Live
- Lal Krishna Advani hospitalised at Delhi's Apollo Hospital
- Modi performs puja at Triveni
- Jammu records season’s lowest minimum temperature as Kashmir valley shivers
- Scheme to give Rs 1K to women to be rolled out in 15 days
- Flirty Texts That Turn into Dates
- ‘Asli’ Sonakshi shares a glimpse of herself in ‘golden hour’
- Shraddha Kapoor took ‘thepla’ for her ‘foreign’ trip
- ChatGPT Now Supports Video Inputs: All Details
- B.Com vs BBA: Which degree better prepares you for an MBA?
- Apple Intelligence now features Image Playground, Genmoji
Just In
Leg-spinner Poonam Yadav bowled a magical spell in her comeback game to steer India to a comfortable 17-run win over defending champions Australia in the opening match of the Women's T20 World Cup here on Friday.
Sydney : Leg-spinner Poonam Yadav bowled a magical spell in her comeback game to steer India to a comfortable 17-run win over defending champions Australia in the opening match of the Women's T20 World Cup here on Friday.
Put in to bat, India struggled to a below par 132 before Poonam (4/19 in 4 overs) foxed the Aussies with her googlies, turning the match decisively into her team's favour.
Australia, who have won the competition four times in six editions, were all out for 115 in 19.5 overs "A bowler like Poonam is someone who leads from the front. We were expecting a great comeback from her. Our team is looking nice, earlier we depended on two-three players," India skipper Harmanpreet Kaur said after the match.
Poonam, who missed the preceding tri-series due to a hand injury, also got good support from other bowlers including pacer Shikha Pandey. The tournament-opener saw a record 13,000 plus attendance with a sizeable chunk supporting India.
India next play against Bangladesh in Perth on February 24. Australia were off to a good start to their chase with opener Alyssa Healy making a 35-ball 51, laced with six boundaries and a six. However, Indian spinners led by Poonam triggered a collapse as Australia suddenly slipped to 82 for six.
Poonam (4/19) snapped four wickets, two in successive deliveries in the 12th over, to break the back of Australia's chase. Ashleigh Gardner (34 off 36) tried her bit but didn't get any support from the other end.
Earlier, India squandered a flying start to end up with a below-par total. Sixteen-year-old Shafali Verma took India to 40 for no loss in four overs with a typically aggressive 29 off 15 balls but her fall derailed the innings as the other batters disappointed.
Deepti Sharma made a composed 46-ball 49 in the second half of the innings but the firepower that India needed in the death overs was badly missing.
India were cruising initially with Shafali taking the opposition to the cleaners, hitting five fours and a six. However, left-arm spinner Jess Jonassen (2/24) snapped two quick wickets, Smriti Mandhana (10 off 11) and Harmanpreet (2 off 5) to reduce India to 47 for three.
Deepti then shared 53 runs with Jemimah Rodrigues (26 off 33) to bring up the 100 in the 16th over. For Australia, Ellyse Perry (1/15) and Delissa Kimmince (1/24) were the other wicket-takers.
Third hat-trick that I have missed: Poonam
Poonam almost completed a hat-trick and took four wickets for 19 runs to help India succesfully defend a low target of 133.
Poonam was suffering from injuries in the buildup to the tournament and she thanked he7r physio and teammates to help her get back to match fitness in time for the World Cup.
"My physio and my teammates supported me a lot when I was injured. I bowled well against Australia here in the past so I wanted to continue that," she said in the post-match presentation ceremony.
Poonam dismissed Rachael Haynes and Australia's star all-rounder Elysse Perry off consecutive balls and would have got the hat-trick had it not been for Taniya Bhatia dropping Jess Jonassen in what was a rare mistake from the wicketkeeper.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com