Australia book semi-final spot; India on the brink

Australia book semi-final spot; India on the brink

Australia 151 for 8 (Harris 40, McGrath 32, Perry 32, Renuka 2-24, Deepti 2-28) beat India 142 for 9 (Harmanpreet 54*, Deepti 29, Sutherland 2-22, Molineux 2-32) by nine runs

India’s T20 World Cup semi-final hopes have been taken out of their hands after a nine-run defeat to Australia in their final group stage match. India have lost two of their four matches and will have to wait on the result of New Zealand vs Pakistan tomorrow to find out if they will advance to the knockouts. Any margin of victory for New Zealand will eliminate India but a Pakistan victory will decide the semi-finalists on net run rate.

Permutations aside, the tournament finally got the thriller it had been crying out for in an intense clash in front of an electric, sold-out Sharjah crowd of 14,946. They were treated to a high-octane affair with both sides acutely aware of what was at stake amid injury concerns. Australia were without captain, opening batter and wicket-keeper Alyssa Healy, who arrived on crutches after sustaining a foot injury against Pakistan, and Tayla Vlaeminck, who has been ruled out of the tournament.
India also lost Asha Sobhana to a knee injury after the toss and needed Australia’s permission to replace her in the XI, which was given. Radha Yadav, who had appeared as a substitute fielder in previous games, was included in Sobhana’s place. Later, Renuka Singh left the field limping after bowling her four overs but came back to face the final ball of the match.
By then, India’s chances of victory were gone after their chase started brightly but was pinned back by wickets at crucial times. They were 47 for 3 in the 7th over before a 63-run stand between Harmanpreet Kaur and Deepti Sharma put them back on track. A collapse of 6 for 31 left Harmanpreet the last player standing and despite a second successive half-century, she could not take India over the line alone.
Australia were uncharacteristically messy in the field, put down two chances and bowled four wides and a no-ball but had enough at their disposal to defend. Grace Harris, opening in Healy’s place, was their top-scorer with a 41-ball 40 and shared a 62-run stand with Tahlia McGrath, which steadied Australia after two early losses. Ellyse Perry’s 23-ball 32 gave them much-needed impetus at the end.

Wary Wareham doesn’t review

Australia were off to a slowish start with 17 runs from their first 16 balls when Renuka struck with a delivery that angled away from Beth Mooney. Australia’s senior opener reached for it and hit a low chance to Radha Yadav at backward point, where she dived forward to take a good catch. Georgia Wareham was pushed up to No.3, where she has occasionally been used as a pinch hitter, and the first ball she faced thudded into the front pad as she missed her flick. Renuka was joined by every single one of her team-mates in appealing and Umpire Sue Redfern eventually raised her finger as Wareham began walking off. Grace Harris asked Wareham if she wanted to review but she decided against it, only to return to the dressing room as ball tracking showed it was missing leg stump by some distance. Australia held Perry back and stand-in captain McGrath was in at No.4, where she had to rebuild.

Middle overs madness from McGrath and Harris
Harris and McGrath took Australia to 37 for 2 in the Powerplay and launched into attack mode from the eighth over, when they both took on Pooja Vastrakar. McGrath hit her through cover for four and then Harris scooped her over fine leg in an over that cost ten runs and took Australia past fifty. Australia were 65 for 2 at the halfway stage of their innings and the Harris-McGrath stand grew to 62 off 54 balls and India were desperate to separate them. They reviewed an lbw appeal against McGrath off a Renuka full toss which was missing leg. McGrath was then dropped on 31 by Harmanpreet off Radha Yadav at cover. The Indian captain got both hands on the ball but it burst through. Harris hit the next ball in the air and Harmanpreet ran back to try and take an overhead catch but missed. It was third time lucky when McGrath charged Radha and missed and Richa Ghosh stumped her.

Harris went nine balls later when she pulled her WPL team-mate Deepti Sharma to Mandhana at short mid-on and India had their foot on the Australian middle order’s throat when Ash Gardner’s leading edge found Radha at cover. After 15 overs, Australia were 101 for 5. Perry showed intent when she took 13 runs off Shreyanka Patil’s third over. India thought they had another important breakthrough when Deepti appealed for lbw after Phoebe Litchfield missed an attempted reverse sweep. Redfern gave it out on field and Litchfield was walking but Perry convinced her to review. The ball was pitching outside leg stump and even though Litchfield changed her stance, television umpire Jacqueline Williams deemed that Litchfield did that only after the ball was delivered and asked Redfern to change her decision to not out. India initially protested the decision but soon calmed down. Litchfield was on 5 at the time, finished the innings unbeaten on 15, and hit a six off the last ball.

Shafali smashes it upfront but India lose two in the Powerplay

India’s intent was evident off the bat of Shafali Verma, who had to wait until only the sixth ball she faced when she found the boundary with great force. She slogged Ash Gardner over square leg for India’s first four, then sent Megan Schutt over her head for four more and finally went all the way, slamming Schutt over long-off. Shafali had soon raced to 20 off 12 balls but when she tried to clear long-on off Gardner, she was caught by Annabel Sutherland and fell to Gardner for the fifth time in T20Is. Australia sensed an opportunity to break through and when Sutherland rapped Jemimah Rodrigues on the pad, reviewed only to find she was hit outside the line. Their next review was successful, when McGrath was persuaded to go upstairs after Smtiti Mandhana was hit on the back thigh off Sophie Molineux’s first ball. Ball tracking confirmed it was hitting the middle of middle stump and India ended their powerplay on 41 for 2.

Australia put the brakes on
Australia got even further ahead when Rodrigues pulled Schutt straight to Gardner at deep midwicket in the seventh over and they could apply a squeeze. Deepti Sharma’s gloved a sweep shot for four in the eighth over but then there were no boundaries for three overs by which time Australia’s spot in the semi-final was confirmed. Harmanpreet Kaur pulled Darcie Brown through deep square leg in the 11th over, which was her first boundary off the 15th ball she faced. Another 20 balls went by before India found the boundary again, in the 14th over by which point the required run-rate was above ten an over. India needed 62 runs off the last six overs.

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