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Australia through to T20 World Cup final after scary West Indies incident

Australia through to T20 World Cup final after scary West Indies incident
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Australia hammers West Indies to claim a spot in the Women's T20 World Cup cricket final Wed 1 Jul 2026 at 7:03am In short: Australia thumped the West Indies by eight wickets to make it into its eighth Women's T20 World Cup final. West Indian star Deandra Dottin collapsed during the national anthems and was carried off the field. Australia will play either South Africa or England in the World Cup final on Monday at 12.30am.

Australia hammers West Indies to claim a spot in the Women's T20 World Cup cricket final Wed 1 Jul 2026 at 7:03am In short: Australia thumped the West Indies by eight wickets to make it into its eighth Women's T20 World Cup final. West Indian star Deandra Dottin collapsed during the national anthems and was carried off the field. What's next? Australia will play either South Africa or England in the World Cup final on Monday at 12.30am. Australia cruised into yet another Women's T20 World Cup final after hammering the West Indies by eight wickets at The Oval overnight. The West Indies made 7-125, and the inadequacy of that total was exposed by Australia hunting it down with seven overs to spare. Opener Beth Mooney and Ash Gardner partnered in the seventh over of the chase and smoked the bowlers in an unbeaten combination of 63 runs from 37 balls for a winning 2-127. Mooney had 61 from 36 balls and her eighth T20 World Cup fifty, tied for the most with New Zealand's Suzie Bates. Gardner had 35 from 20, and the winning runs from a fourth boundary flicked off her pads. Undefeated Australia will chase its seventh T20 World Cup crown in its eighth final in 10 tournaments. At Lord's on Monday at 12.30am (AEST), it will face either host England or South Africa. "The T20 World Cup, you just have to ride it. It's full of momentum, swings," Australia captain Sophie Molineux said. "The group's really enjoyed it, and that's the important thing." The West Indies were shaken moments before the semifinal when allrounder Deandra Dottin was helped off the field by teammates after the anthems. "To see her almost pass out during the national anthems was a bit scary," captain Hayley Matthews said. Dottin eventually recovered and came out to bat later. Australia lost Georgia Voll and Phoebe Litchfield in the powerplay but was relieved by Mooney taking 18 runs, including four boundaries — half her total — from Jahzara Claxton's first and only bowled over in the tournament. Ellyse Perry retired hurt on two out of precaution for a quad issue. Molineux said she should be OK for the final. Gardner replaced Perry and ended up as the player of the match. The allrounder's earlier off-spin took 2-13, removing Claxton and Stafanie Taylor in the 11th over to hasten the West Indies' demise. The West Indies' only two wins over Australia in 19 previous T20S featured Matthews with 66 runs in the 2016 World Cup final and 132 in Sydney in 2023. Matthews made 30 from 28 this time, the pressure on her building while opening partner Qiana Joseph was eating deliveries. Joseph had 8 from 19 at one point and was out after Matthews for 16 from 22. Dottin's absence made the West Indies ' good start vital. But it was six down by the time Dottin appeared. She smacked an unbeaten 16-ball 26 in front of a crowd of 10,023 in an afternoon start required by Indian officials, who anticipated India qualifying. But India was eliminated by Australia on Monday. Supporting Gardner against the West Indies were Molineux with 2-30 and Georgia Wareham, who bowled Matthews in her 2-17. The ABC of SPORT AP [Image text:] rate ORLD RAL
Australia (LOCATION) World Cup (EVENT) West Indies (ORG) the Women's T20 World Cup (ORG) Wed 1 Jul 2026 (EVENT) the West Indies (LOCATION) Women's T20 World Cup (ORG) West Indian (ORG) Deandra Dottin (PERSON) South Africa (LOCATION) England (LOCATION) the World Cup (EVENT) another Women's T20 World Cup (ORG) The Oval (LOCATION) Beth Mooney (PERSON)
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