Todays women’s match in the Hundred featured last place Welsh Fire and second to last place Birmingham Phoenix, at the latter’s home ground, Fire’s elimination was already sealed, but big wins in their last three games plus a few results elsewhere going their way could still see Phoenix qualify.
THE WELSH FIRE INNINGS
Welsh Fire won the toss and chose to bat, virtually a mandatory decision since Edgbaston is a difficult chasing ground and Phoenix have not won a game when chasing in this year’s tournament. Beaumont swapped positions with Matthews in their order, moving up to open while Matthews came in at three. Dunkley started fast, but Beaumont’s promotion of herself did not work out as she hoped, the Fire captain scoring just 2 before she was out to make it 28-1. Matthews batted well, though scoring somewhat slowly, at number three, while Dunkley scored only the second 50+ score for Fire this season (their other such innings was also from her). Hannah Baker bowled her for 53 to make it 99-2 after 72 balls. Jess Jonassen came in at number four, and it was her contribution that would prove crucial to the result. It was Baker who was the main sufferer of Jonassen’s blitz. The young leg spinner had 1-15 from 16 balls, having accepted responsibility for bowling balls 91-95. She finished her allocation with 1-39, Jonassen having hit four successive sixes (the first two might both have been catches another day, so there was a measure of luck involved, but from 140 being in considerable doubt 160 was now on the horizon, with 150 a near certainty). The Aussie all rounder was out to the 98th ball of the innings, caught by Marie Kelly off Megan Schutt to make it 149-3. Jonassen had scored 44 from 17 balls. One further run accrued after her dismissal, so Phoenix had precisely 150 to defend, which given Phoenix’s chasing record meant the win was definitely on.
THE PHOENIX REPLY
Georgia Voll took a four and single off the first two balls of the reply, bowled by Shabnim Ismail. Then Ismail bowled Emma Lamb with the fourth ball of the reply, giving the opener a second ball duck. That, and the dot ball to Marie Kelly that followed earned Ismail a second straight set of five, and with her sixth ball she struck Kelly’s pads and the umpire’s finger went up. Voll at the non-striker’s end did not suggest a review and Kelly walked off, only for the replay to show that the ball would have gone down the leg side. Voll herself reviewed an upheld appeal by Jess Jonassen which looked to be fairly plumb, but to well nigh universal surprise the replay showed that this one would also have missed leg (most were reckoning that it would have missed both leg and off stumps, by the same margin). Voll and Perry shared a good partnership, though they were always dropping behind the rate. With the score at 61, 29 of them to Voll, Jonassen got revenge for the overturned LBW by clean bowling Voll, a mode of dismissal that cannot be sent upstairs. That was the 45th ball of the innings, and Hayley Matthews’ off spin rounded out the first half of the chase. With the 46th ball of the innings she inflicted a first ball duck on Amy Jones, also bowled. Jones’ choice of shot was foolish but it was also a good ball from Matthews. Sterre Kalis now came in and played a reasonable supporting role for Perry, who was playing a fine innings. The trouble was that Kalis was struggling to score. She seemed to have got going when she struck a six and a four in successive balls, but off the next delivery she holed out to Ismail to give Jonassen a second wicket. Ailsa Lister also struggled for runs, and after scoring four off six balls she aimed a big shot at her seventh ball. bowled by Jonassen, and succeeded only in picking out Ismail. Ismail then accepted responsibility for bowling balls 91-95 (the asking rate by then was basically a boundary per ball, so she was looking to kill the match before the last five balls had to be bowled). The 92nd ball of the chase effectively ended Phoenix hopes of rising from the ashes, both in this match and in terms of the tournament as a whole. Ellyse Perry, Phoenix’ sole remaining hope of a miracle fell to a catch by Jonassen off Ismail to make it 108-7, 43 needed off eight balls at 5.375 per ball. By the time Ismail finished her allocation, with 3-16, the target was 40 off five balls, and almost whoever was chosen to bowl the final five balls was highly unlikely to suffer a sufficiently epic attack of the yips to make that a genuine possibility. In the event the vastly experienced Matthews was entrusted with the task. In those five balls she accounted for both Schutt and Mary Taylor (Mary Taylor is one of twins, with her twin sister Millie also being in the Phoenix squad – Mary bowls medium pace, Millie left arm wrist spin) and gave away only three runs, two of them off the final ball. Phoenix thus finished on 114-9, beaten by 36 runs. That sent them to the bottom of the table, with Fire now above them. Fire had done the ‘dog in the manger’ thing – unable to qualify themselves they had at least played a part in preventing another team from doing so as well. Scorecard here.
PHOTOGRAPHS
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