South Africa women's cricket team in England in 2018 explained

Team1 Image:Flag_of_England.svg
Team1 Image Alt:English flag
Team1 Name:England women
Team2 Image:Flag_of_South_Africa.svg
Team2 Image Alt:South African flag
Team2 Name:South Africa women
Dates:9–15 June 2018
Team1 Captain:Heather Knight
Team2 Captain:Dane van Niekerk
No Of Odis:3
Team1 Odis Won:2
Team2 Odis Won:1
Team2 Odis Most Runs:Lizelle Lee (211)
Team1 Odis Most Wickets:Katherine Brunt (6)
Player Of Odi Series:Tammy Beaumont (Eng)

The South Africa women's cricket team toured England in the 2018 cricket season, playing three Women's One Day Internationals (WODIs) against the England women's cricket team, followed by a tri-series which also featured New Zealand. The WODI series formed part of the 2017–2020 ICC Women's Championship, which determined qualification for the 2022 Women's Cricket World Cup. England were captained by Heather Knight, while South Africa were led by Dane van Niekerk.

The three-match WODI series started at New Road, Worcester, where a score of 92 not out from Lizelle Lee and a strong bowling performance helped South Africa to victory. The win was their first against the hosts in England for fifteen years. In the second match, at the County Cricket Ground, Hove, England batted first once again, and centuries from Sarah Taylor and Tammy Beaumont propelled them to 331 for six. Despite a century from Lee, South Africa could not chase the target down, and England levelled the series. The final match was played at St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury, where South Africa won the toss and chose to bat first. They were bowled out with one ball of the innings remaining for 228; van Niekerk top-scored with 95. In response, England chased down their required target with six overs remaining, during which Beaumont scored her second century of the series.

Venues

Venues used during the WODI series[1]
scope=colWorcesterscope=colHovescope=colCanterbury
New RoadCounty Cricket GroundSt Lawrence Ground

Squads

South Africa named 15 players for their 2018 tour of England, making one change from the squads that had whitewashed Bangladesh during May, omitting Trisha Chetty, who had played over 150 international matches, and been their wicket-keeper for 10 years.[2] Three of the players included—Tazmin Brits, Stacy Lackay and Zintle Mali—had made their debuts during the Bangladesh series, and a preview by Cricbuzz suggested that they were included primarily for the Women's Twenty20 International tri-series, looking toward the 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20.[3] Brits was suggested by Cricbuzz as a long-term replacement for Chetty as wicket-keeper, but an International Cricket Council (ICC) preview of the series suggested that Lizelle Lee was more likely to take on the role.[2] [3] Writing for CRICKETher, the journalist Syd Egan said that South Africa were also boosted by the availability of Laura Wolvaardt,[4] who had started medical school in early 2018 but after about a month of studies had her place held so she could continue her cricket career.[5] Egan said that without Wolvaardt, South Africa's batting could be "as brittle as it can sometimes be brilliant".[4]

England initially named a 14-player squad for the first two matches, and made a few changes from their touring party which played India in April. Katherine Brunt and Sarah Taylor, who had both missed the India tour for medical reasons, returned to the squad, while Georgia Elwiss, Laura Marsh and Lauren Winfield were also recalled. Alex Hartley, Kate Cross and Tash Farrant were among six players who toured India that missed out on the first two WODIs.[6] Egan noted that England's squad was very talented and full of experienced players, but lacked younger players, and he questioned whether England were "producing the players they trust to go out there and score runs and take wickets".[4] England subsequently added Cross to the squad for the third WODI, while Danielle Hazell and Winfield were released from the squad.[7]

WODI series

1st WODI

The first women's One Day International (WODI) was played at New Road, Worcester on 9 June. England won the toss and their captain, Heather Knight, decided to bat first. Amy Jones started the innings well for England, but was bowled by Shabnim Ismail in the fifth over for 19, after scoring all but one of England's runs to that point. Writing for ESPNcricinfo, Melinda Farrell praised South Africa's bowling attack, particularly Ismail and Marizanne Kapp, who she said "cannily exploited" the conditions.[8] Taylor and Knight were both dismissed leg before wicket (lbw) in the next three overs for two and four runs respectively, leaving England on 29 for three.[9] Ayabonga Khaka was brought in as South Africa's first bowling change, and took a wicket with her first delivery, described by Farrell as "a corker: a hint of movement through the air before the ball jagged off the seam to beat the inside of Tammy Beaumont's bat".[8] Khaka took two more wickets in the seventeenth over: Sciver got a leading edge which was caught by Dane van Niekerk, while Danni Wyatt was caught at cover by Suné Luus after playing at a wide delivery, moving England to 64 for six. Brunt helped England to recover, as she scored her highest total for England, remaining 72 not out at the end of the innings. After initially scoring slowly, Brunt accelerated her rate and batted alongside the tail to see England finish on 189 for nine.[8] [9]

In response, South Africa lost Wolvaardt and Luus inside the first three overs. Wolvaardt was bowled by Brunt, while Luus was stumped by Taylor off a leg-side wide when South Africa had only scored five runs. South Africa's captain, van Niekerk, joined the opening batter Lee at the crease, and the pair played cautiously against England's opening bowlers, and then more aggressively against the other bowlers. Van Niekerk was the more attacking of the pair during their partnership, and was eventually bowled for 58 when England brought back one of their opening bowlers, Anya Shrubsole. Lee then took on a more attacking role and appeared to be caught by Brunt after scoring 68 runs, but a review by the third umpire adjudged that the ball had not been caught cleanly. Lee and Mignon du Preez both remained not out to help South Africa to victory with 27 balls remaining; Lee scored 92 and du Preez 36.[8] [9] The win was South Africa's first against the hosts in England for fifteen years, since their 2003 tour.[10]

