A Record Winning Margin

A look back at this afternoons mismatch between the Southern Brave and Oval Invincibles women’s teams, a mention fo the closing stages of Manchester Originals v Northern Superchargers yesterday and a photo gallery.

The first half of today’s Hundred double header saw the Southern Brave and Oval Invincibles women’s teams clash in Southampton. The men’s match is currently underway. This post looks back at the extraordinary events of this afternoon.

Southern Brave openers Danni Wyatt-Hodge and Maia Bouchier both fired today (Bouchier 34 off 23 balls, Wyatt-Hodge 26 from 24 balls), Laura Wolvaardt scored 36 from 19 balls, Freya Kemp 19 from 11 and Sophie Devine 19 off 14. All of this added up to a Southern Brave total of 161-6 from 100 balls, more than ample for the best bowling unit in the tournament to defend one thought.

Oval Invincibles never got going at any stage, and wickets fell with ever increasing regularity. Only Tilly Corteen-Coleman, whose 1-25 from her 20 balls was still way less than Invincibles could afford, went for more than a run a ball. It was only a boundary from her penultimate ball that even pushed Bell’s ER for the day above half a run per ball. Only Joanne Gardner, with 10 off nine ball scored at better than a run a ball. Top scorer was leg spinner Amanda-Jade Wellington, not someone usually expected to figure seriously with the bat, with 18 from 18 balls. Probably the worst knock out of a terrible bunch was Marizanne Kapp’s 17 ball 10, somewhat worse than a total reversal of the required scoring rate. At low water mark Invincibles were 47-8, but Sophia Smale (another of the phalanx of left arm spinners featuring in this tournament) and debutant Daisy Gibb helped Wellington to raise the score by 25. Thus the final margin was 89 runs, the biggest in the history of the Women’s Hundred. Brave look to be winning the group outright, while Invincibles qualification hopes hang by the slenderest of threads – they need three wins from their remaining three games and a bit of luck elsewhere, and after the monstering they suffered today net run rate is not going to be their friend. Manchester Originals, successful by five runs over Northern Superchargers yesterday, courtesy of an exemplary display of death bowling from Ecclestone (who did enough with balls 91-95 to leave NSC needing nine to win off the last five) and Filer, who pretty much settled things with balls 96-98, conceding only one run, and causing Kate Cross, forced to go big, to hole down the ground to leave eight needed off two and a brand new batter on strike, look the likeliest challengers to Southern Brave – they also have a splendid bowling unit.

My usual sign off…

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Author: Thomas

I am a founder member and currently secretary of the West Norfolk Autism Group and am autistic myself. I am a very keen photographer and almost every blog post I produce will feature some of my own photographs. I am an avidly keen cricket fan and often post about that sport.

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