Australia versus New Zealand Women’s T20 World Cup Final Live Score: Amelia Kerr led a convincing victory with a score of 43 and three wickets.
Australia versus New Zealand Women’s T20 World Cup Final Match Live Score: At Dubai International Stadium on Sunday, New Zealand won their first Women’s T20 World Cup after defeating South Africa by 32 runs. When playing New Zealand, South Africa was given a winning target of 159 runs. At Dubai International Cricket Stadium, South Africa captain Laura Wolvaardt won the toss and chose to bowl, allowing New Zealand to score 158-5 in 20 overs.New Zealand’s best scorer, Amelia Kerr, scored 43 off of 38 balls. Suzie Bates opened with 32 runs in 31 deliveries, while Brooke Halliday scored 38 runs in 28 deliveries. South Africa’s Nonkululeko Mlaba took 2-31 in four overs.
Suzie Bates,
Georgia Plimmer, Amelia Kerr, Sophie Devine (c), Brooke Halliday, Maddy Green, Isabella Gaze (w), Rosemary Mair, Lea Tahuhu, Eden Carson, and Fran Jonas are the players in the New Zealand starting lineup.
Anneke Bosch, Chloe Tryon, Marizanne Kapp, Sune Luus, Nadine de Klerk, Annerie Dercksen, Sinalo Jafta (w), Nonkululeko Mlaba, Ayabonga Khaka, Laura Wolvaardt (c), and Tazmin Brits make up the South African XI.
South Africa has been on a wild rampage, defeating the reigning champions Australia in the semifinals to go to their second consecutive final. After Eden Carson and Amelia Kerr had done the damage with the ball earlier, Devine called for her longtime partner Suzie Bates to defend 14 runs in the final over as the White Ferns narrowly defeated the West Indies by eight runs in the semifinal.
Sophie Devine: “We will leave as soon as I have that trophy in my possession. I didn’t want to get ahead of ourselves, but last night I began to fantasize about what it would be like to hold the trophy with this squad. For New Zealand cricket, this group—Suze and Lea—has been around for a while. The wonderful thing about this group is that we are aware of the goals we have set for ourselves over the past 15–18–24 months. We continued moving in the right directions; momentum is what you want, and we entered the World Cup fresh off ten straight defeats. However, everyone begins at zero. demonstrates the depth of Suze’s character as a gamer. The player with the most caps in women’s
Laura Wolvaardt: “We didn’t want to get ahead of ourselves; we just wanted to reset [after semis].” We didn’t play our best cricket tonight, even though we knew we still had a very good opponent in New Zealand. In the powerplay, they truly came out as fierce. Early on, they showed dread and intent. We first believed we could take a few wickets here and there, but they persisted. Yes, most likely allowed them to score too many points. We were under a lot of pressure in the back. Teachings? I’m not sure. We’ll need to reflect well on what actually transpired, in my opinion. Right now, we’re still a little new. However, halfway through the stage, you
Marizanne Kapp is one of your more seasoned players, of course, but you also have some fantastic young players emerging. Additionally, you have some young players on the bench who were quite impressive in earlier series but were not given a chance to play in the World Cup. We’ll simply keep improving, start over, and hopefully have a successful World Cup the following year. I would want to express my gratitude to our management. I believe that their behind-the-scenes labor goes unnoticed most of the time. We are incredibly grateful for the many hours they put into preparing us ready to play, but they don’t receive enough credit for it. Just to the families that took the plane, too. Many families
Amelia Kerr: “Given what this team has been through, I’m a little speechless, but I’m also really happy to win. Yes, it’s what dreams are made of.” The wicket seemed decent to me, but it slowed down a bit, so I reasoned that it probably wasn’t a bad thing that we bowled second. It was a fantastic effort from everyone and a lot of faith to, I suppose, do the job. I kind of believed that hitting 140+ in the finals got us into the game and the way Brooke came out and whacked. [On Brooke] Yes, she relieved me of a lot of stress. I was having a lot of trouble out there, and I think I was having some trouble
Bowling is perhaps what initially drew me to the White Ferns, and I’ve always aimed to improve at it. To be able to take wickets and have the self-assurance to step up in crucial situations, but I believe I’ve mentioned it already this year: I’ve never loved bowling as much as I do with our spin group; they make it so much fun, and I’m just having a good time when I’m out there. Getting the big players out is usually preferable.
The top hitters are building their innings in the middle overs, so I suppose bowling through them is what you want to do if you want to be a significant match player. If you can create a breakthrough, it can drive them back, and that’s what I do. Wickets come and go, but fortunately, this tournament has been favorable to me. [on switching between three children and seniors] I’ve been playing international cricket for a while now, so I’ve had to share the field and experience playing alongside three of our greats. Being around our young ones, though, makes it feel like you can form wonderful relationships with them all, and that’s what our team has. They’re such unique individuals, and I love playing for them.
Rosemary Mair: “It’s quite unbelievable. It’s incredible that the team recovered before the competition. The hitters scored an incredible amount. They started the powerplay well. We have experienced terrible points throughout the past 18 months, but we have remained united and persevered because we care so much for one another. [about Tahuhu, Bates, and Devine] They are quite elderly, but we can still learn a lot from them.
Izzy Gaze: “It still hasn’t really hit me. Amazing moment. [during the DRS call] My judgment was sound; I just heard it rather clearly. Even though we weren’t playing well going into the tournament, we had a lot of faith in our squad. We had faith. This is for Devine and Bates.
Lea Tahuhu: Totally unbelievable. so proud of this group. brings all of the effort to fruition. so proud. This group is unique.
Rosemary Mair took two wickets in the penultimate over. In the last stages, South Africa is collapsing. Sinalo Jafta and Chloe Tryon collapse. There are just four runs left in the over.
With just five runs from the final over, Eden Carson closes. New Zealand wins the Women’s T20 World Cup for the first time. This is a thorough victory by 32 runs. This title is well-deserved, and you should see the scenes. There are smiles and tears everywhere.