Defending champions Australia all but secured their place in the semi-finals of the Women’s T20 World Cup with a nine-wicket rout of Pakistan in Dubai but suffered a blow with skipper Alyssa Healy hobbling off injured.
Healy (37 from 23 balls) retired hurt with an apparent leg issue while six-time winners Australia raced to their target of 83 with nine overs to spare to make it three victories from three in Group A, after previous successes against Sri Lanka and New Zealand.
The Southern Stars rolled Pakistan for 82 in 19.5 overs – the lowest score in this tournament – as seamer Megan Schutt (1-7) became the leading wicket-taker in women’s T20Is with her 144th strike and spinner Ash Gardner (4-21) dismissed three batters in the 19th over.
Pakistan – without regular captain Fatima Sana, who has returned to Karachi following the death of her father – did not score a boundary until the ninth over and managed only four in total, three of them hit late on by top-scorer Aliya Riaz (26 off 32 balls).
Ellyse Perry (22no off 23) and Gardner (5no off 7) guided Australia to victory after Healy departed, while Beth Mooney made a run-a-ball 15 at the top of the order before falling to Sadia Iqbal.
Australia suffered a first injury setback two balls into the match when fast bowler Tayla Vlaeminck hurt her shoulder fielding on the boundary and headed off for treatment.
Vlaeminck, whose career has been blighted by injury, was playing just her second T20 World Cup game and first since the 2018 edition.
The seamer’s injury did not disrupt Australia, though, with the tournament favourites kickstarting the cluster of wickets when spinner Sophie Molineux had stand-in Pakistan skipper Muneeba Ali (7) caught on the sweep in the fourth over.
Healy’s side’s catching was a little off with three chances dropped but that had no bearing on the result, with Australia’s chief concerns now the fitness of their skipper as well as pacer Vlaemnick.
What’s next?
There is a double-header on Saturday at the Women’s T20 World Cup with New Zealand playing Sri Lanka from 11am in Group A before South Africa take on Bangladesh in Group B from 3pm.
Australia conclude their pool campaign against India from 3pm on Sunday, after England – who have two wins from two in Group B after knocking off Bangladesh and South Africa – play Scotland at 11am.
Watch every match from the Women’s T20 World Cup live on Sky Sports, up to and including the final on Sunday October 20.