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Women's ODI World Cup 2025: Discussion thread

Give the cup to Australia and get this over with. Damn this was what said when India was dominating 2023 world cup. Even aussies were saying give the cup to India already. Great anti climax. Let us hope we find another winner. SA is the form team.
Yes, they have this player De Klerk who seems to be opposite gender version of Klassen. But they too dont have any chance against Australia. In fact, they were huffping and puffing against our ladies the other day.
 
India lost again. :dav

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Balle balle , Minnow Bangladesh humiliated by Australia. They have lost the match by 10 Wickets .

Hahahahaha 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣

Let's laugh on Bangla fan's

:klopp :jp
 
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Alyssa Healy’s masterful century led Australia to a 10-wicket win over Bangladesh which sealed the reigning champions' place in the knockout stages.

Australia’s captain made it back-to-back World Cup hundreds with an unbeaten 113 in Visakhapatnam as she and Phoebe Litchfield, who made an unbeaten 84, chased down the target of 199 in just 24.5 overs.

Healy and Litchfield’s exploits saw Australia retake top spot in the group stage table and also broke the record for the highest successful ICC Women's Cricket World Cup chase without losing a wicket.

King spins Australia into position of control

A collective bowling effort from the seven-time champions, led by Alana King (2/18), had earlier restricted Bangladesh to 198, who found themselves 165 for nine having slipped from 127 for four.

Fargana Hoque got Bangladesh’s innings off to a good start after they won the toss and chose to bat as the openers put on 32 for the first wicket.

Megan Schutt (1/11) and Darcie Brown bowled well and saw the ball regularly fly through the slip cordon with Rubya Haider dropped on 22 by Litchfield.

The end of the ninth over saw Australia make the breakthrough as Schutt found Fargana’s outside edge and Beth Mooney took a good catch to her right in the slips.

Rubya was dropped again the very next ball – this time by Healy – but kicked on after that with back-to-back fours at Annabel Sutherland’s expense in the 16th over, taking her to 40 and the score to 67 for one.

But the 28-year-old fell on 44 shortly after as she could only find Tahlia McGrath at mid-on when trying to slog Ash Gardner (2/48)

Sharmin Akhter’s dismissal was a carbon copy of Rubya’s to hand Gardner her second wicket before Nigar Sultana Joty was stumped by Healy after being deceived by King’s tossed up delivery.

From there, the Australian bowlers turned the screw as the wicket of Shorna Akter, whose unbeaten 51 from 35 balls almost guided the Tigresses to victory over South Africa last time out, triggered a collapse.

The combination of King and Mooney accounted for the 18-year-old and Georgia Wareham (2/22) and Sutherland (2/41) then tore through Bangladesh’s lower order. The duo picked up two wickets apiece as Ritu Moni, Fahima Khatun, Rabeya Khan and Nishita Akter Nishi all went cheaply.

Resistance came in the form of Sobhana Mostary, who played brilliantly for her unbeaten 66 and her late boundary hitting was crucial to her country setting a respectable target.

Healy and Litchfield’s unbroken stand too much for Bangladesh’s bowlers

However, Australia’s opening batters made light work of their chase.

Litchfield helped herself to two boundaries from Fariha Trisna in the third over as the 22-year-old looked to break the shackles early on.

Healy took a similarly attacking approach as the skipper plundered three fours from Trisna’s third over with the mid-wicket boundary proving particularly fruitful.

The pair took their opening stand past 50 in the eighth over and Litchfield hit the game’s first six as the century partnership approached.

Rubya’s missed stumping gave Litchfield a life on 46 and the same batter then brought up the fastest hundred partnership of the tournament from 13.5 overs.

Healy reached her 19th ODI half century, and fourth at World Cups, in the 15th over and Litchfield notched up her first World Cup fifty in the following over.

With the exception of a top-edge that was put down by Fargana, Healy looked in imperious form and progressed to her fourth World Cup hundred from just 73 balls in the 24th over.

And after a series of late boundaries from the duo, Litchfield smashed the ball to the mid-off boundary to win the match in style.

Bangladesh v Australia - ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium, Visakhapatnam, India

Bangladesh 198/9 from 50.0 overs (Sobhana Mostary 66*, Rubya Haider 44; Alana King 2/18, Georgia Wareham 2/22)

Australia 202/0 from 24.5 overs (Alyssa Healy 113*, Phoebe Litchfield 84*; Shorna Akter 0/19, Nishita Akter Nishi 0/24, Fahima Khatun 0/24)

Result: Australia won by 10 wickets.
 
