Rain could have spoiled the party at Mount Maunganui, but once the second T20I finally started amidst the returns, the story was all about Ish Sodhi. According to record books, the leg-spinner became the most capped men’s T20I player for the Black Caps, overtaking Tim Southee.
It is no doubt a feather in his cap, considering he has been the first-choice spinner of New Zealand in the shortest format. With that landmark achievement, let’s now look at the top five New Zealand T20I appearance holders.
Most T20I matches for New Zealand
| Rank | Player | Matches |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ish Sodhi | 127 |
| 2 | Tim Southee | 126 |
| 3 | Martin Guptill | 122 |
| 4 | Mitchell Santner | 114 |
| 5 | Ross Taylor | 102 |
5. Ross Taylor: 102 matches

Ross Taylor might have been more famous for his exploits in the ODIs and Tests, but his T20I record shows how much he mattered for New Zealand in the early days of the format. Taylor represented New Zealand in 102 T20Is from 2006 to 2020, scoring 1,909 runs at an average of 26.15
He was not a slogger but rather the anchor holding innings together when quick wickets fell and exploded once he was settled. With seven fifties and a highest score of 63, Taylor provided solid stability to the Kiwi middle order. His contribution in the field was further huge, with 46 catches. Being a player who bridged the eras through his career, he immensely contributed to New Zealand T20 cricket.
4. Mitchell Santner: 114 matches

Mitchell Santner has usually been the first name to pop into someone’s head. This right-handed batsman had scored 3,531 runs in 122 matches, averaging 31.81 with two hundreds and 20 fifties. Guptill was basically a powerplay destroyer, an opener that could just clear the ropes on the first ball.
He ended his career having cleared 68 sixes and innumerable reveries of long levers shooting the ball to the stands. Since his debut in 2009 to the last day in 2022, Guptill has kept the Kiwi torch burning in batting and left statistics that will be hard to chase.
3. Martin Guptill: 122 matches

When you think of New Zealand’s batting in T20Is, Martin Guptill would be the first name to pop up in your mind. Right-handed, he smashed 3,531 runs in 122 matches at an average of 31.81 with two hundreds and 20 fifties. Guptill was a powerplay destroyer, the kind of opener who could clean the ropes off first ball.
He finished his career with 68 sixes and endless memories of long levers that sent the ball into the stands. From 2009, when he debuted, till 2022, his last playing year, Guptill kept the flame for Kiwi batting alive and posted numbers that would take some chasing.
2. Tim Southee: 126 matches

Following him was Tim Southee, long-serving pace-bowler, dependable with the new ball as he was at the death. Southee’s T20I career started way back in 2008 and over the years he went from strength to strength and emerged as New Zealand’s bowling spearhead in the format. With 126 matches under his belt, Southee has taken 164 wickets, including the best of 5/18.
His economy and strike rates suggest the knack he has for performing at crucial moments and breaking dangerous partnerships with the new ball. He also chipped in with the bat, scoring 303 runs to show that he could swing more than just the ball. Southee’s 65 catches emphasize the value he brought in the field; for over a decade-and-a-half, he was the whole package.
1. Ish Sodhi: 127 Matches and Counting

And now at the zenith is Ish Sodhi, who slotted past Southee in the Mount Maunganui clash against Australia. In this team since 2014, Sodhi has been the go-to leg-spin option for New Zealand in T20 cricket, especially on turning tracks where his googly and variations make him against whom batsmen find it difficult to score runs; on these 127 matches, he has snared 150 wickets at an average of 22.52 with best innings figures of 4/12.




