Millennium Post

India eves lose again, Australia claim 36-run win

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MUMBAI: India were knocked out of reckoning from the Twenty20 tri-series final after Australia handed the hosts their third successive defeat, the highlight of which was medium pacer Megan Schutt becoming the first bowler from Down Under to claim a hattrick in the format.

Australia outplayed Harmanpree­t Kaur's team by 36 runs. Having failed to secure a single win in the series so far, India are without any points right now and would be aiming for a consolatio­n win over England in their last league match on Thursday.

Australia set India a challengin­g target of 186 for five with the help of twin half centuries by Beth Mooney and Elyse Villani. They then restricted the hosts to 150 for 5 in 20 overs.

Schutt (3-31) wreaked havoc at the Branourne Stadium by claiming a hat-trick. Her scalps included the inform Smriti Mandhana (3), veteran Mithali Raj, who was dismissed for a duck, and Deepti Sharma (2).

While Schutt cleaned up Mandhana and Raj off the fifth and the sixth ball of the second over. She completed her hattrick in the first ball of the fifth over by removing Sharma, who gave a sitter to Amanda Jade Wellington at mid-off, leaving Australian players after defeating India in Mumbai on Monday

the hosts in deep trouble at 26/3.

Skipper Harmanpree­t Kaur (33 off 30 balls) and Mumbaibatt­er Jemmimah Rodrigues (50 off 41 balls) stitched a 54-run stand for the fourth wicket, but that was not enough to take the home side to victory.

Rodrigues, who scored her maiden internatio­nal fifty, and Harmanpree­t dealt in ones and twos but the big shots just did not come through for the two.

Rodrigues was guilty of giving her wicket away by chipping straight down to the fielder.

Harmanpree­t tried to up the ante by hitting a four and a six off consecutiv­e balls, in the 14th over, but was dismissed off the very next ball, caught by Delissa Kimmince off Ashleigh Gardner.

Australian bowlers never allowed the Indian batswomen to settle and took wickets at regular intervals on a placid track.

A quick-fire 38 off 26 balls from Anuja Patil did chip in but the asking rate had risen considerab­ly by then.

Earlier, put into bat, opener Mooney scored a half century and looked unstoppabl­e, hitting eight boundaries. It was medium-pacer Pooja Vastrakar, who removed two Australian batswomen – opener Alyssa Healy (9) and onedown Ashleigh Gardener (17) -- cheaply. While Healy was caught by Rodrigues, Vastrakar cleaned up Gardner.

The visitors were tottering at 29/2 but staged a fine recovery from that point to post 46/2 in the power-play. India gave away the early advantage by letting Villani and Mooney conjure a 114- run stand for the third wicket to steer the team out of trouble.

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