Was it the 1st ever game in a Women WC in which the chasing side thrashed the opponent by 10 wickets? Does anyone hv stats on this?
 
India vs Pakistan in the ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 shattered digital viewership records, becoming the most-watched women’s cricket match ever.

The ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 saw a staggering 1.87 billion minutes of digital viewership across platforms in India. This high-voltage clash alone accounted for over 380 million minutes of watch time, making it the most-watched women’s cricket match digitally in history.

The match was streamed on Disney+ Hotstar and other ICC digital channels, with peak concurrency reaching over 5 million viewers during the game. The tournament’s digital footprint expanded significantly, with over 100 million unique viewers tuning in globally.

Social media interactions around the India-Pakistan match surged, with hashtags trending across platforms and millions of impressions generated.
 
South Africa’s openers, Laura Wolvaardt and Tazmin Brits, produced a clinical display to steer their side to a 10-wicket victory over Sri Lanka in their ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 clash on Friday, booking the Proteas a spot in the semi-finals.

The win marked South Africa’s fourth straight triumph of the tournament — all achieved while chasing — as they delivered another polished performance to move to second place on the table with eight points from four matches. Meanwhile, hosts Sri Lanka remained winless, suffering their second defeat in five games.

Opting to bat first after winning the toss, Sri Lanka managed 105/6 in 20 overs following a rain interruption that reduced the contest to a 20-over-a-side game. In reply, Wolvaardt and Brits made the chase look effortless, compiling 25 runs in the powerplay before shifting gears comfortably.

Wolvaardt registered her 37th ODI half-century — her second of the tournament — while Brits fittingly sealed the win with a six to bring up her own fifty off the final delivery.

Earlier, Nonkululeko Mlaba led the bowling attack with 3/30, helping restrict Sri Lanka to a modest total. Nadine de Klerk and Masabata Klaas (2/18) also made crucial contributions, striking early to keep Sri Lanka under constant pressure.

Vishmi Gunaratne top-scored with 34 after returning from a knee injury that had forced her to retire hurt earlier in the innings. She fought valiantly, finding boundaries at key moments, but lacked support as wickets tumbled regularly — including three in the final over, two of them claimed by Mlaba.

Before the rain break, South Africa had Sri Lanka pinned at 46/2 after 12 overs. Once play resumed, the Proteas tightened their grip further, conceding only seven runs in the last two overs. Klaas had earlier given South Africa a flying start, dismissing Hasini Perera and Chamari Athapaththu inside the powerplay.

Sri Lanka later confirmed that Gunaratne’s injury was not serious, with the medical team clearing her to bat once play resumed. However, despite her return, the hosts failed to build any meaningful partnerships, losing momentum toward the end of the innings.

Sri Lanka will look to bounce back when they face Bangladesh on October 20, while South Africa meet Pakistan the next day, aiming to extend their unbeaten run to five matches in a row.
 
India-Pakistan World Cup clash becomes most-watched women’s match in history

The Women’s ODI World Cup 2025 clash between arch-rivals India and Pakistan has become the most-watched women’s cricket match of all time across digital platforms, the ICC confirmed on Thursday.

The October 5 encounter, one of the most anticipated fixtures of the tournament, recorded an extraordinary 28.4 million reach and 1.87 billion total minutes viewed, setting an unprecedented global benchmark for women’s sport viewership.

According to ICC data, the India-Pakistan showdown wasn’t an isolated spike, as the entire first half of the World Cup’s league stage has witnessed record-breaking engagement across both digital and broadcast mediums.

The opening 11 matches, featuring marquee teams like India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, and South Africa, collectively reached 72 million viewers, representing a 166% surge compared to the previous edition.

Viewing minutes soared by an astonishing 327%, totaling 6.3 billion minutes.

Even the early phase of the competition surpassed expectations, with the first 13 matches amassing over 60 million viewers, five times more than in 2022, and an aggregate 7 billion minutes of watch time, a twelve-fold increase.

While stadium attendance has been mixed, with sellout crowds for games involving India and Sri Lanka and thinner turnouts for neutral fixtures, the surge in global engagement underscores the tournament’s growing impact and popularity.

Adding to the record spree, the India vs Australia league encounter on October 12 reached 4.8 million peak concurrent viewers, setting another all-time high for women’s cricket.


