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Cricket News Updated Jun 23, 2026

Darcey Carter's 72 Lifts Scotland to 131/7 Against NZ in T20 WC

Darcey Carter's unbeaten 72 anchored Scotland to 131/7 against New Zealand in the Women's T20 World Cup. A late collapse saw Scotland lose five wickets in five overs after being 96/2. Amelia Kerr starred with 3-17, while Sophie Devine took 2-19 for New Zealand. Despite sloppy fielding, New Zealand's bowlers recovered to restrict Scotland.

Women's T20 WC: Darcey Carter's unbeaten 72 helps Scotland post 131 against NZ

Bristol, June 23

Opening batter Darcey Carter produced a composed and determined unbeaten 72 to steer Scotland to 131 for 7, but a dramatic collapse in the closing overs prevented them from fully capitalising on a promising platform against New Zealand in their must-win Women's T20 World Cup encounter.

After being put in to bat, Scotland made an assured start with Carter taking the initiative. She settled quickly despite a couple of early chances going begging, and New Zealand's sloppy fielding only added to the defending champions' frustrations. Missed catches, run-out opportunities and untidy work behind the stumps allowed Scotland to maintain momentum through the powerplay, reaching 45 without loss.

Carter was the driving force, mixing clean hitting with intelligent strike rotation as she stitched together a steady opening partnership with Katherine Fraser. While Fraser played the supporting role, Carter ensured the scoring rate never dipped, bringing up a well-crafted half-century with confident strokeplay.

New Zealand finally found a breakthrough when Lea Tahuhu dismissed Fraser in the eighth over, before Amelia Kerr removed Scottish captain Kathryn Bryce soon after, halting the momentum.

Even then, Carter remained unfazed, finding an able partner in Sarah Bryce as the pair rebuilt with a valuable stand that carried Scotland close to the 100-run mark. Sarah Bryce's brisk 25 complemented Carter perfectly, with both batters targeting gaps rather than taking unnecessary risks.

Just as Scotland looked set for a strong finish, Sophie Devine turned the innings on its head. Introduced after the drinks break, the New Zealand skipper struck immediately by trapping Sarah Bryce lbw before dismissing Ailsa Lister in the same over.

Nensi Patel then outfoxed Megan McColl with a clever change of pace, and Amelia Kerr delivered the decisive blow with a superb double-wicket maiden in the penultimate over, removing Priyanaz Chatterji and Pippa Sproul to leave Scotland reeling.

From 96 for 2 after 14 overs, Scotland slipped to 121 for 7 in the space of five overs as New Zealand finally found the breakthroughs that had eluded them for much of the innings. The collapse robbed Scotland of the late flourish they had been building towards.

Carter, however, stood tall till the end. She carried her bat through with an unbeaten 72 off 52 deliveries, calmly collecting runs in the final over to drag Scotland beyond the 130-mark. Her innings accounted for more than half of Scotland's total and kept the innings together amid the late chaos.

For New Zealand, the bowling recovered impressively after an indifferent start. Amelia Kerr finished with outstanding figures of 3 for 17, Devine claimed two crucial middle-order wickets, while Tahuhu and Patel chipped in with one apiece.

Although the fielding left much to be desired for large parts of the innings, the bowlers redeemed themselves at the death to restrict Scotland to a total that will give the defending champions confidence heading into the chase.

Brief Scores: Scotland 131/7 in 20 overs (Darcey Carter 72*, Sarah Bryce 25; Amelia Kerr 3-17, Sophie Devine 2-19) against New Zealand

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

As an Indian cricket fan, I've seen so many collapses like this in our own team. Scotland had it in their hands at 96/2 and then lost 5 wickets for 25 runs. Very disappointing. Still, 131 could be tricky if Carter gets early wickets. Pitch seems to have help for spinners with Kerr and Devine bowling well. Let's see how NZ chase.

James A

Scotland's batting lacks depth. Once the top order fails, there's nobody to accelerate. Carter's knock was classy but she needs support from the middle order. NZ's fielding was atrocious though - dropped catches, missed run-outs. They can't afford that against stronger teams like Australia or India. Kerr bailed them out with the ball.

Vikram M

Honestly, surprised Scotland managed even 131 after that late collapse. Carter showed great temperament - proper Test match grit in a T20! New Zealand bowled really well in the death overs. That double-wicket maiden by Amelia Kerr was brilliant. But fielding was shocking - defending champions need to tighten up if they want to retain the title.

Sarah B

Scotland's batting strategy seemed a bit defensive after the powerplay. They were 45/0 in 6 overs but then struggled to rotate strike. Carter's 72 was brilliant but she consumed a lot of deliveries in the middle overs. Maybe could have accelerated earlier. But credit to NZ bowlers for pulling things back - Kerr was unplayable at the death.

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