The Hindu (Kochi)

Women’s cricket is on the up and up and the T20 World Cup Quali ers underlines it

While Scotland and Sri Lanka have booked their ights to Bangladesh for the showpiece event, the increasing quality of cricket particular­ly from Associate nations shows the need for wider playing platform at the highest level

- Lavanya Lakshmi Narayanan

t’s 2024. Women’s cricket has grown exponentia­lly around the world. Profession­al contracts are in place, franchise leagues are mushroomin­g around the world. The sport now has full-time players who can aord to gainfully take up cricket. Solid medical support and insurance, vibrant sta contingent­s, cutting edge technology and even AI have all made their way into a vertical which is only looking upwards.

The recently concluded T20 World Cup Quali‚ers added to this massive surge ahead in the women’s game while also oering an unsavoury reminder of the vestiges of past handicaps that continue to haunt the game.

Sri Lanka, led by veteran allrounder Chamari Athapathth­u, and Scotland, led by the sprightly Bryce sisters Kathryn and Sarah, completed the deck for the upcoming women’s T20 showpiece in Bangladesh.

Sri Lanka settles into what’s easily the group of death in the tournament alongside holder Australia, a formidable India, Pakistan and New Zealand while Scotland — which will feature in its maiden World Cup campaign — joins England, West Indies, host Bangladesh and South Africa in group B.

IThe journey to acquire that ‘Q’ against their names was not without challenges. Sri Lanka won all its group games including a win against Scotland, all by largely comfortabl­e margins.

However, the semi‚nal clash against a spirited United Arab Emirates led by Esha Oza nearly drove Sri Lanka’s campaign o the cli. Vismi Gunaratne’s 44-ball 45 helped the side post 149 for six after being put in to bat. In response, UAE valiantly countered an experience­d Lankan bowling arsenal with captain Esha leading from the front.

Her 44-ball 66 sparked hope in the hearts of players in the dugout and the sparse home fans and families of the cricketers watching from the stands that maybe, just maybe, UAE could sneak through and qualify.

However, Athapathth­u has seen many seasons change, and a little heat from the Middle East was nothing for the islander. Her strikes with the ball with help from 38-year-old pace-bowling veteran Udeshika Prabodhani (who rocked Esha’s stumps to end her resistance) saw a nervy win through.

Scotland saw o a stronger Ireland out‚t courtesy an allround eort from skipper Kathryn. The Scots restricted Ireland to 110, with Kathryn taking four wickets conceding just eight runs. Two of those wickets came in the very ‚rst over of the day when Ireland — having opted to bat — looked to put up a competitiv­e score.

The Irish could never recover from the opening jolts from Kathryn but crawled to a modest yet sub-par total courtesy resistance from Lena Paul (51-ball 45) and Arlene Kelly (27-ball 35). Kathryn then pitched in with the bat with an unbeaten 35 to guide her side home with 22 deliveries to spare.

These two sides and some of their well-travelled players, who ply their trade in multiple leagues around the world including the ICC-backed FairBreak Global, Australia’s Women’s Big Bash League, England’s The Hundred and India’s Women’s Premier League, then clashed for top honours in a ‚nal in Abu Dhabi.

Scotland, with Kathryn on the bench with a niggle, opted to bowl and struck early with Vishmi falling to Priyanaz Chatterji in the third over. Harshita Samarawick­rama fell soon after in the sixth over and Kavisha Dilhari fell after a 13-ball 15.

Athapathth­u was striking under 100 at this point, just looking to see o the nervous phase of the game and trying to ‚nd support at the other end. That pillar was Nilakshika Silva. The pair put together a 106-run stand for the fourth wicket, Nilakshi contributi­ng 19 o 24 balls and Athapathth­u with the lion’s share — 83 runs o just 41 deliveries.

From scoring just 24 runs o 27 balls early on, she brought up her 100 in just 60 balls. Rachel Slater eventually dismissed the Lankan skipper but not before the carnage had already ended, including 13 fours and four sixes. Her 63-ball 102 was the ‚rst T20I century scored by a Sri Lankan woman. A massive 170-run target was set for Scotland to win the Quali‚er.

Saskia Horley and Megan McColl began with intent in a tall chase but Horley was run out in the third over. A double-wicket maiden from Udeshika where she took out McColl and skipper for the game Sarah in the fourth helped Sri Lanka place one hand on the winner’s trophy.

The spinners choked the run ¥ow and while Priyanaz fought a lone battle (eventually in vain), no one could replicate Athapathth­u’s dominance with the bat on the Scottish side. While the Scots batted out the 20 overs, they fell short by a massive 68 run-margin.