 
It was a horrible decision to do some of the matches in Sri Lanka during this time of the year. They should have selected a place like UAE. We could have seen Sri Lanka beat New Zealand and Pakistan beat England. On the flip side, a team like New Zealand would have backed themselves to beat Pakistan today and strengthen their semi-final hopes. Who knows, they even could have beaten Sri Lanka though I personally doubt it.
 
If you think Asia Cup is a poor tournament. This tournament is like 10x worse with every single game basically getting washed away.
 
Pakistan Woman - we will not take trophy from Jay Shah

Pakistan Woman - yet to win a single match

The same fate awaits the men team in T20 WC.....humilation is the middle name of pakistan:p

Zalalat after zalalat while they consume chooran from the incompetent PCB.
 
@Devadwal , you were wrong. Look India need to beat NZ to qualify despite that NZ-Pak game turned out to be a rain marred game. NZ could have easily won 1 more point from that game and a Win to their name.
 
@Devadwal , you were wrong. Look India need to beat NZ to qualify despite that NZ-Pak game turned out to be a rain marred game. NZ could have easily won 1 more point from that game and a Win to their name.
NZ has two game left , one against India and another against England.

After today game ( Assuming india lost) , india also have two game left against NZ and Bangladesh

NZ - 4 pts
India -4 pts ( But have better NRR)

Even if NZ win against India and lost against England , they will have 6 pts

India needs to beat Bangladesh and due to better NRR( Assuming) india can qualify for the semifinals

:kp
 
NZ has two game left , one against India and another against England.

After today game ( Assuming india lost) , india also have two game left against NZ and Bangladesh

NZ - 4 pts
India -4 pts ( But have better NRR)

Even if NZ win against India and lost against England , they will have 6 pts

India needs to beat Bangladesh and due to better NRR( Assuming) india can qualify for the semifinals

:kp
What if NZ beat England?
 
NZ has two game left , one against India and another against England.

After today game ( Assuming india lost) , india also have two game left against NZ and Bangladesh

NZ - 4 pts
India -4 pts ( But have better NRR)

Even if NZ win against India and lost against England , they will have 6 pts

India needs to beat Bangladesh and due to better NRR( Assuming) india can qualify for the semifinals

:kp
If you lose to all SENA teams, what is the point of even qualifying to top 4?

Atleast beat the rest before the inevitable happens - loss to Australia in Finals.
 
If you lose to all SENA teams, what is the point of even qualifying to top 4?
If they can win in semi/ final than no one care . But problem is we will face Australia in semifinal and need to bring a game like 2017 World Cup semi-final where kaur 171" help us to win the match.

:kp
 
Indian ladies are doing very well.

They have moved at a very fast pace. They should technically be 2 generations behind Western women's teams, but due to the investment and passion they have reached a high standard very quickly.
 
Smirthi gone. India four down

Now looks difficult for Indian women's as they don't have much batting depth.

Need another 55 Runs from 52 balls .

:kp
 
Special effort from India women in losing needing 71 off 72 with 7 wickets in hand & the worst part is they lost by only losing 6 wickets. Now they have lost to all the big teams they have played & beaten only minnows . Absolutely shameful performance so far on a home WC

:kp
 
Indian women made a mess of it. Should have won against England with 62 needed off 60 balls and 7 wickets in hand.

With a run a ball needed, needless aerial shots was their undoing
 
It’s high time BCCI takes some tough calls in their women’s cricket. They want everything and board gave them all under Jay Shah’s tenure. Hope some accountability is set this time.

:kp
 
The NZ vs India game will likely decide the 4th semifinalist
 
Australia, England and South Africa already thru.
 
The NZ vs India game will likely decide the 4th semifinalist
The way our women's team played cricket ,I hope NZ qualify. We lost three winnable games from Good position .

It's High time BCCI to take some taught decison after this World Cup .

Asian women's are miles behind from SENA team's . Running karna ata ni hai. They almost missed minimum 25-30 runs due to pathetic running.

:kp
 
62 runs. 10 overs. 7 wickets.
And Indian women still managed to lose it

My genuine reaction : ladies please go to kitchen 😂😂

:kp
 
The way our women's team played cricket ,I hope NZ qualify. We lost three winnable games from Good position .

It's High time BCCI to take some taught decison after this World Cup .

Asian women's are miles behind from SENA team's . Running karna ata ni hai. They almost missed minimum 25-30 runs due to pathetic running.

:kp
There are cultural reasons for this, despite this, India has closed the gap quite well.

Don't be too harsh.
 
