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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Tanya Aldred and James Wallace

England beat New Zealand by eight wickets: Women’s Cricket World Cup – as it happened

Amy Jones’ 86 off 92 balls helped England end the group stage with a comfortable win.
Amy Jones’ 86 off 92 balls helped England end the group stage with a comfortable win. Photograph: Faheim Husain/Shutterstock

Match report

Righto, that’s all from us today. England progress in style and New Zealand legend Sophie Devine bows out. We’ll be back to bring you all the action from the semi-finals and final in the coming week. Enjoy your Sunday – goodbye!

Here’s England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt:

“We really wanted to put in a performance today. The way that we’ve gone about cricket in this tournament has been largely successful and so we’re happy to put in that performance and take some confidence into the semi-final.”

“As a side, the thing we have to do to show how much we care is with the fielding – keeping that energy up in hot conditions was really important. Being proactive in the middle order with the bat, the conditions played a part today. With the ball, reaffirming plans and making sure execution is high. I’m really happy to help influence the girls (as captain) today.”

On Sophie Ecclestone’s injury: “I don’t know anything further but it was definitely precautionary. We’ve got a huge match coming up against South Africa so we wouldn’t want to risk anything now. We’ll know more in a few days.”

On Amy Jones: “She was brilliant. She started off with a brilliant partnership with her and Tammy… Amy being there at the end is really important, hopefully they can both take confidence into the semi-final.”

New Zealand captain Sophie Devine speaks:

“Disappointed, to be honest. Not to make it about myself but I really wanted to go out on a high. Credit to England, it’s not the way we wanted our tournament to go, but there are bigger things in life.

“We are good enough to be here and when we play our best cricket we can beat anyone in the world. We’ve got such a high ceiling and it’s just about self belief and knowing their best is good enough.

“I didn’t cry as much as I thought I was going to. The great thing about announcing it so early was that I was able to process a lot of those emotions. For me it was never about the result today, it was about enjoying it with my mates. I’m sure we’ll spend a bit of time in the dressing room tonight and reflect.

“It’s so incredible to think of the women’s game. To see where the game’s got to now, it’s almost unrecognisable from when we started. I’m going to be the biggest supporter of this game, it’s a hugely exciting time. We’re professional athletes and we’re judged on our results, but it’s so much bigger than that. Thank you to everyone who’s come out today, I feel so blessed to have played this incredible game - but I’m not fully done just yet, so I’m sure I’ll be annoying people around the grounds.”

England’s win means that they finish second in the group stages. They will play South Africa in the semi-finals on Wednesday. If there is weather around then England are safe due to that second position finish. For example, if the Wednesday game and reserve day are washed out then England will progress to the final by dint of their higher position.

Amy Jones is player of the match:

I particularly enjoyed her comments about the pitch being a tricky one after she’s just iced a chanceless eighty-odd!

“I found it quite challenging (the pitch), it was quite slow, quite frustrating. Tammy was brilliant at the start, taking a lot of pressure off me. It’s hugely exciting to be in the semi-final and to finish second, we’re all very happy with that.”

She says the squad are full of confidence for the semi-final against South Africa before paying tribute to Devine.

“It’s great for Soph to get this recognition. She’s a legend of the game. It’s clear to see how much she means to the Kiwis and the rest of the women’s game, on and off the pitch.”

Sophie Devine is given a guard of honour from both sides as her nigh on twenty year ODI career comes to a close. Lovely scenes.

Updated

England (172-2) beat New Zealand by 8 wickets!

A resounding win for England as Jones clubs Devine over midwicket for four to bring the scores level and then finishes off in style with a cover drive for four. Jones finishes unbeaten on 86 off 92 balls and England finish the group stages in second place. An impressive all round performance from Nat Sciver-Brunt’s side.

Updated

29th over: England 164-2 (Jones 78, Wyatt-Hodge 2) Suzie Bates joins Devine for what is potentially her ODI bow too. Five singles taken. England one blow away.

