The Phnom Penh Post

Australia crush England in World T20 final

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ALL-ROUNDER Ashleigh Gardner starred with bat and ball as Australia cruised to an eight-wicket victory over England in the final of the Women’s World T20 in Antigua on Saturday.

Gardner and teenage leg-spinner Georgia Wareham combined for five wickets to restrict England to 105 all out off 19.4 overs after they had chosen to bat first at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium.

Gardner then featured in an unbroken third-wicket partnershi­p of 62 with her captain Meg Lanning as the Aussies reached the target with almost five overs to spare to lift their fourth World T20 crown.

Given her significan­t contributi­ons in both innings the 21-year-old was the obvious choice as Player of the Match.

The Player of the Series honour was also a predictabl­e selection with opener and wicketkeep­er Alyssa Healy taking the title although the final represente­d her least accomplish­ed performanc­e.

After winning three consecutiv­e Player of the Match honours in Australia’s group matches in Guyana, Healy dropped England topscorer Danielle Wyatt in the third over of the final.

Wyatt contribute­d a breezy 43 off 37 balls to her team’s effort but only England captain Heather Knight managed any other score of note in getting to 25 as wickets continued to tumble around her.

Gardner dismissed both Wyatt and Knight with her off-spinners and added the scalp of tailender Anya Shrubsole to finish with the impressive figures of three for 22. She was ably supported by Wareham, the 19-year-old accounting for Lauren Winfield and Sophia Dunkley off successive deliveries and conceding just 11 runs through three excellent overs.

Shoddy outcricket

Wareham also made amends for some surprising­ly shoddy Australian outcricket by running out England’s Player of the Match from the semi-final against India, Amy Jones, with a direct hit to the non-striker’s end.

Any chance of England defending such a modest total depended on removing Healy cheaply. She was bowled by Ecclestone for 22 – her low- est score of the tournament – and although opening partner Beth Mooney departed shortly after, Gardner and Lanning ensured the result was never in doubt.

Gardner finished unbeaten on 33 with Lanning not out on 28 as the captain sealed a successful campaign to reclaim the title they lost to the West Indies in Kolkata in 2016.

“We did not have our best day in the field but the bowlers did a good job,” said Lanning after receiving the championsh­ip trophy from West Indies batting legend and former captain Sir Vivian Richards. “The last two World Cups really hurt and we had to change a few things and move it forward.”

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