressive hitter against spin he hits over extra-cover off back-foot with a specific Rashid counter-plan. He is also NZ’s second most effective slow bowler. His absence gave Afghanistan 2 fewer overs of quality spin to combat and removed NZ’s best spin-attacking batter from the middle order.
Ish Sodhi (Unavailable): The Only Second Frontline Spinner Gone
Sodhi is NZ’s leg-spinner the bowling counterpart to Rashid in any NZ vs AFG match. His absence meant Santner (left-arm spin) was NZ’s only frontline spinner, with Ravindra as part-time backup. Afghanistan’s right-hand batters Gurbaz, Zadran, Atal, Nabi are all comfortable against left-arm orthodox spin. Against Sodhi’s leg-spin, they face a more complex challenge. Without Sodhi, Santner’s 4 overs were the only spin threat NZ could deploy and Santner’s economy (approximately 8.5 in this match) reflected the disadvantage.
Kyle Jamieson (Unavailable): The Extra Pace Threat Gone
Jamieson’s height and bounce create a different bowling challenge from Henry, Ferguson, and Duffy all of whom operate at similar seam angles. Without Jamieson, Afghanistan’s batters faced three seamers with similar trajectories, making powerplay batting more predictable for Gurbaz and Zadran.
NZ fielded a playing XI built around Henry, Ferguson, Santner, and four batting specialists. Against a full-strength Afghanistan with four genuine spinners and two frontline pacers, this was not NZ’s optimal lineup. They won anyway which is the measure of this result’s quality.
Head-to-Head: Afghanistan vs New Zealand All T20Is
| Result | Match | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| AFG won by 84 runs | 2021 T20 WC, Abu Dhabi | NZ 75 all out — Rashid 4/9, Farooqi 4/17 |
| NZ won by 5 wkts | 2026 T20 WC, Chennai | AFG 182/6, NZ 183/5 — Seifert POTM |
Overall T20I head-to-head: NZ and Afghanistan have a limited bilateral history. Their most important meetings have both been at T20 World Cups — one decisive win each. The 2026 result levels the T20 WC record at 1-1 between these nations.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q1: What was the full scorecard of Afghanistan vs New Zealand T20 World Cup 2026 Match 4?
Ans. Match 4, Group D, T20 World Cup 2026 (MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai, February 8, 2026): Afghanistan 182/6 in 20 overs (Gurbaz 49, Omarzai 38, Nabi 25*; Matt Henry 3 wkts, Ferguson 2 wkts). New Zealand 183/5 in 17.5 overs (Glenn Phillips 49, Tim Seifert POTM; Farooqi 2 wkts). New Zealand won by 5 wickets.
Q2: Who won the toss in NZ vs AFG T20 WC 2026 Match 4?
Ans. Afghanistan won the toss and elected to bat first at the MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai on February 8, 2026.
Q3: Who was the Player of the Match in NZ vs AFG T20 World Cup 2026?
Ans. Tim Seifert of New Zealand was the Player of the Match. Seifert anchored New Zealand’s chase of 183 from No. 2, coming in with NZ at 14/2 after 1.4 overs and building a crucial partnership with Glenn Phillips to bring NZ back from the powerplay collapse.
Q4: What were the playing XIs for NZ and Afghanistan in T20 WC 2026 Match 4?
Ans. Afghanistan: Gurbaz (wk), I. Zadran, S. Atal, D. Rasooli, A. Omarzai, Gulbadin Naib, M. Nabi, Rashid Khan (c), Farooqi, Mujeeb, Ziaur Rahman Sharifi. New Zealand: Finn Allen, Tim Seifert (wk), Rachin Ravindra, Glenn Phillips, Mark Chapman, Daryl Mitchell, Mitchell Santner (c), James Neesham, Matt Henry, Lockie Ferguson, Jacob Duffy.
Q5: Which players were absent for New Zealand in T20 WC 2026 Match 4 vs Afghanistan?
Ans. Devon Conway (illness), Michael Bracewell (calf injury), Ish Sodhi (unavailable), and Kyle Jamieson (unavailable) all missed NZ’s Match 4 vs Afghanistan in the T20 World Cup 2026. Mitchell Santner confirmed the absences at the toss.
Q6: What happened in the 2021 T20 World Cup Afghanistan vs New Zealand match?
Ans. In the 2021 T20 World Cup Super 12 stage at Abu Dhabi (November 7, 2021), Afghanistan scored 159/6 (Gurbaz 80 off 56 balls) and bowled New Zealand out for 75 in 12.1 overs (Rashid Khan 4/9, Fazalhaq Farooqi 4/17). Afghanistan won by 84 runs — NZ’s heaviest T20I defeat.
Q7: How did New Zealand recover from 14/2 to win the T20 WC 2026 match vs Afghanistan?
Ans. After Fazalhaq Farooqi dismissed Finn Allen and Rachin Ravindra in successive balls at 14/2 (1.4 overs), Glenn Phillips and Tim Seifert built a partnership to 88/3 (9.2 overs). Seifert was dismissed at 124/4 (12.5 overs), Chapman out at 155/5 (15.4 overs), and New Zealand completed the chase in 17.5 overs — winning by 5 wickets with 13 balls remaining.












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