Australia outclass Sri Lanka by 6 wickets
Defending champions Australia overcame a mighty scare to eventually beat Sri Lanka by six wickets after pacer Megan Schutt’s probing spell set them up for a small winning target in their women’s T20 World Cup campaign opener here Saturday.
Set a paltry target of 94, Australia were 35/3 at the end of power play, losing captain Alyssa Healy (4), Georgia Wareham (3) and Ellyse Perry (17) early in their run chase.
England spin attack derails Bangladesh
- England's four-pronged spin attack delivered a hard-fought 21-run victory over Bangladesh in their low-scoring group league opener in the Women's T20 World Cup on Saturday.
- On a slow track, England emerged victorious riding on a crucial 48-run opening stand between Maia Bouchier (23 off 18 balls) and seasoned Danni Wyatt-Hodge (41 off 40 balls) as they made 118/7 after opting to bat first.
- In reply, Bangladesh were guilty of not putting in partnerships after spilling a few catches in the first half. They were eventually restricted to 97 for seven in their allotted 20 overs. PTI
But, a 43-run partnership between Beth Mooney (43 not out) and Ashleigh Gardner (12) helped Australia go past the target with 34 balls to spare, as they made 94/4 in 14.2 overs.
Opting to bat, Sri Lanka struggled big time with Nilakshika Silva top-scoring with 29 not out as they huffed and puffed their way to 93 for 7.
Sri Lanka could hit just four boundaries in the whole innings.
Schutt (3/12) also equalled South Africa’s Shabnim Ismail’s record scalp of 43 wickets across all editions of T20 World Cup.
The Sri Lankans were 25/3 in the seventh over and 43/3 at the halfway stage, and they never recovered from there. Interestingly, the Australians also bowled 13 extras, including five no-balls.This was Sri Lanka’s second loss of the tournament, having lost to Pakistan on Thursday.
Brief Scores:
Sri Lanka: 93 for 7 in 20 overs (Nilakshika Silva 29 not out; Megan
Schutt 3/12).
Australia: 94 for 4 in 14.2 overs (Beth Mooney 43 not out; Sugandika Kumari 1/16).