West Indies go down from a strong 100-run opening stand after the Indian pair added a record 184 together
India Women 317 for 8 (Mandhana 123, Harmanpreet 109, Bhatia 31, Anisa 2-59) beat West Indies Women 162 (Dottin 62, Matthews 43, Rana 3-22, Meghna 2-17) by 155 runs
India weathered a blistering opening stand between Deandra Dottin and Hayley Matthews to script a vital, 155-run league-stage win against West Indies that propelled them to the top of the table of the World Cup. In the early stages of India’s defense of 317, their highest World Cup total, the result seemed far from imminent and the centuries from Smriti Mandhana and Harmanpreet Kaur, somewhat inadequate. Sneh Rana‘s 3 for 22, however, decisively turned the tide India’s way at Seddon Park as Dottin’s wicket triggered West Indies’ slump from 100 for 0 to 162 all out.
West Indies looked set to extend their two-game undefeated streak after galloping to 50 in five overs, 81 in the wicketless powerplay, and 100 in just 12. The dominant hand in their blazing start, and West Indies’ maiden century stand, was Dottin’s despite her back and legs requiring regular repairs through her 62-run knock. Dottin carted 11 boundaries in her breathtaking 46-ball innings.
India sought respite from the Dottin-Matthews onslaught but received little despite using two quicks and spinners each in the powerplay. With potential league-stage elimination looming down the tournament, it was third-change Rana’s frugal, game-changing opening spell that led orchestrated West Indies’ implosion.
Dottin swept Rana’s second ball fatally to Meghna Singh, who then dealt West Indies the second blow as Kycia Knight’s pull found Mandhana, the only leg-side fielder in the deep. Meghna followed it up with Taylor’s wicket before Rana removed Matthews for 48. In both dismissals, teen wicketkeeper Richa Ghosh snaffled edges with ease.
Earlier, India’s batters, led by Mandhana and Harmanpreet, pulled no punches in a game they needed to win to stay safe in the race to the knockouts following the loss to New Zealand at the same venue. They put on 317 for 8 – their highest in ODI World Cups and the overall highest in this edition – after choosing to bat first.
Mandhana hit 123 in 119, and Harmanpreet 109 in 107, and they put on 184 for the fourth wicket, India’s best in ODI World Cups, to revive India from 78 for 3. On a used surface, India almost instantly shook off the hesitancy that stifled them in the powerplay against Pakistan and New Zealand, Yastika Bhatia‘s fearless stroke play underpinning their approach early on. Bhatia got off the mark with a four off a mistimed cut that flew over the slips, and next over, she cracked three fours off pulls as Chinelle Henry gave away 15 runs to begin her day.
India’s rapid start led West Indies to introduce spin in the sixth over. But it was the change at the other end, in the form medium-pacer Shakera Selman, that brought the breakthrough. On 31, Bhatia lobbed a dolly back to Selman off a slower delivery. Another soft dismissal followed, this time Mithali Raj, who became the captain with most appearances on the day, giving Matthews a wicket.
Mandhana, meanwhile, steadied the ship at one end, though the two early wickets made her cautious. India amassed 62 for 2 in the powerplay, the best in that phase before West Indies bettered it in the chase, and No. 4 Deepti Sharma’s back-to-back fours off Selman promised a lot. That, however, was not to be. Coming on in the 13th over, Anisa Mohammed drew an edge off Deepti’s slog-sweep, which Matthews intercepted with a stunning one-handed grab behind the keeper.
With India 100 for 3, 20 overs in, it was down to Mandhana and Harmanpreet to lift them to the 250-run mark, which they hadn’t reached in this World Cup before. On 34 off 51 balls, Mandhana struck her first four – a languid flick through the midwicket area – and upped the tempo thereafter. She got to her second fifty in the tournament with another flick, in the 60th ball of her innings, and her next 50 runs came off just 43 balls.
With 200 up in the 36th over, Mandhana cracked a 78-metre six off Aaliyah Alleyne as fielding errors came thick and fast. After reaching the 90s with a four, Mandhana got a big slice of luck when, on 94, Alleyne dropped her at deep midwicket. Shamilia Connell tested her with a short ball and even pinged her pad for an lbw but Mandhana survived, and a four, courtesy a short-arm pull off Matthews, took her to her second ODI World Cup century, and second against West Indies. Three of her 13 fours on the day came off consecutive deliveries as Matthews found herself at the receiving end in the 42nd over. India had crossed 250 by then and as Harmanpreet looked to up the ante at her end, Mandhana pulled one straight to deep midwicket to be dismissed.
Harmanpreet, too, paced her innings judiciously. A drop by Anisa at short third handed her a reprieve when on 20. She remained boundary-less in her first 20 balls but struck 12, two of them sixes, off her next 87. It was her strike rotation, though, that accounted for the bulk – 57 – of her 109 runs. Harmanpreet, unsurprisingly, relied heavily on the sweep but it was a full-blooded lofted shot that brought up her second straight fifty.
She batted close to three hours and faced issues with her wrist as she neared the three-digit milestone. But neither pain nor West Indies could keep her from bringing up her first century in the format since her epochal 171 not out in the semi-final of the 2017 World Cup. A single down the bowler’s right steered her to the mark, and a 15-run over from Anisa soon after lifted India past 300.
India’s 317 for 8 eventually proved too much for West Indies as they rolled over inside 41 overs. On a day of record-breaking feats, Goswami added the finishing touches with the wicket of Anisa, as the India veteran rose to the top of the wickets tally in women’s ODI World Cup history. Fittingly, it was Rana who closed out the game, catching Connell off her own bowling.
Annesha Ghosh is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @ghosh_annesha