The Australian team was the first team to qualify for the semi-finals after they won their first five matches of the tournament. Australia, your ridiculous magnificence.
England, the reigning champions, needed more than extraordinary to pull off a private pursuit, but they continued to lose wickets throughout the innings, which finished at 285 in 43.4 overs. Natalie Sciver, who scored an unbeaten 148 off 121 balls for her second progressive hundred against Australia in the opposition, ultimately ran out of accomplices.
Australian pacer Megan Schutt (2/42) bowled a splendid new ball spell, eliminating last match centurion Danielle Wyat (4) and Tammy Beaumont (27) with her deadly in-pleasure seekers before leg-spinner Alana King (3/64) turned the ball on a cover girl to end with three urgent wickets, including that of England captain Heather Knight (26).
The Australian Team bossed their way to a record-broadening seventh Women’s World Cup title with a devastating 71-run prevail over conventional adversaries England, stepping up their undisputed strength in the competition after a stunning hundred from Alyssa Healy in the last here on Sunday.
Playing the innings of her life, Healy put England’s assault to the blade with an exciting 170 off 138 balls that controlled Australia to an enormous 356 for five.
As it happened
With a heavy dew expected in the evening, reigning champions England chose to bat first. Australia, the main unbeaten group in the competition, were not set in stone to stamp their clout for one final time in the competition, and they surely did that with the bat.
England, the reigning champions, needed more than extraordinary to pull off a private pursuit, but they continued to lose wickets throughout the innings, which finished at 285 in 43.4 overs. Natalie Sciver, who scored an unbeaten 148 off 121 balls for her second progressive hundred against Australia in the opposition, at last, ran out of accomplices.
Australian pacer Megan Schutt (2/42) bowled a splendid new ball spell, eliminating last match centurion Danielle Wyat (4) and Tammy Beaumont (27) with her deadly in-pleasure seekers before leg-spinner Alana King (3/64) turned the ball on a glamour girl to end with three vital wickets, including that of England captain Heather Knight (26).
Healy, who was dropped on 41, played with the English assault in her hypnotising thump, which is presently the most noteworthy ever individual score in a World Cup across all people’s cricket. Adam Gilchrist (149, 2007), Sciver (148 in this game), Ricky Ponting (140, 2003) and Viv Richards (138, 1979) are behind Healy in the world-class list.
Healey’s initial accomplices Rachael Haynes (68 off 93) and Beth Mooney (62 off 47) likewise batted with certainty as Australia put on board the most elevated group ever completed in a World Cup in ladies’ cricket and the second-most noteworthy behind the Australian men’s group’s work of 359 for two against India in 2003.
England restricted the harm in the last five overs by taking four wickets. Anya Shrubsole (3/46) was the main England bowler who finished with decent figures. Sciver, Charlotte Dean, and Kate Cross yielded in excess of 8 runs for every over.
Sophie Ecclestone has the most wickets (21).
Alyssa Healy has the most runs (509)
Player of the Series Alyssa Healy
Now let the Australian team reign as we all eagerly wait for the next World Cup and the world is again proved that women’s strength and power are beyond their imagination.
Published by – Kiruthiga K
Edited by – Kritika Kashyap