The purpose of the ‚nal, given that both sides had secured quali‚cation by making it to the summit clash, was to determine which groups they would complete in the World Cup draw. Ironically, Sri Lanka’s reward for victory is a place in the cut-throat group A, where a few upsets might well be loading.

Scotland’s competitio­n is no easier — neighbour England and South Africa have been steadily improving their T20 pedigree while West Indies will bank on a Hayley (Matthews) storm as it looks to play to its potential in the World event.

Incidental­ly, England and Scotland’s meeting on October 14 will be the ‚rst clash between sides — which share a land border — since 2001.

The Quali‚ers threw up some heartwarmi­ng stories about struggle, determinat­ion and pure passion to keep cricket and its spirit alive in dierent nations. Take Vanuatu for example.

The island nation where cricket is very much an amateur practice, sent a team where a large chunk does seasonal work (fruit picking) alongside pursuing their ambitions in cricket. I Comply Labour and Agricultur­al Compliance tied up with the Vanuatu Cricket Associatio­n to provide nets and other training facilities to the players.

VCA CEO Tim Cutler revealed that the ICC sends the nation a little under $500,000 to manage its running — right from playing for the 18 contracted players under the board (14 men, four women), programmes across junior and school cricket, procuring and maintainin­g grounds and equipment among other things.

Vanuatu made it to the World Cup quali‚ers on winning the East Asia and Paci‚c regional quali‚ers, where it pipped a more establishe­d Papua New Guinea among other teams in the fray, becoming the ‚rst out‚t (male or female) to make the Quali‚ers of the World event.

However, the side fell short of funds to aord kits and other necessitie­s to even make it to UAE to play the tournament. This isn’t the ‚rst time the nation has had to fundraise. They did so in 2019 ahead of the Paci‚c Games too.

This time, its campaign exploded on social media with support (monetary and otherwise) ¥owing in. Among its wellwisher­s is also Hannah Darlington, who in the past has also left behind equipment for players to use in Vanuatu when she played there during an Indigenous XI’s tour last year.

Vanuatu went on to beat Zimbabwe by six wickets in the ‚rst Quali‚er encounter, a historic achievemen­t for a side playing its ‚rst competitiv­e encounter against a Full-Member nation. They did not win anything else and were placed last in the group table, tied with Zimbabwe but lower due to a poorer net run rate. However, nothing would stop the side from soaking in the positives and continuing its push to be part of a World Cup, something this football-crazy nation has not tasted in any discipline.

Ireland’s heartbreak­ing loss in the semi‚nals went against expectatio­ns. It is the nation that is a Full Member, it is the one with resources to support programmes for men’s and women’s cricket. Had that one PowerPlay gone dierently, perhaps Scotland wouldn’t be celebratin­g a tryst with history today. UAE and Esha Oza too would feel a bit hard done by after running Sri Lanka so close in the opening part of their semi‚nal.

There’s much at stake in Bangladesh later this year. Athapathth­u, who has been teasing retirement for the better part of the last month, has a big goal post to play towards. She is at the helm of a ¥ourishing side that has grown from strength to strength in the last few months and will not allow teams to walk over it, even if the group has giants like Australia, India and New Zealand.

While UAE’s exit was heartbreak­ing, that Athapathth­u, and frankly the rest of the world, gets more of the Sri Lankan captain who looks to be in the form of her life with bat and ball came as a relief.

2024 will see two World Cups in the span of a few months. The men’s variant in USA and West Indies will see nine Associate nations take to the ‚eld, while the women’s event will see just one — debutant Scotland.

The men’s event has 20 teams participat­ing, an expansion from a 12-team pool in the inaugural edition in 2007. The 2014 edition saw the tournament expand to 16 teams and the 2024 edition is set to welcome more contenders to the fray.

The women’s variant began as an eight-team aair in 2009. 2014 brought an expansion here too, to 10 teams. The next widening of the playing pool to 12 teams is scheduled for the 2026 edition, which will be hosted by England.

Given how teams around the world have been punching above their weight, eyeing that Full Member status as the larger goal, but also vying for opportunit­ies to play higher-ranked opponents to up their own standards, the World Cup — that too in a format hailed by the ICC as its developmen­tal vehicle — would have been quite a nifty way to do that.

While the bracket is set for this edition and the next, the Quali‚ers has underlined that there’s room in the world’s biggest stage for more players to come and win the hearts of those patronisin­g the support. It’s time for the powers that be to welcome them with open arms.

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