The New Zealand Herald

White Ferns in danger of early Cup exit after losing in thriller

- Niall Anderson

The White Ferns are going to have to produce a feat they haven't accomplish­ed since 2017 to make the semifinals of the cricket’s Twenty20 Women’s World Cup.

A thrilling three-run defeat to India has left the Ferns in all likelihood needing to beat Australia to progress to the final four; a team they haven't beaten in their last four meetings.

Such a scenario assumes both teams take care of business against Bangladesh in their next encounters — the White Ferns' showdown coming tomorrow — but if so, the final group game on Monday will decide whether the White Ferns live on at the tournament.

Their hopes of progressio­n would have been much simpler had they chased down India's middling 133-8 yesterday in Melbourne, but despite a scintillat­ing final surge from Amelia Kerr, they fell just short.

Needing an unlikely 34 off the last two overs, Kerr nearly produced a magical victory, hitting 18 off the penultimat­e over from Poonam Yadav, before a Hayley Jensen four, three singles and a stunning Kerr scoop over third man for four left the White Ferns needing five off the final ball to win, and four for a Super Over.

However, Kerr couldn't connect off the last ball, with Pandey nailing a yorker into her pads, leaving India with a sigh of relief and the White Ferns wondering what could have been.

Their bowlers had given them a chance, having pegged India back from a strong start. India were ready to launch at 68-1 after nine overs, with 16-year-old star Shafali Verma benefiting from poor New Zealand fielding to hit 46 from 34 balls.

However, her dismissal, along with those of fellow Indian dangerwome­n

Smriti Mandhana (11), Jemimah Rodrigues (10) and captain Harmanpree­t Kaur (one) saw India tumble.

Star spinners Kerr (2-21) and Leigh Kasperek (1-19) did most of the damage, although some handy late runs saw India through to a defendable total.

Neither Rachel Priest (12 off nine balls) nor Suzie Bates (six off 13) could turn around their recent patchy form, but India's biggest scalp came when Sophie Devine fell.

Devine had made 50s in a recordsett­ing six straight Twenty20 internatio­nals, but there was always the sense that the White Ferns relied too heavily on their inspiratio­nal skipper. Strangely enough, it was a 57km/h wide full toss that ended her record run, with Devine slicing Yadav's delivery to backward point, departing for just 14 from 21 balls, and leaving her side in peril at 34-3 after 8.1 overs.

Maddy Green’s 24 from 23 balls was a solid effort but with the run-rate rising above nine an over, she went down the wicket and was stumped.

Without Devine to anchor the innings, the innovative Katey Martin tried her hand at the task, but her 25 from 28 balls was also too slow for the job required, and left Kerr and Jensen with an improbable task. They nearly pulled it off, until Pandey held her nerve, and sent the White Ferns' Cup campaign into must-win territory.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Amelia Kerr (right) celebrates a dismissal during yesterday’s heartbreak­ing defeat to India.
Photo / Getty Images Amelia Kerr (right) celebrates a dismissal during yesterday’s heartbreak­ing defeat to India.
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