2nd WODI

The series moved to the County Cricket Ground in Hove on 12 June for the second match, which was played as a day/night game. Dane van Niekerk won the toss for South Africa, and opted to chase again, letting England bat first. In contrast to the first match, England put together two strong partnerships; Jones and Tammy Beaumont put on 71 runs together before Jones was caught for 29. Taylor then joined Beaumont and the pair added 126 runs. Beaumont was praised by ESPNcricinfos Andrew Miller for her combination of powerful shots with sweeps which prevented South Africa's bowlers from finding a rhythm. Beaumont reached her century from 107 balls, before being dismissed two deliveries later, caught in the deep. Taylor maintained England's momentum, reaching her own century from 93 balls, and going on to score 118. England finished on 331 for six, the highest score in women's ODIs at Hove.[11]

As in the first match, South Africa began cautiously against England's opening bowlers; they scored 32 runs without losing a wicket from the first 10 overs, but then accelerated sharply, adding another 110 runs from the next 15 overs. Lee was once again South Africa's best batter; when Wolvaardt was caught behind off Brunt's bowling, she had only scored 32 of South Africa's 142 runs. Luus was dismissed next, three overs later for two runs, before Lee was caught at backward point. She had scored 117 runs from 107 deliveries, batting with what Miller described as "ferocious power". Her century marked the first time a women's international cricket match had featured three centuries.[12] After her dismissal, at which stage the score had been 170 for three, South Africa lost their momentum, and the required run rate began to climb. Chloe Tryon added 44 runs from 26 balls, including seven boundaries, but South Africa were regularly losing wickets, and eventually completed their 50 overs on 262 for nine, losing by 69 runs.[11]

3rd WODI

The final match of the series, which was tied at 1–1 after two matches, was played at St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury on 15 June. South Africa won the toss for the second consecutive game, and chose to bat first. Lee, who had scored the bulk of South Africa's runs in the first two matches was dismissed (lbw) early, after only scoring two runs. Replays subsequently showed that it was the wrong decision, as the ball would not have gone on to hit the stumps, but there was no review system in place to reprieve Lee. Andrie Steyn and Wolvaardt added fifty runs together before Steyn was out lbw to Sophie Ecclestone, leaving South Africa 58 for two. Dane van Niekerk joined Wolvaardt, and the pair scored a century partnership, albeit at a slow scoring-rate. Wolvaardt's dismissal for 64 brought Tryon in, and she and van Niekerk adopted a more attacking batting style. Tryon scored 19 runs from 16 balls, and soon after van Niekerk was also out, stumped by Taylor for 95 runs. ESPNcricinfos Miller described the stumping as "outstanding moment of the innings".[13] South Africa's lower-order batters did not add much to the score; du Preez scored 17 runs but four of the last five batters for South Africa did not score, and South Africa finished with 228 runs.[14]

In their response, the England openers—Jones and Beaumont—scored 39 runs before Jones was dismissed for 24. Taylor only scored five runs before she was bowler by Khaka, and Knight joined Beaumont at the crease. The pair then added 154 runs together; Knight passed her half-century, while Beaumont scored a 121-ball century, her second in consecutive matches, before being dismissed lbw two balls later. Knight was joined by Sciver and England reached their target two win by seven wickets with six overs remaining.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: South Africa Women tour of England 2018: Fixtures and Results . ESPNcricinfo . 5 September 2021.
  2. News: South Africa drop Trisha Chetty for limited-overs tour of England . . 21 May 2018 . 5 September 2021.
  3. News: Stacey Lackay, Tasmin Brits picked in SA Women squad for England tour . Cricbuzz . 21 May 2018 . 5 September 2021.
  4. News: Opinion: England Hope For Triumph of Experience In Busy Summer . Egan . Syd . CRICKETher . 9 June 2018 . 5 September 2021.
  5. News: 'It's frustrating because this is the year I decided to opt for cricket as a career' . ESPNcricinfo . Moonda . Firdose . 25 April 2020 . 5 September 2021.
  6. News: Alex Hartley dropped; Sarah Taylor and Katherine Brunt return for England . ESPNcricinfo . 4 June 2018 . 5 September 2021.
  7. Web site: England v South Africa women (Fri, 2pm) . . 14 June 2018 . 2 September 2021.
  8. News: Lizelle Lee secures victory after South Africa's attack shatters England . Farrell . Melinda . ESPNcricinfo . 9 June 2019 . 1 September 2021.
  9. Web site: Scorecard: 1st ODI, Worcester, Jun 9 2018, South Africa Women tour of England . ESPNcricinfo . 1 September 2021.
  10. News: Proteas women go 1–0 up in England . . 10 June 2018 . 1 September 2021.
  11. News: England withstand Lizelle Lee firestorm to draw level in ODI series against South Africa . Miller . Andrew . ESPNcricinfo . 12 June 2018 . 2 September 2021.
  12. Web site: England beat South Africa to level women's ODI series – as it happened . Harris . Daniel . Collins . Adam . . 12 June 2018 . 2 September 2021.
  13. News: Tammy Beaumont century guides England to series win . Miller . Andrew . ESPNcricinfo . 15 June 2018 . 5 September 2021.
  14. Web site: Scorecard: 3rd ODI (D/N), Canterbury, Jun 15 2018, South Africa Women tour of England . ESPNcricinfo . 5 September 2021.