The way our women's team played cricket ,I hope NZ qualify. We lost three winnable games from Good position .

It's High time BCCI to take some taught decison after this World Cup .

Asian women's are miles behind from SENA team's . Running karna ata ni hai. They almost missed minimum 25-30 runs due to pathetic running.

:kp
Agreed. India was in a good position against Australia as well.330 was a really good score (despite wasting 7 balls, otherwise 350 was on) should have been defended with their spinners
 
England held their nerve to edge past India by four runs in their in their ICC Women's Cricket World Cup 2025 clash,in Indore on Sunday After winning the toss and opting to bat first, England posted 288/8 and then maintained control with regular breakthroughs to hand the hosts their third consecutive defeat in the tournament.

The result sees England become the third team to qualify for the semi-finals, joining South Africa and Australia. With the win, England move to nine points from five matches level with Australia while India remain on four points having played five games.

Smriti Mandhana (88) top-scored for India with valuable contributions from Harmanpreet Kaur (70) and Deepti Sharma (50) that kept the hosts in contention. However, England struck at crucial moments, breaking key partnerships and tightening their grip as the required run rate climbed, making the chase increasingly difficult for India in the final overs.

Natalie Sciver-Brunt (2/47) was the pick of the bowlers while Linsey Smith, Charlie Dean, Sophie Ecclestone and Lauren Bell chipped in with a wicket each.

Smriti Mandhana and Deepti Sharma had tilted the momentum in India’s favour with a solid 69-run stand before England struck thrice in quick succession to claw their way back into the contest.

Mandhana, looking well set, was caught at long on while attempting to go big, giving Linsey Smith her first wicket. Natalie Sciver-Brunt then dismissed Richa Ghosh and Sophie Ecclestone tightened the screws by removing Deepti, who fell in similar fashion to Mandhana.

The flurry of wickets saw India slip from 234/3 to 262/6.

In the first innings, India struck at regular intervals to restrict England to 288/8 after Heather Knight’s magnificent century had set the tone for the innings. England were cruising at 249/4 when Knight fell but India’s bowlers kept chipping away to ensure the total stayed under 300.

Knight top-scored with a superb 109 off 91 balls, laced with 15 fours and a six, while Amy Jones (56) provided a steady start at the top of the order to lay the platform for England.

India’s spinners led the fightback with Deepti Sharma (4/51) standing out as the pick of the bowlers, well supported by Sree Charani (2/68).

Earlier in the innings, Heather Knight’s century had put England firmly in control before her run out triggered a late collapse. India conceded only 42 runs in the final six overs while picking up five wickets.

Knight and Natalie Sciver-Brunt had added 113 runs for the third wicket, steering England’s innings and shifting the momentum in their favour before Sree Charani struck to dismiss the England captain. Knight attempted to loft one over the covers but mistimed her shot, offering a catch to Harmanpreet Kaur.

Their partnership proved vital in maintaining England’s momentum after openers Amy Jones and Tammy Beaumont had laid a solid platform with a 73-run stand.

It was Deepti Sharma who provided India with their first two wickets to remove England openers Tammy Beaumont and Amy Jones. Beaumont was bowled while attempting a sweep and the dismissal marked a personal milestone for Deepti, who reached 150 ODI wickets.

Deepti struck again soon after when Jones attempted to go big but was caught at mid-on, where Smriti Mandhana completed a superb diving catch to leave England two down.

Before her dismissal, Jones had anchored the opening partnership with Beaumont and brought up her maiden World Cup fifty, giving England a strong start to their innings.

Earlier, Nat Sciver-Brunt won the toss and elected to bat first in a mouth-watering clash. A major change in India's lineup for the crucial contest sees Jemimah Rodrigues make way for pacer Renuka Singh Thakur.

The hosts, after starting their World Cup campaign with back-to-back wins against Sri Lanka and Pakistan, faced successive defeats against South Africa and Australia, making their road to the semi-final tougher as they face an undefeated England.

The Harmanpreet Kaur-led side would take some confidence from their recent England tour where they had emerged victorious in the ODI series.

The match also marked special milestones for two England players with Heather Knight featuring in her 300th ODI and Charlie Dean, who is making her 50th ODI appearance.

England, on the other side, have had a near perfect tournament so far, notching up three early wins in a row while being placed at number three in the points table.

However they did face a scare from Pakistan, who ran through their batting in their previous outing, before rain forced the encounter to be abandoned.


ICC
 
There are cultural reasons for this, despite this, India has closed the gap quite well.