28th over: England 159-2 (Jones 75, Wyatt-Hodge 0) Danni Wyatt-Hodge is sent in to deliver the coup de grace for England but she can’t manage it off the wily Devine, five dots to delay the inevitable. Lovely stuff from Sophie Devine.

WICKET! Heather Knight lbw b Devine 33 (England 158-2)

A lovely moment for Sophie Devine who picks up one -potentially final- wicket for the road. Heather Knight is not a bad final scalp to take, she misses a straight one and has to depart as Devine’s 111th ODI wicket.

27th over: England 158-1 (Jones 75, Knight 33) Jones digs out a well directed yorker from Jess Kerr and then plays something veering on the agricultural through the leg side to pick up four. England just a couple of smites away now.

26th over: England 151-1 (Jones 70, Knight 31) Amy Jones is in a hurry now! She hits three boundaries in a row off Rosemary Mair, through long on, midwicket and extra cover. The opener is brimming with confidence and heads into the 70s. England only need 18 more runs so sadly no century in the offing.

25th over: England 136-1 (Jones 57, Knight 29) Knight and Jones getting england to the finish line in clinical style. Six picked off Jess Kerr with surgical precision.

24th over: England 130-1 (Jones 54, Knight 27) Five singles picked off Rosemary Mair. England need just 39 more to complete an emphatic victory. The camera pans to Sophie Ecclestone throwing a cup of coffee into a waste paper bin, she doesn’t look to encumbered by that shoulder injury but we wait to get official news.

23rd over: England 125-1 (Jones 52, Knight 24) Suzie Bates is worked around for four singles before Amy Jones opens the shoulders and brings up her fifty with a crunch over wide long on for SIX. A bad ball from Bates, dragged down and dispatched in style.

22nd over: England 115-1 (Jones 44, Knight 22) Shot! Heather Knight hits the 100th SIX of the tournament with a shimmy out of her crease and a lofted drive into the crowd over long on. Pure class.

21st over: England 107-1 (Jones 43, Knight 15) Suzie Bates into the attack and met with an Amy Jones paddle for four, that was a bit of a loosener for Bates. Six off the over in total. 62 runs needed for England, from plenty of overs.

20th over: England 101-1 (Jones 38, Knight 14) New Zealand cannot believe it! Victor Meldrew scenes all round as Kerr scuds one onto Knight’s pad with the batter on the sweep. The umpire raises the finger but Knight sends it upstairs where the ball tracking has the ball somehow bouncing over the stumps by half another set. That looked plumb. Ghosts in the machine? Kerr and Devine are incredulous but take it with customary grace. Hundred up for England.

19th over: England 98-1 (Jones 36, Knight 13) Another tight over from Tahuhu, just one Amy Jones single punched through the covers.

18th over: England 97-1 (Jones 35, Knight 13) Do not bowl there to Heather Knight. England’s number three picks up a boundary down to fine leg with easy pickings off her pads from Carson. A single brings Jones on strike and she does the very same.

17th over: England 86-1 (Jones 29, Knight 8) Tahuhu with a good over, she stitches together a maiden as the ground DJ plays this banger – a personal favourite of my four year old…

I blame the parents.

16th over: England 86-1 (Jones 29, Knight 8) Eden Carson into the attack as New Zealand seek to get another breakthrough. Knight and Jones are watchful but tick the scoreboard over without alarm.

15th over: England 79-1 (Jones 27, Knight 4) Heather Knight arrives at number three, I thought they might stick Danni Wyatt-Hodge up the order to get some time in the middle but Knight it is and she starts in style, gliding past backward point for four.

WICKET! Tammy Beaumont lbw b Tahuhu 40 (England 75-1)

New Zealand needed that! In the first over after the drinks break Tahuhu pins Beaumont on the pad and up goes the finger! Beaumont reviews but with little hope and sure enough the ball was crashing into middle stump.

14th over: England 74-0 (Jones 26, Beaumont 40) Beaumont springs to life once more, pounding a full ball from Kerr for four through the covers and then getting deep in her crease and flat batting the next ball to the fence through the leg side. Time for a drink with England in cruise control.

