Our website uses cookies to provide your browsing experience and relevant information. Before continuing to use our website, you agree & accept our Cookie Policy & Privacy.

Women's T20 World Cup final: England overpowered by Australia at Lord's as Southern Stars win record-extending seventh title

skysports.com

Women's T20 World Cup final: England overpowered by Australia at Lord's as Southern Stars win record-extending seventh title

Australia dashed England's hopes of a first ICC Women's T20 World Cup win in 17 years and second overall as they romped to a seven-wicket victory at a packed-out Lord's to secure a record-extending seventh title.

England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt (58 not out off 53 balls) and Freya Kemp (44no off 28) shared an unbroken stand of 80 from 55 balls as the hosts, who lost the toss, posted 150-4 after being reduced to 70-4 in the 11th over when Heather Knight (2) was pinned lbw.

However, Australia reached their target with 17 balls to spare in front of nearly 29,000 spectators to increase their winning streak over their rivals to nine matches across the formats and deny England a first global title since the home 50-over World Cup success in 2017.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

The class of Beth Mooney (64 off 49) and Phoebe Litchfield (48 off 35), who spanked precisely 100 off 76 balls for the second wicket in the evening sunshine, coupled with some wayward early England bowling, allowed Australia to reach 62-1 at the end of the powerplay.

The Southern Stars - for whom Litchfield struck an outrageous reverse-swept six - went on to complete the highest successful chase in a Women's T20 World Cup final, eclipsing the 149 West Indies had scored against them in Kolkata back in 2016.

Neither Mooney nor Litchfield could guide Australia home, with that honour left to Ellyse Perry (13no) - who survived when an irate Sophie Ecclestone was adjudged to have grounded a catch at mid-off late on - and Ash Gardner (3no).

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Charlotte Edwards was captain when England won the inaugural T20 World Cup in 2009, also on their own turf, but while she was unable to lead her side to victory as head coach this time around, there is no doubt the team have improved markedly since she took over last year in the wake of the 16-0 Ashes drubbing.

Scorecard: Australia vs England, Lord's

As it happened in Sunday's final

Stream England cricket without a contract

Follow Sky Sports on WhatsApp

On that chastening tour, England lost all six white-ball games to Australia - three T20Is and as many ODIs - as well as the sole Test as fitness, fielding blunders and an inability to cope under pressure led to Edwards' predecessor as coach Jon Lewis being sacked and Sciver-Brunt replacing Knight as captain.

You have to say those changes have paid off - the stirring semi-final win over South Africa earlier this week at The Oval proved that - but the fact they were emphatically beaten by Australia shows a gulf still exists between them and the women's game's benchmark side, who have now claimed 13 wins from 15 in all World Cup finals.

This was a battle between the two unbeaten teams at this year's World Cup - England and Australia had six wins from six coming in - and it was Edwards' side's impeccable record that went up in smoke as they failed to win a home World Cup for the first time, with that 2009 T20 triumph joined by three 50-over trophies (1973, 1993, 2017).

England did well to get the score they did after losing openers Amy Jones (2) and Danni Wyatt-Hodge (8) cheaply - the latter was out caught behind after in inspired review from Australia wicketkeeper Mooney - with Alice Capsey clubbing 29 off 23 deliveries, including a six, before she was bowled on the reverse sweep by Sophie Molineux.

Kemp nailed the second maximum of the innings in a 13-run final over but England's total, limited by some fine Australia fielding at points, always looked about 20 short and so it proved, despite Lauren Bell picking up the early wicket of Georgia Voll (9), cleaned up off an inside edge.

By the time Charlie Dean rearranged Litchfield's stumps and Ecclestone trapped Mooney leg before, it was too little, too late, with Ecclestone's five wides down the leg-side in the 18th over ending a contest that had long been settled.

  • Last
More news

News by day

Today,
6 of July 2026

Related news

More news