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Grace Harris stars as Australian women dominate England's Hundred

Grace Harris stars as Australian women dominate England's Hundred

Australian cricketers Grace Harris, Charli Knott and Beth Mooney have produced match-winning hands in England's white-ball showpiece, the Hundred.
Harris ended the tournament's first week with masterly death bowling to enable London Spirit to edge Welsh Fire by just two runs in Cardiff.
Her teammate Knott also came to the party in the Spirit's win, with the 22-year-old all-rounder earning player-of-the-match honours with her 47 off 33 deliveries as well as a crucial wicket.
Their heroics came soon after another thriller in London in which Mooney played the perfect captain's knock, a superb 70 off 45 deliveries, to earn the Originals a two-run win over the Invincibles at The Oval.
The Invincibles almost chased down the total with a half-century from former Australia captain Meg Lanning (56).
In Cardiff, all-rounder Harris started off by hitting the only six of the match in her cameo of 18 in the Spirit's 124 all out.
Later, she took a fine catch on the boundary off Knott's spin to get rid of the dangerous Tammy Beaumont as the Fire, who were being guided by a fine knock from another Australian Jess Jonassen, appeared to be coasting to victory.
With just one five-ball "over" remaining, Harris was called on to save the day for the Spirit with her crafty spin, but it looked a hopeless cause with the visitors only three wickets down and needing just seven to win.
But Harris, who had taken a final-over hat-trick to win a Women's Premier League match for UP Warriorz back in February, again proved nerveless.
She went for just four runs off five balls, having one catch off her bowling dropped before taking a wicket with her final delivery as Georgia Elwiss tried to hit the winning boundary, only to be caught by Charlie Dean, running back from mid-on.
Two balls earlier, Jonassen's hopes of guiding the visitors home had been ended by a brilliant piece of fielding from fellow Australian, wicketkeeper Georgia Redmayne, who flicked the ball back on to the stumps to run her out.
Earlier at The Oval, Mooney was thrilled to get the better of her old national captain and friend Lanning in their terrific batting duel.
Mooney gleaned more than half her side's total of 6-139 as she cracked 10 boundaries but Lanning miscued and was caught for 56 off 42 balls.
With Marizanne Kapp (19 not out) not quite able to get the Invincibles across the line, it only meant more frustration for Lanning, who had scored 85 in another losing cause in their first match of the tournament.
AAP
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