13th over: England 62-0 (Jones 24, Beaumont 30) A scruffy first over from Tahuhu as she slings down a couple of wides and a no ball.

12th over: England 58-0 (Jones 23, Beaumont 30) A quiet over from Amelia Kerr, just three runs off it. Devine takes herself out of the attack, time for some Lea Tahuhu.

11th over: England 55-0 (Jones 21, Beaumont 29) Devine scuds one onto Beaumont’s boot and gives it the full Richard Hadlee star pose in her appeal but it was slipping down leg and she wisely chooses not to burn her last review. Five pocketed off the over.

10th over: England 50-0 (Jones 20, Beaumont 26) The fifty opening stand comes up for Jones and Beaumont as the former clonks Kerr over mid on (just) for four more. This is a good confidence boosting partnership ahead of the semi final next week. England are cantering after the first ten overs.

9th over: England 46-0 (Jones 16, Beaumont 26) Sophie Devine is playing her final ODI of a wonderful career but Amy Jones isn’t feeling sentimental as she lofts the Kiwi legend over long on for four.

Updated

8th over: England 41-0 (Jones 11, Beaumont 26) It’s a double change as Amelia Kerr enters the fray. She tweaks one onto Tammy’s front pad and New Zealand send it upstairs but there’s nothing going for this one, it pitched and hit outside the line. Review lost for the White Ferns but a decent over from Kerr, just one run from it.

7th over: England 40-0 (Jones 10, Beaumont 26) Sophie Devine comes on and is resolutely stump to stump. Just a single off the over after the Beaumont pyro off the over before.

6th over: England 39-0 (Jones 9, Beaumont 26) Kerr floats one wide and Beaumont climbs into it with abandon, scorching the turf through the covers for four! Kerr then commits the cardinal sin of overstepping. Free Hit incoming… FOUR! Beaumont heaves the length ball over midwicket for four. Tammy Time! Four more laced through point. And again! Kerr has been marmalised for 17 runs and four fours off the over.

5th over: England 22-0 (Jones 9, Beaumont 10) Beaumont rocks back and thrashes Mair through backward point for four! That’ll settle the nerves a little. Mair sprays wide of the tramlines but then adjusts well to get three dots. Beaumont nudges a single to pinch strike from Jones for the next over.

4th over: England 16-0 (Jones 9, Beaumont 5) Just a couple of singles off Kerr. England unable to break the shackles thus far. A couple of early wickets and this has got squeaky run chase written all over it.

Updated

3rd over: England 13-0 (Jones 8, Beaumont 3) Mair is accurate and probing, she’s denied a maiden to Beaumont because of a misfield at backward point off the final ball of the over. Amy Jones scampered a leg bye off it too to keep England ticking.

2nd over: England 11-0 (Jones 8, Beaumont 2) I think England’s best bet is to try and haul this target down quickly and not let dear old pressure come into it. Easier said than done, Jess Kerr is on the mark and the keeper is up to the stumps. Nevertheless England rotate strike well to pick up five runs off the over.

Hello all and thanks Tanya. An eventful first over from Rosemary Mair as she pins Amy Jones on the pad and there’s a big appeal! The umpire says no but we go upstairs… NOT OUT! Clipping the bails so remains umpire’s call. Lucky Jonesy. She clips for two to get off the mark and then crashes a full ball through the covers for four!

1st over: England 6-0 (Jones 6, Beaumont 0)

Updated

Here come the players, time for me to hand over to Jim Wallace – thanks for your company – bye!

A cracking little interview with New Zealand queens Suzie Bates and Sophie Devine, recorded with Ian Ward pre-game.

“It’s been the highest of highs to the lowest of lows,” says Devine, “but that’s cricket. When we won the World Cup we got momentum and every little thing went our way. We got on the roller coaster and it felt like it was meant to be. I think in this tournament it has felt like it hasn’t meant to be! “

“Winning the World Cup is something that you always dream of when you play for nearly 20 years, it’s the moment that you play for, and great to experience that at least once, the actual game was fearless. Suz and Georgia out there, a feeling of calmness. In the final over, me and Suz caught each other’s eye a few times, great to be able to share that.”