Don't be too harsh.

Look at the physical builds of the Indian team compared to SENA teams. Some of the Indian batsmen can barely lift the bat to hit a six.
 
Agreed. India was in a good position against Australia as well.330 was a really good score (despite wasting 7 balls, otherwise 350 was on) should have been defended with their spinners
The INDIA WOMEN'S Team should be completely revamped. Only two or three players from the current squad deserve to be retained and a young team should be built for the future. These chomu players have failed to deliver even on home soil despite having all the facilities

:kp
 
Look at the physical builds of the Indian team compared to SENA teams. Some of the Indian batsmen can barely lift the bat to hit a six.
Opener Pratika Rawal looks like a school girl who don't have any power game. :kp
 
Look at the physical builds of the Indian team compared to SENA teams. Some of the Indian batsmen can barely lift the bat to hit a six.
Western women have been playing and working out for years.

In contrast this is a relatively recent thing for Asian women. They have to overcome a lot of obstacles that those women don't.

Still, India have pumped in a lot of money and closed the gap quickly.
 
ICC deserve a lot of credit for growing the women's game.

It is a genuine sporting product now.

Maybe it's the only thing the ICC have done right.
I think only in T20 and maybe ODI WC to an extent. Test and what not are complete waste of time. The fielding aspect is very bad because it's very difficult for women put in the dive.
 
India women team lost 3 close games. They need an MSD type of finisher and Bumrah type of death bowler. First scoring 330 and losing it. Infact should have scored 360 with the way they were going.
 
Indian women are clear cut chokers. They have the talent to take on top teams. But does not have the guts to win close games.
 
ICC deserve a lot of credit for growing the women's game.

It is a genuine sporting product now.

Maybe it's the only thing the ICC have done right.

Slow bowlers (their pacers bowl in the 110s). Short boundaries. Barely any six. No sledging.

Not much entertaining. :inti
 
Bangladesh batting like India against England during the last overs yesterday

The requirement was 30 off 36 balls at one stage

Now they need 9 off the last over!
 
Total harakiri by Bangladesh in the final 5-6 overs
 
Sri Lanka held their nerve in a nail-biting in their ICC Women's Cricket World Cup 2025 clash to knock Bangladesh out of the tournament in Navi Mumbai on Monday. Defending 203, Bangladesh needed eight runs off the final over, but Sri Lanka captain Chamari Athapaththu rose to the occasion in stunning fashion. Bangladesh lost four wickets in the first four balls of the over, with Athapaththu claiming three of them to seal a dramatic win.

The result keeps Sri Lanka’s semi-final hopes alive while Bangladesh’s campaign comes to an end following their fifth defeat of the tournament.

Earlier, Sri Lanka struck early in their defence of 203, claiming three wickets before Bangaldesh clawed their way back in the game to leave the contest finely poised.

The hosts claimed their first breakthrough through Udeshika Prabodhani, who got a wicket in her very first over. The spinner dismissed Rubya Haider for a duck who edged behind to the keeper while attempting to push at a delivery. Haque then lost her wicket soon after her powerplay as she was run out before Sobhana Mostary fell to Sugandika Kumari.

However, Bangaldesh responded in great fashion with Sharmin Akter and captain Nigar Sultana Joty putting up a solid 100-run partnership. Joty and Sharmin both struck fifties to bring Bangladesh back in the contest after they were reeling at 44/3.

In the first innings, Bangladesh’s bowlers delivered a collective effort to bowl out Sri Lanka for 202 in their World Cup clash in Navi Mumbai. Sri Lanka had cruised to 174/4 after a solid start from the top order but regular wickets in the death overs meant they just managed to cross the 200-run mark.

Hasini Perera (85) top-scored for the hosts while Chamari Athapaththu (46) and Nilakshika Silva (37) also contributed valuable runs. Perera, the last of the trio to fall, found little support at the other end as Bangladesh continued to strike at regular intervals.

Shorna Akter (3/27) was the standout performer with the ball well supported by Rabeya Khatun (2/39) while Marufa Akter, Nishita Akter and Nahida Akter chipped in with a wicket each.

Silva and Hasini Perera had revived the innings with a crucial 74-run partnership, capitalising on a few dropped chances after Sri Lanka were struggling at 100/4 before the 20th over.

However, momentum swung firmly back in Bangladesh’s favour as their spinners tightened the screws on Sri Lanka. Silva’s dismissal in the 32nd over triggered a collapse and Perera's dismissal - who struck 13 fours and a six in her innings - soon after deepened the slump.

