Australia fly into T20 World Cup final on a wing and a runout

“The way I was batting, that was the only way for me to get out.” – Harmanpreet Kaur on her runout.

Telford Vice / Newlands

RARELY in the long and winding annals of bat-throwing has a specimen been hurled with as much vitriol as Harmanpreet Kaur unleashed at Newlands on Thursday. Her respiratory tract infection still stuck in her throat, her helmet ripped off her head, her eyes ablaze, she let fly with visceral anger.

Rather than a scene from a cricket match, it was straight out of a cage fight. Actually, it might have had her disqualified from a cage fight. Whatever else you do around this woman, do not get in her way.

The bat flew many metres into the outfield as if it had been spat out of Harmanpreet’s consciousness never to return, twisting and turning gracelessly through the afternoon air, then landing ugly, bouncing back up, and travelling further still towards the dark alley of shadow cast by the members’ pavilion, whose denizens would deplore such behaviour. Happily, hardly any of them were in attendance.

Don’t feel sorry for the bat. It was not an innocent. The damn fool thing had lodged itself in the pitch instead of gliding seamlessly across the turf and the crease, and causing Harmanpreet to be run out. It had earned its unscheduled journey to nowhere.

Yes, Harmanpreet should have angled her bat better to avoid her fate. Yes, players are taught to do what she failed to do when they are children learning the game. No, she didn’t deserve to be cast as the villain of her team coming closer than most to beating Australia in a T20 World Cup semifinal. She might disagree.

“If my bat didn’t get stuck I would’ve easily finished that run,” Harmanpreet said in the aftermath, stoney-faced and clearly still riled. “If I had stayed till the last moments we could have definitely finished the match one over earlier as we had the momentum. But even after that, Deepti [Sharma] was there, Richa [Ghosh] was there. I had the belief that they could do it, too, because Richa has also batted well in all the matches till now. But after I got out we played seven or eight dot balls in the middle and the match turned. Otherwise, we got a good momentum and the match was going well.”

In fact, India scored three runs off the next six deliveries after the runout. But she wasn’t wrong — that’s where the match was won and lost. Harmanpreet’s dismissal ended a stand of 35 off 26 with Ghosh, which followed her partnership of 69 off 41 with Jemima Rodrigues. When India’s captain took guard, at 28/3 in the fourth, her team needed 8.88 runs an over. When she was removed, they needed 40 off 32. The match was there for the winning. Until it wasn’t.

“My runout was a turning point. Otherwise we were in the game. Everything was going in our favour. It was a disappointment because the way I was batting, that was the only way for me to get out. The way I was meeting the ball, I knew how to take this innings to the end. From the Australian team’s body language, it looked like they had given up the match. But the moment I got out the momentum shifted.”

India finished five runs shy of overhauling Australia’s 172/4, but the truth of it was they had no right to run the perennial and defending champions that close. They had put in a shocking display in the field, leaking runs alarmingly and dropping three catches, and their bowling was scarcely better.

On top of that, the Indians weren’t sure their captain would be involved considering she had sought relief from her infection at a hospital on Wednesday. “Until the team meeting [on Thursday morning], we didn’t even know whether she would play,” Rodrigues said. “When I saw her dragging her bag I had just stepped out of my room, and I knew she was going to play. It’s not easy. Harry Di, from the time she’s come here, she’s been falling sick, she has injuries. And I’ve hardly seen her bat in the nets because something or the other was happening to her. Imagine the kind of thing she was going through, mentally. To come out there and play the way she did said so much about her mental strength and determination. She’s passionate about the sport and this team. And about winning.”

Instead Australia won their 10th consecutive completed women’s T20I, a stream of success that might have been 22 games long and stretched back more than 16 months had it not been for their loss to India in a super over in Mumbai in December last year.

Their bottomless batting produced stands of 52 off 45 between Alyssa Healy and Beth Mooney, 36 off 27 between Mooney and Meg Lanning, 53 off 36 between Lanning and Ash Gardner, and 24 off nine between Lanning and Ellyse Perry.

They spilled one catch, in the 13th when Healy lunged to where a slip might have been and dropped Harmanpreet off Darcie Brown, but otherwise handed down a fielding masterclass. The prime example was Perry, and the best of her sterling work came in the 19th over when Sneh Rana swept Jess Jonassen for what looked for all money like four. Only for Perry to swoop, dive, and flick the ball several metres back from whence it came, all in one magnificent motion, to limit the damage to two.

“We showed our class today in the field,” Gardner said. “We always speak about being the best fielding team in the world, and I think we really showed that. We took those pivotal moments when we needed to. Ellyse Perry was elite on the boundary, the blueprint for our side. Fielding could have been something that was the difference between us and them.”