How do you feel about no Test caps in two decades of playing. Devine: “Depends on the day, probably would have been over in a day and a half but we’d have had a bloody good time. Unfortunate that it hasn’t happened in our careers but maybe one day for the other girls in the team. So cool to see females playing in that format.”

Bates: There are more and more opportunities, the best thing we’ve had is the A team. We talk about more cricket all the time and the difference in NZ is that a 15 year old boy and a 15 year old girl, the volume of cricket they’ve played - you can’t even compare.”

Such wise women – would love to see them on the ICC board – though they probably have better things to do with their lives post cricket.

Updated

An interesting nugget from Hussain, who says that England have been practising for bowling with the dew by dipping their hands in buckets of water and bowling with a wet slippy ball. They need to practise that for sweaty conditions like today too.

Well that was…not the most enthralling cricket of the tournament.

Nasser sums it up: “England got better as they went through that innings. An error strew innings by both sides. Wickets from full tosses, a catch put down, New Zealand gave their wickets away, didn’t bat their overs. If they do that against Australia or England they won’t bowl them out. Luckily for England, New Zealand were even more under par.”

Updated

Alice Capsey: “Nice to get a ball in hand, we’ve done well to restrict them to a lowish total. My second wicket was from a full toss. Looks like there was a little bit of turn when I was bowling a lot slower, felt like a bit harder to hit straight. Anything that was targeting the stumps looked hard to hit. No chase is easy but fingers crossed.”

WICKET! Tahuhu c Dean b SMith 2 (New Zealand 168 all out)

A hopeful chip caught by Capsey running backwards over her shoulder from mid off. Cracking catch, end to a sorry innings.

38th over: New Zealand 168-9 (Tahuhu 2, Carson 1) Can New Zealand limp to 200?

WICKET! Kerr run out (Dean) 10 (New Zealand 166-9)

New Zealand’s innings whimpers towards a close after Kerr is run-out, late out of the blocks and short of the crease at the striker’s end. Given out on review.

Updated

37th over: New Zealand 165-8 (Kerr 9, Tahuhu 1) Three singles from Smith’s ninth.

36th over: New Zealand 162-8 (Kerr 7, Tahuhu 0) NSB picks away at the tail – her eighth World Cup wicket.

WICKET! Mair lbw Sciver-Brunt 0 (New Zealand 162-8)

Not the best decision the umpire will ever make. Mair looks very out as NSB thumps into her pads and ball-tracking agrees. Decision overturned with a flourish.

35th over: New Zealand 157-7 (Mair 0, Kerr 2) This innings slipping through New Zealand’s grasp now.

Updated

WICKET! Gaze b Smith 14 (New Zealand 157-5)

And another one! Done by the drift and loses her off stump.

34th over: New Zealand 156-6 (Gaze 14, Kerr 1) NSB replaces Bell. Scrapes her hair back in the heat and makes the break through. Farewell Sophie Devine, all time great. And thank you.

Updated

Devine c Jones b Sciver-Brunt 23 (NEw Zealand 155-6)

A top-notch off cutter. Jones whips the bails off but NSB fancies a catch and calls for a review. Good ears! A kiss off an inside edge and Devine walks off for one last time, a quick march, without ceremony.

33rd over: New Zealand 154-5 (Devine 23, Gaze 13) Smith. Another England full toss goes unpunished and New Zealand milk just one from the over. Hopefully this is England’s off game, and they’ll be all button back up for the semi-final against South Africa on Wednesday.

32nd over: New Zealand 153-5 (Devine 23, Gaze 12) Bell struggling a little with her radar – a wide, then a slower ball wafting down leg side which Devine shovels behind for four. Gaze then wildly top edges a short ball for four more. The players take drinks.

Updated

31st over: New Zealand 142-5 (Devine 18, Gaze 7) Smith, more bounce in her boots now. Dries her hands on the soil of Visakhapatnam. Just three singles.

