For the first time since 2022, New Zealand will not be in the final of the FIH Hockey Men’s Nations Cup after they lost in a shootout to hosts South Africa following a 2-2 draw in regulation time in their semifinal at Hartleyvale Stadium in Cape Town on Friday.
The Black Sticks were not able to convert any of their four shootout attempts, thanks to the outstanding goalkeeper Cullin de Jager, who also shone during the preceding hour.
South Africa were not flattered by the result, being typically dangerous on the counter but also adding a defensive performance of great determination.
The hosts, who won the inaugural Nations Cup at home in Potchefstroom in 2022, will take on France, who have finished third and second in the last two editions, in Saturday's final.
France edged out Japan 4-3 in an enthralling semifinal that saw the teams locked at 3-3 at halftime. A goal-less third quarter followed, before Corentin Sellier came up with a superb finish for the winner in the 53rd minute.
Earlier, Malaysia had come from 2-0 down to beat the United States 4-2 and they will play Scotland in the playoff for fifth place. Nations Cup Debutants Scotland continued their remarkable tournament by holding Ireland to a 4-4 draw, Jamie Golden scoring a magnificent equaliser with 35 seconds remaining. Scotland then held their nerve to win the shootout 8-7 in sudden death.
Malaysia 4 USA 2 (5th-8th playoff)
A 4-2 defeat for FIH Hockey Men’s Nations Cup debutants the USA seemed unreasonably harsh given how well they played, but huge credit to Malaysia, who staged an incredible comeback to win from 2-0 down at halftime.
The USA were good value for their 2-0 lead at the break, having had nine shots at goal compared to Malaysia's single effort and having nearly twice as many circle entries.
But Malaysia lifted their pace in the second half and played with more connection up front, finishing the match with 59% possession and 11 penalty corners to seven.
Excellent work by Muhajir Abdu Rauf earned a penalty corner soon after the break, Mohamad Anuar opening Malaysia's account with a well-placed flick.
Malaysia then scored probably the goal of the match in the 39th minute to equalise at 2-2 and mark the 400th goal in the history of the men's Nations Cup in fitting style. Mohammad Azrai ran into the circle and played a marvellous one-two with Anuar, tapping in for his 70th international goal.
The USA could feel a little unfortunate with the way they conceded the third and fourth goals, however. With eight minutes remaining, goalkeeper Andre de la Porte pulled off a good snap save but the ball lifted off his pad and Malaysia were awarded a penalty corner, Faizal Saari scoring with a wonderful drag-flick into the left corner.
Just three minutes later, De la Porte made a fine penalty corner save, but the rebound was slotted home by Faris Harizan.
The USA pushed hard in the last five minutes but could not convert any of the chances they made.
The Americans had made a wonderful start to the game, immediately earning a trio of penalty corners, with Sekayi Charasika powering a flick into goal from the third set-piece.
Early in the second quarter, a fine tackle by Aki Kaeppeler stopped a Malaysian attack and a long free hit found Jack Heldens, who made a strong run to the edge of the circle and then hit a cross ball to Alberto Montilla at the penalty spot, the 28-year-old knocking the ball into goal.
But Malaysia regrouped in the second half to prove once again that they can never be discounted.
Player of the Match Marhan Jalil hailed the team's improvement in the second half.
"What we improved was playing as a team more and little technical things. We also focused on our passing and our marking was tighter. Our penalty corners were good, but we had a lot of them and hopefully we can adjust a bit to convert 100% of them," Jalil said.
Ireland 4 Scotland 4 (7-8 SO) (5th-8th playoff)
A sudden death shootout is eventually what separated the Celtic nations as Scotland upset Ireland to advance to the playoff for fifth position, following a 4-4 draw in regulation time.
Scotland, making their debut in the FIH Hockey Men’s Nations Cup and ranked 17th to Ireland's ninth, were 2-0 up after 35 minutes through Jacob Tweedie's close-ranger goal and a brilliant penalty corner drag-flick by Jamie Golden.
Ireland were on the board in the 40th minute as Matthew Nelson bunted in a rebound after a double save at a penalty corner by in-form Scotland goalkeeper Tommie Alexander, but the underdogs regained their two-goal buffer when Cameron Golden's stick was played from behind in the circle and younger brother Jamie squeezed the penalty stroke into the left corner.
