The tournament has seen an unprecedented volume of runs being scored.
Five of the top six team totals in a Women’s T20 World Cup have been recorded in the last two weeks, including four scores exceeding 200 runs.
This surge is partly due to a rise in boundary hits, with the tournament’s boundary percentage surpassing that of any prior edition.
Boundary deliveries account for 52% of total runs, reflecting both the growing power in women’s cricket and the organizers’ aim to provide favorable batting surfaces.
At the 2024 edition in the United Arab Emirates, where pitches were slower and lower, the boundary percentage fell to 40%.
Notably, three of the four highest successful chases have occurred in this tournament, compared to just two such chases across the previous nine editions, with three already achieved in 2026.
Former England spinner Alex Hartley noted, “The pressure of a chase feels less daunting given the increased volume of cricket being played. World Cups are typically highly competitive.”
“If you arrive at a World Cup having successfully chased a large total seven times, what changes when you attempt it an eighth time?”
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