A stat from the Guardian’s women’s cricket queen Raf Nicholson: “Dunkley has only bowled two overs across the three domestic comps last season. So not exactly bowling fit!”

Ecclestone won't bowl again today

30th over: New Zealand 139-5 (Devine 16, Gaze 6) Bell gets a change of ends too, three from the over.

News on Ecclestone – she is having more treatment on her shoulder after feeling discomfort when bowling, and won’t bowl again today.

29th over: New Zealand 136-5 (Devine 14, Gaze 6) Smith returns after her uneasy first spell. A different end, an older ball, and altogether a neater over. Just one from it.

28th over: New Zealand 135-5 (Devine 13, Gaze 6)…and I speak too soon as Gaze dollies her first ball back to Casey, who makes a Horlicks of a pat-a-cake catch. The end of the over… no it isn’t… as the no-ball signal goes off and a free hit is splayed over long on for four by Gaze.

Updated

WICKET! Green c and b Capsey 18 (NEw Zealand 128-5)

A cracking catch by Capsey as Green toe-ends a low-full toss back and Capsey, smartly picks up by her boots. The kind of catch that would not have been taken during the Ashes.

Updated

27th over: New Zealand 124-4 (Devine 11, Green 17) Dunkley has an interesting action, a kind of lurching camel. Her first ball is cut off the back foot for four and New Zealand have their boundary.

Updated

26th over: New Zealand 118-4 (Devine 10, Green 12) A sweet sweet four through the covers by Green, playing in her 200th international match.

25th over: New Zealand 111-4 (Devine 9, Green 6) Dunkley wasn’t just a fill-in – she goes again with her leggies. New Zealand milk five singles and we are halfway through the innings.

24th over: New Zealand 106-4 (Devine 7, Green 3) Devine, now in a cap, chewing gum. Now we’re so used to helmets, there’s something glorious about seeing a human face. New Zealand don’t make the most of Capsey’s allsorts – there have been “six or seven horrendous balls that haven’t made it to the boundary this innings” tuts Isha Guha on the radio.

Updated

Ecclestone off

23rd over: New Zealand 102-4 (Devine 6, Green 1) Ecclestone for the first time. It looks painful, she grimaces after each delivery. A discussion with NSB after two balls, but she continues. A wide, a wicket, then she’s off again – that shoulder still not right. Dunkley continues the over.

Updated

WICKET! Halliday c Dunkley b Ecclestone 4 (New Zealand 101-4)

A rather desperate slog sweep from Halliday, well caught by a retreating Dunkley on the rope, backwards over her head. Ecclestone, in pain, breaks through straight away.

Updated

22nd over: New Zealand 97-3 (Devine 5, Halliday 3) Dean again for her seventh over in a row. Asks for a slip, gets one. Great to see Wyatt-Hodge racing about in the field, an agile duracell bunny. Singles, tick, tock.

21st over: New Zealand 94-3 (Devine 3, Halliday 2) Three gentle singles off Capsey.

20th over: New Zealand 91-3 (Devine 1, Halliday 1) England right back on top again, and Ecclestone hasn’t even bowled. The fabulous Sophie Devine in the middle for the last time in ODIs and possibly the last time ever in a New Zealand shirt.

WICKET! Plimmer lbw Dean 43 (New Zealand 89-3)

Two in two! Dean floats one in, clonks the retreating Plimmer on the knee roll and she doesn’t bother to review.

Updated

WICKET! Kerr c Dean b Capsey 35 (New Zealand 89-2)

Kerr licks her lips, tries to smash Capsey down the ground but instead picks out Dean, who plucks it out of the air. with one hand.

19th over: New Zealand 89-2 ( Plimmer 43)

Updated

Ecclestone back on the field

18th over: New Zealand 85-1 ( Plimmer 41, Kerr 33) Not too many in the ground today, and quite a wind whistling across. A hot wind. Dean continues – Kerr slog sweeps but can’t reach the rope and another decent over.

