Women’s Ashes: Australia win series outright as England suffer agonising six-run DLS method defeat in second T20 | Cricket News


Australia sealed the Women’s Ashes outright with a dramatic six-run win via DLS over England in the second T20 at the Manuka Oval in Canberra.

With skipper Heather Knight (43no) and Amy Jones (0no) out in the middle for the final over, England needed 22 runs from the final six deliveries and after Knight started with a boundary to leave them needing 18 runs from five balls, the umpires stopped play and left the visitors fuming as they were brought off at a crunch time.

From there, with the rain still pouring, the game was called and with it, the hosts now have a 10-0 lead in the contest.

Now, even with victory in the final T20 and one-off Test, Heather Knight’s side can only bring the scoreline back to 10-6. England had entered the second T20I with an 8-0 deficit in the Ashes after being swept 6-0 in the preceding ODI series and then losing the first T20I by 57 runs which saw the hosts retain the Ashes.

After putting Australia into bat and being set a tough target of 186, Danni Wyatt-Hodge (52) and Sophia Dunkley (32) built a crucial partnership for England, 12 fours and one six between them having England’s tally ticking along nicely.

See also  Wholesale prices jump to a 3.5 percent annual increase

However, a decisive 13th over from Megan Schutt (2-32) turned the tide and saw both dismissed after a rain delay, reducing England to 99-3 and Australia once again winning the pressure moments.

That brought Knight and Nat Sciver-Brunt (22) out to the middle and gave two England stalwarts the task of chasing down the remaining 87 runs required, the pair coping under pressure after adding 17 runs from the 17th over.

Despite their late aggressive partnership, with the rain returning the total proved too much and England fell six runs short of an Australia total that was boosted by a late surge from Talia McGrath (48) and Grace Harris (35), the partnership picking up 48 runs from the final three overs their stand worth an unbroken 71 from 35 balls.

The loss will leave England reeling and the question of whether they had left it too little too late unanswered.

The series continues with the final T20 at Adelaide on Saturday and then concludes with the pink-ball Test match at the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground from January 30.

See also  Tom Brady on what makes Jayden Daniels so special for the Commanders | The Herd

England’s intent improves as pressure moments in the field cost them

At the start of the contest, England’s spin bowlers looked dangerous and struck early to see Australia collapse from 66-1 to 75-4, Sophie Ecclestone (1-33) and Charlie Dean (2-28) combining to remove Beth Mooney (44), Elyse Perry (2), and Phoebe Litchfield (17).

England's players celebrate after dismissing Australia's Beth Mooney during their Women's Ashes T20 cricket match in Canberra, Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP)
Image:
Sophie Ecclestone came up with a clever delivery to remove strike opener Beth Mooney

However, after Freya Kemp (1-21) made up for dropping Annabel Sutherland (18) in the 11th over by dismissing her in the 15th, Australia picked their moment and regained control of their innings.

With McGrath and Harris going aggressive and putting the pressure back on England’s bowling attack, they passed their half-century partnership to post a combined 83 runs and wrestle the control back for their side.

England's Charlie Dean, right, appeals for a LBW decision on Australia's Grace Harris during their Women's Ashes T20 cricket match in Canberra, Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP)
Image:
Charlie Dean also proved a thorn in Australia’s side as she was pivotal in their early collapse

England’s fielding had been questioned throughout the series and although the increase in their level of intent was palpable, the strike power throughout Australia’s side saw dropped catches and runaway boundaries still play their part, Dean dropping strike-woman McGrath in the 19th over which saw 18 runs added to Australia’s tally.

Women’s Ashes – results and fixtures

All dates and times UK and Ireland



Source link

Related posts:

EU Message to Zelensky: You Are Not Alone

What Greenland’s Resources Mean for the EU

EC: First disbursements from the Growth Plan for WB between the second and third quarters of this ye...

Vicepremiér P. Kmec: Slovensku sa darí čerpať peniaze najrýchlejšie spomedzi štátov EÚ

Slovenia is not inclined to condition the disbursement of cohesion funds on reforms

Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever participates in second consultation on Ukraine

Belgium supports additional budgetary room for defense

Dodiku Trial: Test for the Judiciary and the European Path of BiH

Ukraine: the military effort for security in Europe will have “consequences for French public financ...

Prouza criticizes the EU’s vision for agriculture, Výborný considers it a solid foundation

EC announces that farmers will not be forced to sell their products below production costs

Šefčovič in the USA: EU wants to avoid the scenario of customs measures and countermeasures

Fico: In Paris, a meeting of friends of war is taking place, Slovakia has nothing to do there

Trump’s IVF order: Democrats allege ‘PR stunt’ as anti-abortion groups bristle 

Judge signals he’s taking time to decide on dropping Adams charges

Microsoft unveils company’s first quantum computing chip

5 things to watch at this year’s CPAC

Hochul to Trump on congestion pricing: ‘We’ll see you in court’

Acting Social Security commissioner clarifies claims about people older than 100 getting benefits

Allies troll critics with references to King Trump

Cheney: Trump is ‘antithesis of everything Ronald Reagan stood for’

USAID contractors ask judge to hold Trump admin in civil contempt for violating order to lift spendi...

DHS fires roughly 400 probationary employees

Watch: Trump gives remarks at Saudi-led investors conference in Miami

Live updates: Trump says he plans to give Americans ’20 percent’ from DOGE cost cuts

Former NFL punter arrested for protest against pro-Trump city council

Trump floats using DOGE savings to pay Americans, pay down debt

Senate GOP dismayed by Trump, Zelensky war of words

Key GOP votes withhold support from House plan despite Trump’s backing

Trump says he plans to meet with some Democrats next week

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *