Englishwoman 8 259 (Beaumont 49, Brunt 45 *, Villani 3-42, Beams 2-44) Australian women 3 times 8 times 256 times (Perry 70, Lanning 40, Hartley 2-31, Brunt 2-42)
Scorecard and Breaking Details
On July 24, 1993, England won 43 Australian matches in the Women's World Cup at Gilford. Between that match and 24 years later, the two sides met six times in the World Cup between the match, one meeting had no result and Australia won on the other.
England's wait ended in Bristol. After the roller coaster competition went down to the last ball, it was put in the shade. Jess Jonassen needed to hit the last ball 6 times. She killed Jenny Gunn, and it was as if she were going to win in Australia-the moment between the contact following the ball's orbit and the TV camera. She did not put it in the middle, and the ball fell three yards to the left of the defender of the three-fourths of the way to the border, a deep defender.
Gunn ended up with a figure of 2 for 54, and an economy of exactly 6.00 did not require justice for the impact of the slow ball, which she was hard to pick, on the Australian side, and got the grip at the required rate. Her stub-stump left arm spin-in Alex Hartley was hardly hit and Catherine Brunt took two turnstiles.
Brunt and Gunn, meanwhile, played an important role with the bat, with the seventh wicket dropping 73 balls to 85 to revive England's innings. When they gathered six years old at 174 o'clock, England was falling off the rail with Batman alongside Sarah Taylor (35), Natalie Sushi Burr (29) and Daniel Wyatt (27) after Batman came in and looked good and abandoned the turnstile. Seemed to A) all culpable. Thanks to the strength and common sense demonstrated by Brunt and Gunn, England ended in 8 to 259.
Australia's defenses may not have been shattered. Alyssa Healy dropped a catch and blew a chance to stepping in a series of balls to sign Gunn more than 41 times, while Kristen Beams dropped a return catch in Gunn on the 46th. Slowly ranked fourth in the middle, Elyse Villani finished bowling in the final and scored 13 points, while Ellyse Perry, who scored 4.42 points in the quick middle, just exceeded seven.
The British defense was likewise full of blockers. Jonassen finally got the chance to win the last ball because Sciver dropped the previous ball to the boundary. Danielle Hazell put down a dive return catch to save 27-year-old Beth Mooney, and Anya Shrubsole, who blew a sitter in the middle when Elise Villani turned 2 years old. Perry offered Sverer a simple opportunity in Happy Midwicket. 67 turns off
But these three drops cost a total UK 19 runs. The tight lines that the baller keeps on the slow surface combined with the scoreboard pressure continued to create opportunities. Australia continued punching but the 260 target was not reached.
They approached the pursuit with the intention of getting a ticket gate at the end, which mostly worked. Nicole Bolton and Mooney added 56 to the first turnstile at 15.3 overovers, and Perry and Meg Lanning added 57 to the third turnstile at 13.3 overovers. Lanning saw his best touch despite being hit tightly on his right shoulder. When she was 40, Australia, who was so far away from Hartley and york, needed 131 from 110 balls.
The main stage of the defense of England was when Australia batted 35th. Perry used his feet nicely, driving four of Danielle Hazell just after four people, then playing mid-wick wit six times when Australia made the 12th place in the 35th place. But while Perry and Villani struggled to fight the speed changes of Hartley, Gunn, and Anya Shrubsole, five Powerplay overs brought 16 runs.
The rate needed for these five overovers rose from 7.13 to 9.10. Alex Blackwell, Ashleigh Gardner, and Jonassen's muscles and Healy's innovation brought Australia closer, but close enough.
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