A sign in the crowd in Durban this morning (NZT) announced it was doomsday and it wasn't clear if it was a commentary on the fact it was the end of the Mayan calendar or the state of the New Zealand cricket team.
It probably wasn't the latter because the Black Caps have had too many bad days in recent times, but this was undoubtedly another one. They were dismissed for just 86 - their third-worst total in Twenty20 cricket history - and South Africa romped home in 12.1 overs for the loss of just two wickets in the first of three T20 internationals.
There had been a smidgen of optimism that New Zealand would be able to compete with the hosts in the shortest format of the game, particularly as both sides had a number of new faces, the Black Caps convincingly won a warmup game against South Africa A and anything can happen in Twenty20 cricket.
New Zealand's capitulation, however, was a sadly familiar tale. They were often the architects of their own downfall as they adopted an aggressive approach and it was largely left to the four debutants to try salvage something.
They slumped to 36-6 and only Colin Munro (23) and Doug Bracewell (21) ensured they passed the 80 New Zealand scored against Pakistan in Christchurch in 2010 and 81 against Sri Lanka in Lauderhill the same year.