In a career-spanning testament to grit and longevity, 35-year-old New Zealand pacer Lea Tahuhu etched her name into White Ferns folklore on March 22, 2026, becoming just the fifth player from her country to reach 100 T20I appearances.

The landmark arrived during the fourth T20I against South Africa at Sky Stadium, Wellington, where Tahuhu’s seasoned presence helped skipper Amelia Kerr’s side clinch a six-wicket victory, sealing the five-match series with one game remaining.
Lea Tahuhu, who first burst onto the international scene with an ODI debut against Australia in Brisbane on June 14, 2011, followed by her T20I bow against India at Bristol just 11 days later, has been a pillar of New Zealand’s white-ball attack for over a decade and a half. In her 100th T20I outing, part of the ongoing white-ball series against Laura Wolvaardt’s South Africa from March 15 to April 4, she delivered a tidy spell of 2-0-15-0, underscoring her enduring value, as the hosts sealed the series after their commanding fourth T20I win.
Her bowling ledger reads like a masterclass in consistency: 95 wickets across 99 innings, at an average of 20.32 and an economy of 6.42, including two four-wicket hauls. Tahuhu’s pinnacle moment came on December 2, 2022, against Bangladesh at Hagley Oval, Christchurch, where her mesmerising 4-0-6-4 in the second innings demolished the chase. Defending 165, the White Ferns skittled Bangladesh for 32 in the 15th over, romping to a 132-run triumph that showcased her ability to turn games single-handedly.
Nor has the bat been idle in her arsenal. Tahuhu has chipped in with 247 runs in 37 innings at a strike rate of 108.81 and an average of 10.73, valuable lower-order cameos that have often guided New Zealand in tough situations under pressure. At 35, in an era where T20’s blistering pace chews through careers, Lea Tahuhu’s century of caps stands as a beacon for emerging White Ferns talents. As New Zealand eyes the ODIs ahead, her milestone not only honours a storied past but also fuels the fire for future glory.
