Australia win Women’s Cricket World Cup
Alyssa Healy produced a milestone innings in a tournament that may be transformative for women’s cricket, as Australia beat England by 71 runs yesterday to win the Women’s Cricket World Cup for the seventh time.
Healy struck 170 from 138 balls as Australia reached 356-5 to toss aside any notions that women’s limited-overs cricket is in any way staid or lacking in spectacle.
Nat Sciver then produced an innings of almost equal quality, reaching a century from 90 balls to give hope to what seemed a hopeless England run chase. Sciver was 148 not out when England’s last wicket fell at 285 in the 44th over. While she was at the crease, Australia’s total seemed attainable.
Healy’s was the highest and Sciver’s the third-highest individual scores in a men’s or women’s ICC World Cup that made clear this final was one of the best ever in a cricket World Cup.
“That was pretty special from our group, something that we’ve been working towards for a long period of time,” Healy said. “Everyone’s been talking about it for a long time, so to get over the line was great.
“We knew England were peaking at the right time and you never know what’s going to happen. Full credit to the bowlers, they held their nerve. Nat Sciver played a tremendous innings, I thought she might have got them over the line, but it was just a great game of cricket.”
More than 86,000 fans attended when Healy made 75 from 39 balls as Australia beat India in the final of the Women’s T20 World Cup in March 2020.
The crowd was much smaller this time but still near capacity at Hagley Oval, and the ripples of yesterday’s match may radiate wide as women’s cricket grows and its move towards equality with the men’s game gains pace.
The women and young girls who wore the jerseys of their favourite players or clamoured for autographs at the final, were only a small indication of the new generation this World Cup, broadcast to an unprecedented global audience, may have inspired.
Healy helped demonstrate how far the women’s game has come since England won the first World Cup in 1973, when the players wore white pleated skirts and knee socks, and the seven competing teams included Young England and an International XI.
Through 31 matches over 30 days, the 2022 tournament produced cricket of the highest calibre, with 11 centuries, four innings of 300 or more, and many thrilling finishes in the final over.
Healy’s innings, which followed her 129 in Australia’s 157-run semi-final win over the West Indies, represented a higher level of performance for its command, the range of her shots, and the power with which she struck the ball.
AP