Scotland were 3-1 up after the third quarter and looking comfortable, but what a final quarter Ireland produced as they pushed the Scottish defence to the point of exhaustion. That defence finally cracked in the last five minutes as Ireland scored three goals in four minutes.
Darragh Walsh's slap into the middle of the circle was deflected into goal by Nelson and then Greg Williams did great defensive work to win the ball back for Ireland, Benjamin Walker finding Sam Hyland in the circle and he beat Alexander at his near post.
With a shootout looking likely, Ireland claimed what was surely the winner when a quick free hit to Ben Nelson at the top of the circle saw him find Jeremy Duncan who prodded the ball home at the far post.
But Jamie Golden then stunned everyone at Hartleyvale when he completed his hat-trick and saved the draw for Scotland with just 35 seconds remaining. Alistair Douglas controlled a loose
ball in the circle very well, feeding Golden, who showed exceptional composure to run wide of the circle into space and then flick over the goalkeeper from an acute angle.
Scotland missed their first two shots in the shootout, however, giving Ireland a 2-1 advantage after the first three players had gone. Walker and Kyle Marshall then both failed to score for Ireland and Scotland captain Robert Field turned and finished the fifth and final attempt in polished fashion to take the shootout into a second round.
Both teams failed with their third attempts, sending the shootout into sudden death.
Matthew Nelson tripped and his goalbound shot was well-saved with the glove by Alexander, leaving Struan Walker to provide the winner for Scotland, low into the right corner.
Shot-stopper supreme Alexander was a relieved man at the end of it all.
"This win is huge for us, considering where we are ranked. We should have closed out the game, but we went into our shells a bit. But we showed great courage to score the last goal in regulation play and I'm really proud that we've shown we are a good hockey nation. This is another building block from the World Cup qualifiers," Alexander said.
France 4 Japan 3 (semifinal)
France and Japan exhilarated their fans in the first half and then produced a tense second half as the French won a thrilling semifinal 4-3 to reach the men's Nations Cup final for the second time.
Instead of feeling their way into the vital encounter, both teams seemed to want to blow the other off the field in the first half. Japan produced some tremendous attacking runs, while France were all about long balls and clinical entries into the circle.
Japan goalkeeper Takashi Yashikawa had to make two good saves in the first four minutes and then France almost immediately paid for a mistake by intimidating defender Victor Charlet. He sent a long ball from halfway back towards his 23, but it went straight to Koji Yamasaki, whose reverse-sticks shot was saved by Corentin Saunier, but Seren Tanaka showed great skill to turn the rebound out wide into another opportunity, his pinpoint pass to Oyama Ooka being nudged into goal.
Charlet needed just two minutes to make amends as he equalised with a high drag-flick after a reckless tackle at the top of the circle by Tanaka had given away a penalty corner.
But the end-to-end action continued as Keito Tanaka then raced into the French circle and earned a penalty corner, which was converted by Shota Yamada powering a flick right down the middle.
Just two minutes later, Xavier Esmenjaud scored the fourth goal inside the first 10 minutes when he tapped in another French equaliser during a goalmouth scramble after a re-awarded penalty corner had not been stopped properly.
Japan, no doubt annoyed by conceding such a soft goal, went 3-2 ahead in the 22nd minute when Hyota Yamada converted a penalty corner by flicking into the vacant area where the right post man would have been.
France equalised again though with a spectacular goal six minutes later. From a free hit, Noe Jouin sent a lovely ball under the shoulder into the circle and Timothee Clement produced a beautiful finish, lifting the ball up and then flicking it over the advancing goalkeeper.
Japan almost took the lead again before halftime but Kazumasa Matsumoto's fiery shot into goal was ruled to have only crossed the line after the hooter. It was the second time this had happened to Japan in the tournament.
After all the dazzling excitement of the first half, the third quarter was a puzzling tactical battle with both teams slowing the game down to a calmer pace. Japan were unable to take advantage of France being reduced to 10 players by a yellow card towards the end of the period.
But that goal-less 15 minutes set the fans up for a nail-biting final quarter. The teams stayed locked at 3-3 for the first five minutes, Saunier making another dazzling save in the French goal.