Shorna Akter ripped through the middle order with three key strikes as Sri Lanka managed only 27 runs while losing four wickets between overs 31 and 40. From there, it was only a matter of time before Bangladesh cleaned up the tail. Though Udeshika Prabodhani and Malki Madara held on until the penultimate over, the lack of runs made their resistance in vain.

After the dismissal of Chamari Athapaththu, Bangladesh tightened their grip by removing Harshitha Samarawickrama and Kaveesha Dilhari in quick time.

Samarawickrama was the first to go, as she was run out and Dilhari’s dismissal came in unusual fashion before the end of the 20th over. The ball took an inside edge and it ricocheted off wicketkeeper Nigar Sultana Joty before clipping the bails with Dilhari’s back foot in the air during the moment of impact.

Earlier on, Bangladesh got off to a perfect start with a wicket coming off the very first ball of the innings as Marufa Akter trapped Gunaratne LBW. The batter attempted to play across the line and although given not out initially, Bangladesh reviewed successfully after ball tracking showed all three reds.

Athapaththu then combined with Hasini Perera to steady the innings, adding 72 runs for the second wicket. The Sri Lankan captain looked in fine touch, striking six boundaries and two sixes, before Rabeya Khatun broke the stand. Athapaththu was struck on the pad while attempting to defend and the umpire had no hesitation in raising the finger, leaving Sri Lanka two down.


ICC
 
If some of you have some blatantly biased views on women, why are you watching these matches? Nobody asked you watch this tournament and share your patronizing, condescending takes on women with the rest of us.
 
Slow bowlers (their pacers bowl in the 110s). Short boundaries. Barely any six. No sledging.

Not much entertaining. :inti
You gotta watch it knowing there are physical differences and we won't see a Shoaib Akhtar or Chris Gayle.
 
Indian women are clear cut chokers. They have the talent to take on top teams. But does not have the guts to win close games.
They are shaped my the patriarchal indian society. will take some time to break through.
 
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I just seen the scorecard that's an unbelievable loss. The lady who made 62 should be ashamed.
disagree. These women are the first one thro the male chauvinistic shithole that is the subcontinent. They are going to get bloodied on their journey. no shame in that.
 
Congratulations Bangladesh first team to knock out from wc 2025

It is good because they can return to kitchen faster. :yk

Jokes aside, BD women's team can call their campaign a success if they can finish 7th. They were expected to finish last anyway. :inti
 
Funny last 2 overs. Lot of teams have collapsed in this world cupe. Even big teams have collapsed. But they had someone to rescue them. Pure panic driven collapse. I don't think atthapatthu is a main strike bowelr for SL.
 
ROFL just stop. There is no point to this. This tournament should be held between SENA teams only + IND only due to markets and huge invests done in WPL.

Cant run between wickets, cant field to put in a dive, cant catch either. Cant chase 10 runs even with 7 wickets in hand. Complete waste of anyone's time. Why are we being fed this mockery of sport?
 
disagree. These women are the first one thro the male chauvinistic shithole that is the subcontinent. They are going to get bloodied on their journey. no shame in that.


I agree with your comment overall they are breaking barriers, but we got a judge the actual sports output too. That was a shocker of a knock by any standard of cricket.
 
ROFL just stop. There is no point to this. This tournament should be held between SENA teams only + IND only due to markets and huge invests done in WPL.

Cant run between wickets, cant field to put in a dive, cant catch either. Cant chase 10 runs even with 7 wickets in hand. Complete waste of anyone's time. Why are we being fed this mockery of sport?

There is a huge gap between SENA and other countries.

Tier 1: SENA
Gap
Tier 2: West Indies, India
Gap
Gap
Gap
Tier 3: BD, SL, PAK

I know West Indies didn't make it this time. But, they are an okay team. West Indies women's team won 1 World Cup (2016 I believe).
 
ROFL just stop. There is no point to this. This tournament should be held between SENA teams only + IND only due to markets and huge invests done in WPL.

Cant run between wickets, cant field to put in a dive, cant catch either. Cant chase 10 runs even with 7 wickets in hand. Complete waste of anyone's time. Why are we being fed this mockery of sport?
Where is the mockery? Bangladesh women for example are representing their country, training hard, practicing and breaking barriers.

They have probably achieved at a same level to your mens team. Infact they have even one an Asia cup!

Given the obstacles they face before even stepping on the field they have done quite well.
 
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