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Cricket News Updated Jul 6, 2026

T20 WC Final: Jay Shah Hails Women's Cricket as Unmissable Golden Era

Australia defeated England by seven wickets at Lord's to win their sixth T20 World Cup title. ICC Chairman Jay Shah praised the tournament, calling it a reminder of why women's cricket is unmissable. Beth Mooney led the chase with 64 runs as Australia reached the target in 17.1 overs. Shah declared that women's cricket is in a golden era, thanks to the power, passion, and class displayed.

T20 WC reminds us why women's cricket is unmissable: Jay Shah

New Delhi, July 6

After Australia crushed England by seven wickets at Lord's to lift their sixth T20 World Cup title, ICC chairman ICC Chairman said that women's cricket is in its golden era and that the tournament served as a reminder of why the sport is unmissable, thanks to the power, passion and class on display.

The ICC Chair presented the trophy to captain Sophie Molineux, who lifted the T20 World Cup title just six months into her tenure as captain. After surrendering both the 20- and 50-over titles over the past two years, Australia reasserted themselves as the world's best team, securing their 14th white-ball title.

"Congratulations to Cricket Australia on winning their seventh ICC Women's T20 World Cup title with another incredible campaign. Huge credit to England cricket too - fantastic runners-up but champions in spirit. This tournament reminded us why women's cricket is unmissable - power, passion, and pure class on display from start to finish. Thank you to both teams and everyone who made this World Cup so special. Women's cricket is in a golden era," Jay Shah posted on X.

In front of a 28,000-plus record crowd at the Lord's Cricket Ground, Australia wrapped up their invincible run at the tournament in style, restricting England to 150 after electing to bowl and then chased down the target in 17.1 overs with Beth Mooney leading the way scoring 64 runs.

An emphatic win to seal an emphatic tournament, as Australia returned to the summit of T20 cricket after three years. In doing so, they broke a streak of rotten luck at World Cups on UK shores dating all the way back to the 1993.

England, who were playing their first T20 World Cup final in eight years, previously won all four of the Women's World Cups (50-over and T20) they had hosted; but Australia had won all six of the finals (50-over and T20) the two nations had contested.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

As an Indian fan, it's heartwarming to see the level of competition. Australia's dominance is remarkable, but England fought well too. Jay Shah's words ring true—this is the golden era. Just wish we saw more teams challenging the top two.

Sarah B

What a final! Beth Mooney is a superstar. The 28,000 crowd says it all—women's cricket is here to stay. Can't wait for the day when India lifts that trophy. The talent is there, just need more exposure and support.

Rohit P

Respect to Australia for their relentless winning mentality. But honestly, the gap between top teams is still big. ICC needs to work on spreading the game to more nations. That said, thrilling tournament overall—women's cricket deserves every bit of this praise.

Kavya N

The energy at Lord's must have been electric! Great to see Jay Shah acknowledging this growth. Indian women cricketers watch these matches and learn—our day will come. Proud moment for the sport! 🇮🇳👏

Michael C

Unmissable indeed! Australia's depth is incredible—six months into captaincy and Sophie Molineux lifts the trophy. Hats off to her leadership. The standard of fielding and power-hitting has gone up massively. Women's cricket is in safe hands.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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