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Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat
Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

The Advertiser

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • The Advertiser

Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

There are Australians everywhere you look in England's Hundred Women competition, often in key roles batting, bowling, wicketkeeping and captaining, testament to the country's pre-eminence in the women's game. However, there is one team without an Aussie, Southampton-based Southern Brave, and as the competition moves to the business end they are leading after five wins in five. Their latest victory was over Oval Invincibles, who proved far from invincible in an 89-run dubbing on Monday, a tournament record loss. A key factor in their defeat was a rare failure by Australian great Meg Lanning, this year's leading scorer who came into the match with 200 runs in four innings at a strike rate of 1.58. However, she fell for a four-ball two, bowled by a superb ball from Sophie Devine, the Kiwi's delivery straightening off a good length to beat Lanning's outside edge and clip the top of off. While this was Lanning's first failure she has produced diminishing returns with successive scores of 85, 56, 36 and 23 previously. Three balls later Devine dismissed opening partner and skipper Lauren Winfield-Hill for 10 and Invincibles, chasing Brave's 6-161 off their 100 balls, never recovered. Top-scorer was Australian Amanda Jade-Wellington, who made a run-a-ball unbeaten 18 while wickets tumbled around her. Devine took 2-15, leading wicket-taker Lauren Bell 2-11 and Mady Villiers 3-17 as the visitors were dismissed for 72. Put in to bat Brave, who are coached by South Australian Luke Williams, got off to a strong start with English openers Maya Bouchier (34 off 23) and Danni Wyatt (26 off 24) putting on 59 off the first 38 balls. South African Laura Wolvaardt (36 off 19) built on that platform until she was third out at 123, caught by Lanning off Jade-Wellington (1-25 off 15 balls). Freya Kemp then provided a late boost with 24 off 11. The leaders will go straight into the August 31 Lord's final while second and third in the eight-team ladder play an eliminator. There are Australians everywhere you look in England's Hundred Women competition, often in key roles batting, bowling, wicketkeeping and captaining, testament to the country's pre-eminence in the women's game. However, there is one team without an Aussie, Southampton-based Southern Brave, and as the competition moves to the business end they are leading after five wins in five. Their latest victory was over Oval Invincibles, who proved far from invincible in an 89-run dubbing on Monday, a tournament record loss. A key factor in their defeat was a rare failure by Australian great Meg Lanning, this year's leading scorer who came into the match with 200 runs in four innings at a strike rate of 1.58. However, she fell for a four-ball two, bowled by a superb ball from Sophie Devine, the Kiwi's delivery straightening off a good length to beat Lanning's outside edge and clip the top of off. While this was Lanning's first failure she has produced diminishing returns with successive scores of 85, 56, 36 and 23 previously. Three balls later Devine dismissed opening partner and skipper Lauren Winfield-Hill for 10 and Invincibles, chasing Brave's 6-161 off their 100 balls, never recovered. Top-scorer was Australian Amanda Jade-Wellington, who made a run-a-ball unbeaten 18 while wickets tumbled around her. Devine took 2-15, leading wicket-taker Lauren Bell 2-11 and Mady Villiers 3-17 as the visitors were dismissed for 72. Put in to bat Brave, who are coached by South Australian Luke Williams, got off to a strong start with English openers Maya Bouchier (34 off 23) and Danni Wyatt (26 off 24) putting on 59 off the first 38 balls. South African Laura Wolvaardt (36 off 19) built on that platform until she was third out at 123, caught by Lanning off Jade-Wellington (1-25 off 15 balls). Freya Kemp then provided a late boost with 24 off 11. The leaders will go straight into the August 31 Lord's final while second and third in the eight-team ladder play an eliminator. There are Australians everywhere you look in England's Hundred Women competition, often in key roles batting, bowling, wicketkeeping and captaining, testament to the country's pre-eminence in the women's game. However, there is one team without an Aussie, Southampton-based Southern Brave, and as the competition moves to the business end they are leading after five wins in five. Their latest victory was over Oval Invincibles, who proved far from invincible in an 89-run dubbing on Monday, a tournament record loss. A key factor in their defeat was a rare failure by Australian great Meg Lanning, this year's leading scorer who came into the match with 200 runs in four innings at a strike rate of 1.58. However, she fell for a four-ball two, bowled by a superb ball from Sophie Devine, the Kiwi's delivery straightening off a good length to beat Lanning's outside edge and clip the top of off. While this was Lanning's first failure she has produced diminishing returns with successive scores of 85, 56, 36 and 23 previously. Three balls later Devine dismissed opening partner and skipper Lauren Winfield-Hill for 10 and Invincibles, chasing Brave's 6-161 off their 100 balls, never recovered. Top-scorer was Australian Amanda Jade-Wellington, who made a run-a-ball unbeaten 18 while wickets tumbled around her. Devine took 2-15, leading wicket-taker Lauren Bell 2-11 and Mady Villiers 3-17 as the visitors were dismissed for 72. Put in to bat Brave, who are coached by South Australian Luke Williams, got off to a strong start with English openers Maya Bouchier (34 off 23) and Danni Wyatt (26 off 24) putting on 59 off the first 38 balls. South African Laura Wolvaardt (36 off 19) built on that platform until she was third out at 123, caught by Lanning off Jade-Wellington (1-25 off 15 balls). Freya Kemp then provided a late boost with 24 off 11. The leaders will go straight into the August 31 Lord's final while second and third in the eight-team ladder play an eliminator.

Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat
Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

There are Australians everywhere you look in England's Hundred Women competition, often in key roles batting, bowling, wicketkeeping and captaining, testament to the country's pre-eminence in the women's game. However, there is one team without an Aussie, Southampton-based Southern Brave, and as the competition moves to the business end they are leading after five wins in five. Their latest victory was over Oval Invincibles, who proved far from invincible in an 89-run dubbing on Monday, a tournament record loss. A key factor in their defeat was a rare failure by Australian great Meg Lanning, this year's leading scorer who came into the match with 200 runs in four innings at a strike rate of 1.58. Oh that's special, Sophie Devine! 😱#TheHundred — The Hundred (@thehundred) August 18, 2025 Meg Lanning was bowled by New Zealand's Sophie Devine However, she fell for a four-ball two, bowled by a superb ball from Sophie Devine, the Kiwi's delivery straightening off a good length to beat Lanning's outside edge and clip the top of off. While this was Lanning's first failure she has produced diminishing returns with successive scores of 85, 56, 36 and 23 previously. Three balls later Devine dismissed opening partner and skipper Lauren Winfield-Hill for 10 and Invincibles, chasing Brave's 6-161 off their 100 balls, never recovered. Top-scorer was Australian Amanda Jade-Wellington, who made a run-a-ball unbeaten 18 while wickets tumbled around her. Devine took 2-15, leading wicket-taker Lauren Bell 2-11 and Mady Villiers 3-17 as the visitors were dismissed for 72. Put in to bat Brave, who are coached by South Australian Luke Williams, got off to a strong start with English openers Maya Bouchier (34 off 23) and Danni Wyatt (26 off 24) putting on 59 off the first 38 balls. South African Laura Wolvaardt (36 off 19) built on that platform until she was third out at 123, caught by Lanning off Jade-Wellington (1-25 off 15 balls). Freya Kemp then provided a late boost with 24 off 11. The leaders will go straight into the August 31 Lord's final while second and third in the eight-team ladder play an eliminator.

Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat
Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

Perth Now

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • Perth Now

Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

There are Australians everywhere you look in England's Hundred Women competition, often in key roles batting, bowling, wicketkeeping and captaining, testament to the country's pre-eminence in the women's game. However, there is one team without an Aussie, Southampton-based Southern Brave, and as the competition moves to the business end they are leading after five wins in five. Their latest victory was over Oval Invincibles, who proved far from invincible in an 89-run dubbing on Monday, a tournament record loss. A key factor in their defeat was a rare failure by Australian great Meg Lanning, this year's leading scorer who came into the match with 200 runs in four innings at a strike rate of 1.58. Oh that's special, Sophie Devine! 😱#TheHundred The Hundred (@thehundred) August 18, 2025 Meg Lanning was bowled by New Zealand's Sophie Devine However, she fell for a four-ball two, bowled by a superb ball from Sophie Devine, the Kiwi's delivery straightening off a good length to beat Lanning's outside edge and clip the top of off. While this was Lanning's first failure she has produced diminishing returns with successive scores of 85, 56, 36 and 23 previously. Three balls later Devine dismissed opening partner and skipper Lauren Winfield-Hill for 10 and Invincibles, chasing Brave's 6-161 off their 100 balls, never recovered. Top-scorer was Australian Amanda Jade-Wellington, who made a run-a-ball unbeaten 18 while wickets tumbled around her. Devine took 2-15, leading wicket-taker Lauren Bell 2-11 and Mady Villiers 3-17 as the visitors were dismissed for 72. Put in to bat Brave, who are coached by South Australian Luke Williams, got off to a strong start with English openers Maya Bouchier (34 off 23) and Danni Wyatt (26 off 24) putting on 59 off the first 38 balls. South African Laura Wolvaardt (36 off 19) built on that platform until she was third out at 123, caught by Lanning off Jade-Wellington (1-25 off 15 balls). Freya Kemp then provided a late boost with 24 off 11. The leaders will go straight into the August 31 Lord's final while second and third in the eight-team ladder play an eliminator.

Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat
Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

West Australian

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • West Australian

Rare failure for Aussie great in record Hundred defeat

There are Australians everywhere you look in England's Hundred Women competition, often in key roles batting, bowling, wicketkeeping and captaining, testament to the country's pre-eminence in the women's game. However, there is one team without an Aussie, Southampton-based Southern Brave, and as the competition moves to the business end they are leading after five wins in five. Their latest victory was over Oval Invincibles, who proved far from invincible in an 89-run dubbing on Monday, a tournament record loss. A key factor in their defeat was a rare failure by Australian great Meg Lanning, this year's leading scorer who came into the match with 200 runs in four innings at a strike rate of 1.58. Meg Lanning was bowled by New Zealand's Sophie Devine However, she fell for a four-ball two, bowled by a superb ball from Sophie Devine, the Kiwi's delivery straightening off a good length to beat Lanning's outside edge and clip the top of off. While this was Lanning's first failure she has produced diminishing returns with successive scores of 85, 56, 36 and 23 previously. Three balls later Devine dismissed opening partner and skipper Lauren Winfield-Hill for 10 and Invincibles, chasing Brave's 6-161 off their 100 balls, never recovered. Top-scorer was Australian Amanda Jade-Wellington, who made a run-a-ball unbeaten 18 while wickets tumbled around her. Devine took 2-15, leading wicket-taker Lauren Bell 2-11 and Mady Villiers 3-17 as the visitors were dismissed for 72. Put in to bat Brave, who are coached by South Australian Luke Williams, got off to a strong start with English openers Maya Bouchier (34 off 23) and Danni Wyatt (26 off 24) putting on 59 off the first 38 balls. South African Laura Wolvaardt (36 off 19) built on that platform until she was third out at 123, caught by Lanning off Jade-Wellington (1-25 off 15 balls). Freya Kemp then provided a late boost with 24 off 11. The leaders will go straight into the August 31 Lord's final while second and third in the eight-team ladder play an eliminator.

Mooney masterminds Manchester victory over doused Fire
Mooney masterminds Manchester victory over doused Fire

West Australian

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • West Australian

Mooney masterminds Manchester victory over doused Fire

Beth Mooney has masterminded a valuable victory for Manchester Originals in the Hundred Women, beating Welsh Fire in Cardiff by seven wickets. The visitors eased to victory with 19 balls to spare, after an impressive display in the field restricted Fire to 9-73 off their 100 balls. Mooney failed with the bat, making three, but showed her worth as skipper as she juggled her bowling resources. The innovative move was to give teenager pacer Monika Gaur 20 of the first 25 balls, at the end of which Fire were 2-12. This is possible in the Hundred's format. Balls are bowled in sets of five, two sets at a time from each end, with bowlers able to deliver consecutive sets. Beth Mooney stumps Georgia Elwiss off Sophie Ecclestone Nevertheless, it had not been done before in five seasons of the women's competition. Gaur began with ten balls, setting the tone as the English left-armer dismissed international colleagues Sophia Dunkey (2) and Tammy Beaumont (0). The world's No.1 spinner Sophie Ecclestone bowled the next five, conceding two runs, then Mooney brought Gaur back for ten more, five from each end, finishing with 2-10. From then on Mooney rotated her bowlers, using seven in all, to keep Fire doused. Ecclestone picked up 2-11 from her 20 balls, having Georgia Elwiss (11) stumped by Mooney and bowling West Indies' Hayley Matthews (22). English quick Lauren Filer claimed 3-8, including Australia's Jess Jonassen (20 off 19), and Scot Kathryn Bryce took 2-7 in ten balls late on. "I've sometimes got too many options but hopefully bowled them in the right spots today," said Mooney. "I speak to the coaching staff (head coach is Michael Klinger), making sure I have good options in the powerplay, then it is more about gut feel." After Matthews had Mooney lbw following a review Bryce (45 off 41) took Manchester to the brink of victory before she was stumped in Jonassen's second set. Jonassen took 1-10 off 15 but should have had more. In her first set Smales, on 1, edged behind off the glove, but it was a difficult edge to discern and Fire did not review. Later, with the game almost done, Smales (20 not out) was dropped on 15 and Deandra Dottin should have been stumped, though neither were easy chances. Earlier on Wednesday Southern Brave, the only squad without an Australian, thrashed Northern Superchargers by eight wickets with 17 balls to spare at Southampton. Annabel Sutherland fell to a fine catch Both sides came into the match boasting two wins from two but Superchargers were dismissed for 102 off the last of their 100 balls. Skipper Hollie Armitage was last out, top-scoring with 36. Australia's Annabel Sutherland was next best with 20 while Phoebe Litchfield made five before falling to New Zealand's Sophie Devine (3-15). Georgia Wareham was absent. Last year's match was a tie with both teams making 100, but this time Brave coasted to victory with England's Danni Wyatt-Hodge (43) and South Africa's Laura Wolvaardt (33) adding 62 in 45 balls. The results left Brave, who are coached by South Australian Luke Williams, top with 12 points. Superchargers and Originals are respectively third and fourth with eight, and Welsh Fire bottom and pointless.

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