No excuses for Proteas as they crash out of T20 World Cup

Shukri Conrad admitted his side was outclassed by New Zealand in the semi-finals, dismissing any thoughts of choking in the knockout stages.

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South Africa coach Shukri Conrad was making no excuses as his side crashed out of the ICC Men's T20 World Cup with a nine-wicket loss to New Zealand in Kolkata.

The Proteas entered the knockout semi-final at Eden Gardens on a seven-match unbeaten streak at the tournament, but the Black Caps received a record-breaking century from opener Finn Allen to book their place in the title decider and send Conrad's side packing.

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Conrad was asked after the match whether the Proteas had choked at the semi-final stage, with the experienced coach not mincing his words and instead suggesting his team was simply outclassed by New Zealand in all facets of the game during the semi-final.

"I don't know if tonight was a choke. I thought it was a bloody walloping. We got our arses kicked," an honest Conrad admitted.

"I think in order for you to choke, you must have had a sniff in the game. We didn't have a sniff. In South Africa, we say we'd get moered.

"Tonight, we got a proper snot klaaped, also a South African word meaning a real hiding."

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Despite the loss, Conrad believes there were still plenty of positives for his side to take out of the tournament that the nay-sayers will fail to mention.

Skipper Aiden Markram hit 286 runs to continue his excellent recent run, while pacers Lungi Ngidi (12 wickets), Corbin Bosch and Marco Jansen (11 wickets each) all featured among the leading wicket-takers at the tournament.

"I think there'll be enough people that are going to be jumping on the bandwagon," Conrad said in relation to the predicted fallout from South Africa's loss.

"But yeah, we did so many special things. I'm so proud of these guys.

"I don't think many people gave us much of a chance of even getting into a semi-final when we left the shores, given our form before that.

"But that's no consolation or anything like that. Look, I mean, I think it's cue the abuse now. There'll be enough of it."

ICC Men's T20 World Cup, 2026