Australia secured their seventh Women’s T20 World Cup title in a commanding final against England at Lord’s Cricket Ground, retiring the opposition for just 151 after posting a competitive total of 150-4 in the first innings. The Aussies chased the target with ease, dismissed in 17 balls, sweeping aside England’s efforts to defend their late-2026 tournament crown.
Beth Mooney’s commanding century (64 off 49 balls) and Phoebe Litchfield’s fiery knock (48 off 35 balls) anchored Australia’s innings, with the pair forging a match-defining 112-run partnership. Their aggressive batting set a relentless pace, with Mooney later named player of the tournament for her pivotal role throughout the campaign. “Winning the World Cup is incredible,” Litchfield remarked, praising Mooney’s leadership: “Moods made it look easy. It’s such a blast batting with her.”
Amid a sold-out finale at London, Australia’s dominance extended beyond cricketing prowess—a rematch victory following a 2025 Ashes whitewash. This clash cemented their legacy as tournament powerhouses. Key all-rounders Ellyse Perry and Annabel Sutherland were also highlighted, the latter registering her 50th T20I dismissal after Marizn Wyatt-Hodge’s edge behind off Ash Gardner.
England’s innings faltered under pressure. opener Charlotte Dean endured a poor start, dismissed in a rampageous opening over by Lucy Hamilton. Georgia Voll’s match-altering catch at deep point off Alana Sikhula caught Sciver-Brunt mid-drive, shifting momentum. Yet Nat Sciver-Brunt and Freya Kemp steadied their side temporarily, smashing 80 together—a partnership anchored by brief fireworks including a Sophie finish in the death overs. However, England’s collapse resumed as Gardner returned figures of 2-24 in four overs, with Kramer’s lbw dismissal sealing the result after the last wides slowed play.
Post-match, England coach Shanta Chatterjee acknowledged Australia’s class: “They’ve led by example in women’s cricket. We’re closing the gap, but today it went their way.” Media pressure mounted on England weeks prior when England Cricket Board leaders questioned squad selection decisions. Still, both teams faced logistical fallout from political tensions—notably amid European sponsor withdrawals highlighting geopolitical divides. Despite these off-field narratives, the final itself stood as a showcase of athletic grit, with Australia’s batters exploiting loose delivery to keep England chasing shadows in wind-swept late-2026 London.
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