Scotland Hunt Down Namibia Target to Win T20I Opener

15th April 2026

Scotland made a confident start to their T20 International series against Namibia on Wednesday, chasing 160 with seven wickets and more than an over to spare at a neutral venue.

Namibia batted first and posted 159/7 in their 20 overs – a competitive total, but not enough on a surface that gave Scotland’s top order little trouble. The chase was completed in 18.5 overs, Scotland winning by 7 wickets.

Namibia’s Innings: Erasmus Holds the Innings Together

Namibia were put under early pressure as Scotland’s bowlers found their lengths quickly. Jan Frylinck (8) and Zacheo Jv Vuuren (12) both fell inside the first four overs, leaving the hosts at 33/2.

Louren Steenkamp (27 off 19) gave the innings some momentum in the middle overs, but it was skipper Gerhard Erasmus who was the one anchor Namibia could rely on. His 54 off 39 balls – top score of the innings – gave the total some shape, though he fell in the 19th over to Safyaan Sharif with the total at 136/7.

The tail wagged late. Ruben Trumpelmann (22*) and Jan Balt (19* off just 7 balls, including two sixes) added a 23-run unbroken eighth-wicket stand to push the total past 155. Those late blows proved crucial in framing the chase as a genuine contest.

Scotland’s pick of the bowlers was Mark Watt, who conceded just 24 from four overs and took two wickets – including the key scalp of Vuuren early on. Jasper Davidson matched him with 2/28. Both bowlers kept the run rate under control during the powerplay and middle overs.

Scotland’s Chase: Munsey and Berrington Seal It

Scotland’s reply was set up by George Munsey and Finlay McCreath, who put on 53 for the first wicket. McCreath (16) was bowled by Jack Brassell in the sixth over, but Munsey (44 off 31) continued to attack before falling to Max Heingo in the 11th over with the score at 82.

Brandon McMullen played a measured innings throughout, finishing 44 not out off 39 balls. His partnership with captain Richie Berrington was the key phase of the chase – the pair added 67 for the third wicket. Berrington’s 34 off just 20 balls (two fours, two sixes) put Scotland firmly in control before he was caught off Heingo with six runs needed off 8 balls.

Matthew Cross (7*) saw Scotland home without drama. Target reached in 18.5 overs.

Namibia’s best with the ball was Max Heingo, who took 2/16 from three overs – impressive figures that were not enough to change the game’s direction.

Statz Ratings

Statz MVP: Mark Watt – 66.3

Watt’s combination of wickets and economy across four overs earned him top billing. His early breakthrough of Vuuren settled Scotland’s nerves, and a 6.0 economy rate in a 159-run game is exactly what you want from a frontline spinner.

Match Summary

Namibia 159/7 (20 overs) | Erasmus 54 (39), Trumpelmann 22* (19) | Watt 2/24, Davidson 2/28

Scotland 160/3 (18.5 overs) | Munsey 44 (31), McMullen 44* (39), Berrington 34 (20) | Heingo 2/16

Scotland won by 7 wickets

Full scorecard and player ratings: statz.ai/cricket