
Heather Knight (Photo ICC/Getty Images)
Heather Knight and Danni Wyatt led the way as England bounced back from not making the final of a preceding tri-series, beating New Zealand in their first warm-up fixture in Adelaide.
The two batters both made 40s to steer England to a six-wicket win, after their bowling unit made the ideal start to ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2020 preparation by restricting the White Ferns to 134 for nine.
Meanwhile, dismissing Lizelle Lee from the second ball was some way for Sri Lanka to begin their warm-up opener with South Africa, but they couldn’t convert the perfect start into victory.
Sune Luus’s four for 20 proved decisive for the Proteas in securing the 41-run win, also at the Karen Rolton Oval.
Both of the scheduled fixtures in Brisbane were abandoned due to waterlogged conditions at the Allan Border Field.
England ease to six-wicket victory over New Zealand
Sophie Devine has been in inspired form of late but England weren’t to be intimidated by the White Ferns captain, with Katherine Brunt’s early breakthrough setting the tone in Adelaide.
From there the wickets just kept on coming for Lisa Keightley’s side as New Zealand’s top order quickly collapsed.
First Rachel Priest was caught by wicket-keeper Amy Jones for Brunt’s
second scalp before Anya Shrubsole impressed with two for five in her
first three overs, bowling Maddy Green before removing 19-year-old
starlet Amelia Kerr.
New Zealand kept fighting and edged their
way towards three figures through the ever-reliable Suzie Bates (33),
but when she was dismissed by Sarah Glenn, it was left to Katey Martin
to steer the ship.
Her 57 from 44 helped New Zealand set a defendable 134 for nine, with
Brunt finishing with three for 23 while Sophie Ecclestone picked up two
in the final over of the innings.
England, who could not make
the tri-series final in Australia earlier this month that also featured
India, started the chase in promising fashion with 40 coming from the
first five overs.
But from there New Zealand’s bowlers came into their own with Lea
Tahuhu taking two wickets in three balls to remove opener Jones and
Brunt, batting at three.
Wyatt struck a 32-ball 42 before
falling in the tenth over while Fran Wilson helped guide England to 111
for three until she was removed by seamer Jess Kerr.
But
England had little reason to panic with Knight at four, the captain
continuing her fine form with an unbeaten 45 off 36 balls to secure the
six-wicket victory.
England’s Wyatt said: “New Zealand are a
quality side so it was nice to be under pressure and great for myself to
spend time out in the middle against them.
“I feel good after this match, which will benefit me ahead of the first match against South Africa at the WACA next Sunday.”
Luus strikes as South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 41 runs
South
Africa claimed their first warm-up win – a feat they failed to achieve
in the run-up to the Women’s T20 World Cup 2018 – but Sri Lanka didn’t
let it come easy.
Sri Lanka got off to a flying start, Udeshika Prabodani setting the tone from the offset by bowling Lee for a duck before taking the big scalp of Dane van Niekerk, who also failed to score.
Prabodani’s early showing (two for eight) helped to restrict South
Africa to 23 for two from six overs but middle-order batters Marizanne
Kapp (44) and Mignon du Preez (28) stabilised the Proteas’ innings.
Kapp was then dismissed by Chamari Atapattu in her first over before
the Sri Lanka captain delivered again to bowl Luus for seven with just
three overs remaining.
Laura Wolvaardt (38 not out) and Chloe
Tyron (23 not out) stitched together a 44-run partnership to finish the
innings on 146 for five.
Sri Lanka pushed on with the bat with Hasini Madushika scoring 22 but a flurry of wickets quickly derailed their chase.
Luus struck twice in her first over before finishing with the match’s
best-bowling figures of four for 20 while Nonkululeko Mlaba, Ayabonga
Khaka and Van Niekerk took one apiece in the 41-run victory.
Sri Lanka’s Achini Kulasuriya was injured fielding and was taken to hospital as a precaution but has since been discharged and taken back to the team hotel.
Luus said: “I’m very happy with my performance. If it’s your day with
the ball, it’s your day and I’m just happy it came off. All the bowlers
contributed and we’re happy with how the game went.
“We had a rocky start with the bat but I think our middle order brought it back nicely.
“Before the last T20 World Cup, we lost all our warm-up games so
everyone went into this game pretty nervous, but we’re pretty happy with
how it went.”
No play in Brisbane
A
week of heavy rain prevented any play being possible in Brisbane on
Sunday, with Bangladesh’s contest with Thailand and India’s clash with
Pakistan being abandoned.
The outfield at
Allan Border Field was deemed unfit for play with the decision made on
the first game at 11h45 local time and the second at 14h15.
Heavy rain hit Queensland in the build-up and areas of concern in the outfield meant the matches went the same way as Australia and West Indies’ scheduled meeting on Saturday.
India will try again when they go up against the West Indies in Brisbane on 18 February, while Bangladesh and Pakistan face off on 20 February in the final warm-up match before the tournament begins.
Debutants Thailand now head to Adelaide to face New Zealand in a warm-up match on 19 February.
Scores in brief:
England beat New Zealand by six wickets, Karen Rolton Oval, Adelaide
New Zealand 134-9, 20 overs (Katey Martin 57, Suzie Bates 33; Katherine Brunt 3-23, Anya Shrubsole 2-19)
England 136-4, 18 overs (Danni Wyatt 42, Heather Knight 45; Lea Tahuhu 2-20)
South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 41 runs, Karen Rolton Oval , Adelaide
South Africa 146-5, 20 overs (Marizanne Kapp 44, Laura Wolvaardt 38 not out; Udeshika Prabodani 2-8, Chamari Attapatu 2-28)
Sri Lanka 105-8, 20 overs (Ama Kamchana 24 not out, Hasini Perera 22; Sune Luus 4-20, Ayabonga Khaka 1-5)
ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2020 warm-up matches
18 February: Australia vs South Africa, Karen Rolton Oval, Adelaide
18 February: India vs West Indies, Allan Border Field, Brisbane
18 February: England vs Sri Lanka, Karen Rolton Oval, Adelaide
19 February: New Zealand vs Thailand, Karen Rolton Oval, Adelaide
20 February: Bangladesh vs Pakistan, Allan Border Field, Brisbane