France then piled on the pressure, Etienne Tynevez making a brilliant diving interception on Japan's 23 and threading the ball into the circle for Corentin Sellier to grab the winner in spectacular fashion, sending a superb diving reverse-sticks shot under the goalkeeper and into the goal.
Saunier made another brilliant save just before the hooter from a Japanese snap-shot, but it was Sellier who was named Player of the Match.
"We're very happy with the performance, we defended very well and I am very proud of the team. Now we need to prep well and stay focused for the big game of the tournament. We are very excited for the final, it is very important for the federation so we need to be really focused. A win would be great for our improvement and for the next few years," Sellier said.
New Zealand 2 South Africa 2 (0-2 SO)
New Zealand's 15-match unbeaten record in the FIH Hockey Men’s Nations Cup came to an end in the semifinals on Friday, albeit in a shootout loss to hosts South Africa after their gripping match ended 2-2 in regulation time.
The back-to-back champions opened the scoring in the 12th minute when the South African defence stood off a bit, allowing George Baker to force a penalty corner. The first shot was into the foot of charging first wave Niel Raath, but the re-award saw Kane Russell send a drag-flick rocketing over goalkeeper Cullin de Jager's shoulder into goal.
De Jager had to scramble to close down New Zealand captain Sam Lane in a one-on-one early in the second quarter and South Africa were able to equalise three minutes before halftime. An excellent tackle by Raath on his 23 allowed South Africa to transition quickly, Luke Wynford feeding Dayaan Cassiem, whose baseline run earned a penalty corner. Calvin Davis sent a fine flick into the left corner.
South Africa, to the delight of a sold-out crowd at Hartleyvale, went 2-1 up two minutes into the second half. Jamie Seale went on a searing run and his ball from the baseline into the back of the circle was slammed home on the half-volley by Kenton Melville.
De Jager again preserved South Africa's lead with a fine save, deflecting Russell's high penalty corner rocket over goal.
New Zealand pounded the home circle over and over again in the final quarter and eventually equalised with five minutes remaining. A penalty corner was not stopped properly by Scott Boyde, but he recovered brilliantly and sent the ball straight down the middle of the circle, Finn Ward getting the deflection into goal.
Goalkeeper De Jager had enjoyed a great game, but he stepped it up even further in the shootout, saving all four of the shots New Zealand attempted. South African captain Cassiem was unable to score from their first shot, but rookies Hans Neethling and Raath calmly converted their chances to put their team in the final for the first time since their 2022 triumph, also on home soil, in Potchefstroom.
"We just tried to learn from our mistakes and it was a tough game. But we were able to fix our problems and we stuck to the plan, it worked out in the end. We created, we showed a lot of intent and we played forward. Attack is the best form of defence, but our defence deserves a lot of credit," Player of the Match Seale said.
To see the current standings in the FIH Hockey Men's Nations Cup 2025-26, click here.
FIH Hockey Men's Nations Cup 2025-26 – June 19, 2026
Hartleyvale Stadium
Cape Town, South Africa
Match 17 - 5th/8th playoff result:
Malaysia 4 - 2 USA
Player of the match: Marhan Jalil (MAS)
Umpires: Jake Charles (ENG), Aziz Adimah (GHA), Rob Argent (IRE-video)
Match 18 - 5th/8th playoff result:
Ireland 4 - 4 Scotland (7-8 SO)
Player of the match: Tommie Alexander (SCO)
Umpires: Alex Miles (CAN), Chad Fourie (RSA), Jake Charles (ENG-video)
Match 19 - Semifinal result:
France 4 - 3 Japan
Player of the match: Corentin Sellier (FRA)
Umpires: Munashe Mashoko (ZIM), Rob Argent (IRE), Chad Fourie (RSA-video)
Match 20 - Semifinal result:
New Zealand 2 - 2 South Africa (0-2 SO)
Player of the match: Jamie Seale (RSA)
Umpires: Kamile Mockaityte (LTU), Sebastien Michielsen (BEL), Ayanna McClean (TTO-video)
Saturday's schedule
Match 21: 12h15 7/8 United States v Ireland
Match 22: 14h30 5/6 Malaysia v Scotland
Match 23: 16h45 3/4 New Zealand v Japan
Match 24: 19h00 Final South Africa v France
For match schedules, pools, team information and all tournament updates, click here.

