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Match 13 | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 | The Rose Bowl, Southampton | 19 June 2026
Orla Prendergast’s bat against Jess Kerr’s missed catches behind her bowling is the duel that decides this one. Both sides arrive at the Rose Bowl winless, meaning whoever wins keeps alive any realistic hope of avoiding an early exit. Prendergast has carried Ireland’s batting almost alone through two defeats, while Kerr has bowled well only to watch her own fielders spill the chances she created. Friday’s result in Southampton could hinge entirely on which of those two patterns breaks first.
Match 13 throws together two sides that have lost both their group games. New Zealand fell to West Indies by seven wickets, then to Sri Lanka by five wickets, both finishing with at least two balls to spare. Ireland has lost to Scotland by 40 runs and to England by four wickets, competitive without ever threatening to turn into wins.
Both teams sit on zero points heading into Southampton, which makes Friday’s result more than just pride. Whoever wins keeps their net run rate and their realistic hopes of advancing intact for at least one more match.
Jess Kerr was the one bright spot with the ball against West Indies, finishing with 2 for 17 from her four overs at an economy of 4.25. Rosemary Mair went at the other extreme, conceding 27 from her four overs without a wicket as Shemaine Campbelle accelerated through the death overs to finish unbeaten on 90.
New Zealand’s bigger problem wasn’t the bowling so much as what happened around it. Six or seven catches went down against West Indies alone, with further drops and missed stumpings repeated against Sri Lanka. Captain Melie Kerr summed it up simply, saying her bowlers were creating opportunities the fielders weren’t taking.
Nensi Patel produced New Zealand’s best figures against Sri Lanka with 2 for 23, but Nilakshika Silva’s unbeaten 54 still got the chase home. Jess Kerr’s exact figures from that match aren’t available from published scorecards.
Ireland’s batting has produced one consistent name across both defeats. Orla Prendergast top-scored against Scotland with 33 off 23 balls at a strike rate of 143.47 before being run out, then shared top billing with Louise Little on 26 against England.
Amy Hunter’s 39 against Scotland was Ireland’s only other major contribution in that match, while no Ireland batter beyond Prendergast and Little reached 20 against England. Across both games, Prendergast has scored 59 of Ireland’s runs, comfortably the team’s leading contributor through two matches.
Her wider numbers back up the eye test. Across 83 T20Is for Ireland, Prendergast has scored 1,868 runs at a strike rate of 122.42, with 12 half-centuries and a high score of 80, numbers that back up everything she’s shown in two matches here.
If one matchup decides Friday’s result, it’s Prendergast against Kerr. She’s the batter Ireland needs to fire again. Kerr is the bowler New Zealand needs their fielders to finally back up.
| Metric | Orla Prendergast (IRE, Bat) | Jess Kerr (NZ, Bowl) |
| Career T20I numbers | 1,868 runs in 83 T20Is, SR 122.42 | 37 wickets in 50 T20Is, best 3/16 |
| This tournament, match one | 33 off 23 vs Scotland (SR 143.47), run out | 2/17 off 4 overs vs West Indies (Econ 4.25) |
| This tournament, match two | 26 runs vs England, joint top scorer | Figures vs Sri Lanka not confirmed from available scorecards |
| Tournament total so far | 59 runs from 2 matches | 1 confirmed wicket haul from 2 matches |
Prendergast’s record says she should come good again. Kerr’s record says the same thing about her bowling. The difference on Friday could come down to which team’s fielders actually show up.
Ireland’s wait for a maiden Women’s T20 World Cup win now stretches across 20 matches, after Scotland’s win over them was confirmed as Scotland’s own first-ever tournament victory. New Zealand, by contrast, sits on zero points and a negative net run rate after two matches, though the exact figure isn’t published.
A win for either side keeps realistic qualification hopes alive into the final group games; a loss likely ends them. With NZ vs IRE Women T20WC 2026 set for a 6.30 pm BST start at the Rose Bowl, neither team can afford the fielding lapses or batting collapses that defined their opening two matches.
Who decides Match 13, Prendergast’s bat or New Zealand’s fielders? Drop your prediction below.
Has New Zealand won a match at the 2026 Women’s T20 World Cup?
No, New Zealand is still without a win this tournament. They lost to the West Indies by seven wickets and Sri Lanka by five, sitting on zero points.
Has Ireland ever won a Women’s T20 World Cup match?
No, Ireland remains winless across 20 Women’s T20 World Cup matches. Defeats to Scotland and England in 2026 extended that streak further.
Who is Ireland’s top run scorer at the 2026 World Cup?
Orla Prendergast leads Ireland’s batting with 59 runs from two matches. She scored 33 against Scotland and 26 against England.
What is New Zealand’s net run rate after two losses?
New Zealand’s net run rate sits in negative territory after two defeats. Both matches were lost narrowly while chasing, with the exact figure not yet published.
When do Ireland and New Zealand play at the 2026 Women’s T20 World Cup?
Ireland face New Zealand on Friday, June 19, 2026, at 6.30pm BST. It’s Match 13 of the group stage at the Rose Bowl, Southampton.
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