But Australia weren’t at all assured of success when India reached a runrate of 9.30 midway through their innings — 1.30 better than was required, and with Rodrigues and Harmanpreet in full flow. It wasn’t so much that the Australians bowled badly, but that the Indians were batting with enterprise and intent.

“At the 10-over mark in India’s innings everyone had probably written us off,” Gardner said. “That shows our character and that’s why the best teams win from those positions. When our backs are against the wall we always try and find a way. Today we probably had no right to win at one point. They were cruising. And then we found a way to get some wickets.”

Champions do that. Great champions do it again and again and again. Australia, who have won this trophy five times in its seven previous editions and have reached the final seven times, are already in that category. They have earned a stab at being heralded as even greater champions.

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Imagine all the countries, living like their cricket fans

“We know Pakistan don’t get many opportunities to play in the leagues. That’s very unfortunate.” – Bismah Mahroof

Telford Vice / Newlands

HOW do India and Pakistan detest each other? Let us count the ways … None, if the stands during their T20 women’s World Cup match at Newlands on Sunday were a reliable indication. Clumps of rival supporters exchanged smiles and chants, were more than happy to share neighbouring sections of seats, and got along well enough to take the edge off the wider realities. 

It seems you can take ugliness out of people by taking them out of ugliness. Maybe when your consciousness isn’t being poisoned by politicians and the press you are able to see the wood of the cricket despite the trees of the designed disharmony.

To see the Indian and Pakistani flags dance so closely to each other makes you want to imagine there’s no countries. It isn’t hard to do. Nothing to kill or die for. And no religion, too. But not even dreamers like John Lennon would be able to wish away the truth: malevolent nationalism conjured far from cricket grounds is transported there nonetheless.

Bismah Mahroof deflected when she was asked what the fans getting along famously could teach others: “It was very loud in the middle. We couldn’t hear our partners from the non-striker’s end. But it was fun to play in front of the crowd. The cricket was very good by both teams and they enjoyed it.” The reporter had another go — did the crowd deliver a lesson? “Maybe, I don’t know,” Bismah said with a smile and averted eyes.

Monday’s WPL auction in Mumbai, an event of such import that it is overshadowing a global tournament, will not include any Pakistani players; a decision that has a direct impact on cricket even though cricket had no input in it. The folly of this ruling was starkly apparent while Bismah and Ayesha Naseem were hammering India’s bowlers — all of whom are likely to land WPL deals — far and wide in their unbroken stand of 81 off 47 to power Pakistan to 149/4, their record total in a T20I against India.

“We know Pakistan don’t get many opportunities to play in the leagues,” Bismah said. “That’s very unfortunate, and of course we would like to. Definitely we would love to take up every opportunity. But that’s what it is and we can’t control that.”

Jemima Rodrigues, whose 38-ball 53 not out was central to India winning by seven wickets with an over to spare, didn’t have to wonder what it felt like to be cruelly snubbed by the biggest development in the history of professional women’s cricket.

“Honestly, I just want to play in the WPL,” Rodrigues said. “I’m not bothered which team is going to pick me. I just want to be a part of it, because it’s a dream come true for everyone who plays cricket in India. We have waited very long for this. I think if you ask the girls [they would say], ‘Even if you don’t pay us anything we’re still happy to go out there and play.’ This is going to change a lot for women’s cricket in India.”

How did she feel about the crowd? “It always motivates and encourages me. I am someone who really gets pumped up when the crowd is cheering. I like to take in their energy. So many times it’s their energy that’s spent inside the camp; you hit a boundary and everyone’s cheering. It lifts you up, it pushes you.”

By the early stages of India’s reply there were only 3,578 spectators in the ground. But they punched many decibels above their weight. Among them were Rodrigues’ parents, Lavita and Ivan Rodrigues: “They’ve never experienced an India-Pakistan game. It was very special for me.”

Matches between India and Pakistan are always special. For everybody who watches them. That holds true even though India have won 20 of the 29 completed T20Is between the teams. And while Pakistan have won just three of their 30 World T20 or T20 World Cup matches, two of those victories were achieved against the Indians.

“India versus Pakistan, there’s always added pressure,” Rodrigues said. “We even spoke about it in the team meeting. Growing up, we’ve always watched these matches so closely. We were on it. We shared our experiences.”

Sunday’s second match was played to the sound of the hands of only one team’s supporters clapping. Bangladesh’s fans are among the most vociferous anywhere, and they lived up to that billing. Sri Lanka’s are significantly less plentiful, which is understandable not only because their country is in economic meltdown but also owing to their population amounting to a mere 1.6% of India’s and 13.08% of Bangladesh’s.   

Nothing anywhere in sport is like India versus Pakistan, and Bangladesh against anyone is a spectacle in its own right. There’s no need to imagine all those people living life in peace. We see it for ourselves whenever their teams play. Here’s hoping someday the rest of us will join them. And the world will live as one.

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