Updated

17th over: New Zealand 81-1 ( Plimmer 39, Kerr 31) The cameras spot Ecclestone on the boundary, wrinkling her nose as she rolls her left over. Capsey replaces NSB, her first ball is edged for four. And, to everyone’s relief, they take DRINKS.

Updated

16th over: New Zealand 76-1 ( Plimmer 34, Kerr 31) Dean, elegantly dishevelled as always, aviator shades, wayward bun, whistles through a tidy over – fast arm, on the money.

Updated

15th over: New Zealand 75-1 ( Plimmer 33, Kerr 31) The fifty partnership come up as Plimmer, bat hovering as she waits, tonks NSB straight into the bluebell blue sky for four. An otherwise neat over.

14th over: New Zealand 70-1 ( Plimmer 28, Kerr 31) Dean stems the boundaries, finds her rhythm. My nephews, visiting from London, have joined me on the sofa.

13th over: New Zealand 67-1 ( Plimmer 26, Kerr 30) On the rope, England put ice packs round their necks, gulp at frozen water. A pretty good over from NSB till the penultimate delivery, a drag down, and Plimmer tucks in, pulled to the boundary.

12th over: New Zealand 61-1 ( Plimmer 21, Kerr 29) Dean finds her line too, just three singles dabbed .

Updated

11th over: New Zealand 58-1 ( Plimmer 20, Kerr 27) Better from Sciver-Brunt, just a single from it. It’s hot, hot, hot out there – 40 degrees in the middle.

Updated

10th over: New Zealand 57-1 ( Plimmer 20, Kerr 26) Charlie Dean replaces the struggling Smith, and Kerr sweeps her immediately and with gumption for four. Eccleston is still off the field after hurting her left shoulder fielding on the rope earlier in the innings.

Updated

9th over: New Zealand 52-1 ( Plimmer 20, Kerr 21) Nat Sciver-Brunt replaces Bell and also struggles to hit her straps, Plimmer slams her last two balls to the rope.

8th over: New Zealand 43-1 ( Plimmer 12, Kerr 3) Smith has the most wickets in the power play, but something is amiss today. Kerr cracks her second ball to the rope, her third is a wide full toss that Kerr plonks behind square also for four, the free hit is spatulated through extra cover for four, and the next purred through cover for four more. Definitely time for a break.

7th over: New Zealand 25-1 ( Plimmer 12, Kerr 3) A handful of singles off Bell.

6th over: New Zealand 22-1 ( Plimmer 11, Kerr 1) Smith pockets a wicket despite not really finding her rhythm and the majestic Bates leaves the crease for possibly the final time.

WICKET! Bates c Lamb (sub) b Smith 10 (New Zealand 21-1)

A waist high full toss does for Bates who muscles it to mid off. The umpires check for a no ball – the players have their waist measurements checked before the tournament started – who knew? – but the ball is good. A pie, but good.

Updated

5th over: New Zealand 21-0 (Bates 10, Plimmer 11) Bell gets clonked for two fours by Plimmer.

New Zealand win the toss and bat - Wyatt-Hodge in

Argghgh I got my times totally wrong there, done by the clocks going back. Apologies. Danni Wyatt-Hodge plays for Emma Lamb. New Zealand unchanged.

Preamble

Good early morning and hello GMT for another year. It’s still black here, but not in broiling Visakhapatnam where England will be in top spirits – South Africa, their opponents in Wednesday’s semi-final, bundled out for 97 by Australia.

This is a dead game for both England and New Zealand – though England can leapfrog South Africa to finish second behind Australia in the group stage – an ego-boost, but no more. New Zealand, who have had a disappointing tournament, stalked by rain and just one win, against Bangladesh, say farewell to faithful captain Sophie Devine who plays her final ODI of a stonking career of 158 matches, 4,256 runs and 110 wickets.

On paper, this also seems a good chance for England to give a game to some of the drinks carriers – to Danni Wyatt Hodges, mysterious bench warmer as the middle order implodes, or Lauren Filer. But Charlotte Edwards has not been moved so far.

Play starts at 5.30am GMT, grab an early morning brew and join us.

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