Australia Women280 for 4 (Lanning 97, Healy 72, Haynes 43, Mooney 30*, Vastrakar 2-43) beat India Women 277 for 7 (Raj 68, Bhatia 59, Harmanpreet 57*, Vastrakar 34, Brown 3-30, King 2-52) by six wickets
When you are 121 for no loss inside 19 overs chasing 278, the pursuit of the highest successful chase in an ODI World Cup doesn’t feel too daunting. When you are Australia, undefeated and title favourites with an unmatched batting depth, it’s almost inevitable, a matter of when, not if.
Healy and Haynes punished anything wide or wayward, running hard between the wickets even when the flow of fours remained quick and steady. In all, they pinched 33 singles, seven twos, four threes, and struck 14 fours in their century stand as Healy played the aggressor with her 65-ball 72, equalling her highest score of this World Cup.
It didn’t help that India’s attack showed little adaptability with their lengths or lines, with Australia galloping to 69 in the powerplay. That India were one bowler short – Deepti Sharma was left out in favour of Shafali Verma – also hurt them on a ground with short boundaries and batting-friendly conditions.
On the way to her highest score in this World Cup, Lanning put the cut to especially good use. Before Saturday, the shot had cost Lanning her wicket four times in as many innings, for just 25 runs off 22 balls. Against India, it brought her 46 runs in 29 balls.
Lanning and Perry took Australia past 200 with ease before the expected rain made an appearance after the 41st over. At the time, Australia were 225 for 2, well ahead of the DLS target of 197. The game paused for 22 minutes. It didn’t help Perry, who perished immediately after the restart for 28.
Mooney, who struck the winning runs with Australia needing eight in the final over, joined Lanning for another brisk stand even as the captain set herself up for a hundred that was not to be. With eight required off nine, Lanning sliced straight to Vastrakar at point off Meghna Singh. The last-minute hiccup, however, didn’t hurt Australia, thanks to Mooney’s two fours in the final over off Jhulan Goswami, whose 200th ODI ended on a forgettable note.
India’s total didn’t look likely when they were 39 for 2 in the powerplay. Back in the Australian side after sitting out the last game against West Indies, 19-year-old Brown dealt India two big blows inside six overs. She enticed Smriti Mandhana into an expansive cover drive, which flew into the safe hands of first-slip Lanning, before having Verma caught by Mooney for 12.
After Raj’s gritty 68 and Bhatia’s 59, a late injection of impetus came from Harmanpreet and Vastrakar in the final leg of the innings. Eventually, though, India’s effort across all three disciplines proved too feeble against an Australia side that seems to be racking up wins for fun.
Annesha Ghosh is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @ghosh_annesha