Litchfield, Perry, McGrath fifties help clinical Australia go 1-0 up
Australia 285 for 4 (Perry 78, Litchfield 75, McGrath 68*) beat India 282 for 8 (Rodrigues 82, Vastrakar 62*, Bhatia 49, Wareham 2-55, Gardner 2-63) by six wickets
Ellyse Perry and Phoebe Litchfield made India's above-par score of 282 look less threatening as Australia went 1-0 up in the first of the three ODIs at the Wankhede Stadium on Thursday. Losing Alyssa Healy in the first over of the innings, Litchfield and Perry notched up 78 and 75 respectively, with Tahlia McGrath contributing a valuable unbeaten 68 as Australia recorded the second-highest run chase in women's ODIs.
This was after Jemimah Rodrigues' tasteful 82 and Pooja Vastrakar's battling 62 not out at No.9 on a hot Mumbai evening moved India to their most elevated ODI complete against Australia.
Perry's plan was obvious from the very outset as she got going energetically to stay aware of the necessary run pace of 5.66. The allrounder crushed nine fours and two clean sixes in her 72-ball innings while the left-given Litchfield provided us with a brief look at the eventual fate of Australia's batting with her calculative thump. She started the innings simply by stroking to get familiar with the circumstances and when she got gotten comfortable, Litchfield started to track down limits with the scope, turn around clear and punches off the back foot. Playing her twelfth ODI, first in Quite a while, Litchfield scored eight limits and a six in her 89-ball thump. The left-right couple sewed together 148 off 150 balls, and when Perry was excused by Deepti Sharma in the 26th over, the establishment was all around laid for the pursuit.
Beth Mooney and McGrath gained by the begin to put on one more 88 runs off only 67 conveyances and made the pursuit look easy as the wicket turned out to be smarter to bat on. Vastrakar tidied up Mooney for 42 in the 42nd over, however it was past the point of no return for India to return with little assistance from the bowlers in the subsequent innings. McGrath, in her most memorable visit as full-time bad habit commander, remained till the finish to finish the conventions with six wickets close by.
Prior, India retaliated from early butterflies in the wake of losing Shafali Verma, Richa Ghosh and Harmanpreet Kaur right off the bat in the innings. The prominent non-attendant from their XI was bad habit commander and opener Smriti Mandhana, who was unwell and inaccessible for determination. Nonetheless,
Until the eighth-wicket stand among Rodrigues and Vastrakar, Australia permitted no pair to get comfortable. Six of the seven bowlers got up a wicket each after they were approached to bowl first on a track offering turn.
Rodrigues, who conveyed forward her Test structure into ODIs, was apparently shriveling in the intensity, yet she ran hard, cleared hard and passed through covers to score up her fifth fifty in her 25th ODI. Subsequent to sharing 38, 39 and 45 runs with Bhatia, Deepti Sharma and Amanjot Kaur separately, she tracked down Vastrakar's assistance to put on 68 runs - the main fifty or more association of the innings - for the eighth wicket.
Rodrigues' 77-ball stay had seven fours while Vastrakar hit seven fours and two sixes in her 46-ball thump. After Rodrigues' excusal in the 47th over, Vastrakar shot her direction to her fourth ODI fifty off 39 balls in the penultimate over, once more demonstrating her batting accreditations lower down the request.
Each of the four of Vastrakar's ODI fifties have come while batting at No.8 or lower. No one else has scored multiple fifties while batting at No.8 or lower in ODIs.
It seemed to be India saved the best for the last stage, aggregating 82 runs in the last ten overs. Be that as it may, defeating Meg Lanning-less Australia wasn't sufficient. For the guests, Wareham and Ashleigh Gardner were significant in scalping two wickets each.