Meg Lanning (left) and her team are an happy lot after besting England in the first semifinal on Wednesday.
T20 World Cup 2016
Chasing 133 for victory, England’s batting capitulates to fall short by by five runs
There are matches that teams win. And then there are
games that teams contrive to lose, inexplicably, from a position of
strength.
The England women’s team would place
firmly in the second category after its World T20 semifinal against
defending champion Australia, imploding miserably to lose by five runs
here on Wednesday.
The last time the two met in the
semifinals of the competition, England had come off the winner, going on
to lift the title in the inaugural edition on 2009. There was to be no
repeat this time as the unbeaten side’s middle order was exposed
brutally by the Aussies, who booked their fourth straight final spot.
Chasing 133, England was only able to reach 127 for seven in 20 overs
with a combination of nerves of reckless shots.
Aggressive skipper
Australia
captain Meg Lanning, named Player of the Match, had said her team would
be aggressive and she stuck to her promise both with the bat and the
ball. Her 50-ball 55 was the highlight of the Aussie innings and her two
brilliant catches to dismiss well-set England openers Charlotte Edwards
and Tamsin Beaumont ensured the chase would not materialise.
England
elected to field on a good batting wicket and it looked for a while
that Charlotte had taken the right call before her batters failed to
cope with the pressure of the climbing run rate.
Despite
Lanning’s innings, and a quick start by openers Alyssa Healy and Elyse
Villani, Australia would have felt at least 15 runs short, thanks mainly
to some exceptional fielding from the English including two direct run
outs from the deep by Natalie Scriver and and Anya Shrubsole, the latter
sending back Lanning.
England’s chase disintegrated
in the last seven overs, going from 61 for no loss in nine overs to 127
for seven in 20, losing six wickets for just 39 runs. Australia fought
back to prove why it is a three-time defending champion, diving around
to save runs and bowling a tight line that forced England to go for the
big shots.
Those came off occasionally but more
often than not, found a fielder in the deep. Edwardsand Beaumont farmed
the field, the placing and timing of their shots a delight to watch.
Batting
looked easy and everything Lanning tried in terms of fielding and
bowling changes was swept away. With 17 extras, it looked like England
would finally exact revenge for its previous two losses in the final.
That
wasn’t to be as Lanning stepped up to finally break the partnership
with a brilliant catch at mid-off to dismiss her opposite number in the
10th over.
The scoring rate dropped but the runs
kept coming till Beaumont was at the crease before Lanning, running in
from cover, dived in front to snap up another catch.
The
rest of the batting just couldn’t measure up to the job at hand as
Ellyse Perry and Co. tightened the screws to keep the Southern Stars
shining.
The scores: Australia 132 for six in
20 overs (Meg Lanning 55, Alyssa Healy 25; Natalie Sciver two for 22) bt
England 127 for seven in 20 overs (Tamsin Beaumont 32, Charlotte
Edwards 31; Megan Schutt two for 15) by five runs. Player-of-the-match: Meg Lanning.
AUSW 132/6 (20.0 Ovs)
ENGW 127/7 (20.0 Ovs)
Australia Women won by 5 runs
No comments:
Post a Comment