T20 World Cup: Phillips secures New Zealand’s Super Eight spot; Nepal end 12-year wait

Yuvraj Samra etched his name into the history books with a scintillating century, but it wasn’t enough to prevent New Zealand from securing their passage to the Super Eight stage with an eight-wicket win in Chennai.

Samra, at just 19 years old, became the youngest player to score a T20 World Cup fifty before powering on to 110—the highest ever score by an Associate batter against a Full Member in the tournament.

However, Canada’s inability to defend 173 was a story of profligacy in the field and a clinical counter-attack from Glenn Phillips (76*) and Rachin Ravindra (59*).

Despite an early wobble at 30 for 2, the Black Caps made light work of the target, finishing the chase with nearly five overs to spare.

Yuvraj Samra brought up a 58-ball century•Feb 17, 2026•ICC/Getty Images

Phillips and Ravindra take charge

After Jaskaran Singh and Dilon Heyliger provided early hope by removing Tim Seifert and Finn Allen, the Phillips-Ravindra partnership (146 off 73 balls) effectively killed the contest.

Phillips was particularly brutal against the spinners, switch-hitting Saad Bin Zafar for six and treating the wrist-spin of Ansh Patel with utter disdain.

Canada’s indiscipline—manifested in overthrows, no-balls, and dropped catches—gifted the Black Caps momentum they never relinquished. By the time Phillips brought up his 22-ball fifty, the outcome was a formality.

Nepal’s ‘Cardiac Kids’ stun Scotland in Mumbai thriller

SUMMARY: Nepal 171 for 3 (Airee 50*, Bhurtel 43, Leask 3-30) beat Scotland 170 for 7 (Jones 71, Kami 3-25) by seven wickets

Nepal ended a 12-year drought for a T20 World Cup victory with a riotously received seven-wicket win over Scotland at the Wankhede.

In a game of fluctuating fortunes, veteran seamer Sompal Kami provided the mid-innings spark with the ball before Dipendra Singh Airee’s explosive 50* off 23 balls completed a high-octane chase that sent the heavily Nepali crowd into a frenzy.

Dipendra Singh Airee’s 50* sealed the win for Nepal•Feb 17, 2026•Getty Images

The Airee Impact

Chasing 171, Nepal seemed to be stuttering when Michael Leask’s three-wicket burst reduced them from a steady 74 for 0 to 98 for 3. With the required rate climbing toward 12, Airee arrived to “skewer” the Scottish resolve.

He struck four fours and three sixes, taking 20 runs off a single Leask over to swing the pendulum. Alongside Gulsan Jha (24*), Airee ensured there would be no repeat of the near-misses that have plagued Nepal’s recent major tournament history.

Earlier, Scotland appeared set for a total north of 190. Michael Jones (71) was in regal touch as Scotland raced to 131 for 1 after 15 overs. However, the introduction of Sompal Kami changed everything.

Kami produced a masterclass in change-of-pace bowling, deceiving Jones with a knuckleball before plucking a stunning one-handed return catch to remove Brandon McMullen. Scotland lost 6 for 30 in the final four overs—a collapse that proved fatal once Airee found his range in the second innings.

 

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