South Africa's World Cup Heartbreak: Captain Vows to Forget Defeat Amid Semifinal Hopes

South Africa suffered a heavy defeat to Australia in their final league match of the Women's ODI World Cup. Captain Laura Wolvaardt acknowledged the batting collapse but emphasized focusing on the team's overall tournament performance. Despite the disappointing loss, she remains optimistic about their semifinal chances against England. The Proteas are determined to put this defeat behind them and carry forward the positive momentum.

Key Points: Laura Wolvaardt on South Africa's Australia Defeat in Women's World Cup

  • Alana King's historic 7-18 spell dismantled South Africa for just 97 runs
  • Australia secured top spot with comfortable seven-wicket victory in Indore
  • South Africa extends losing streak to nine consecutive World Cup losses against Australia
  • Captain Wolvaardt emphasizes learning from mistakes while moving forward quickly
3 min read

Women's World Cup: Will forget about today and focus on all the good we've been doing, says SA captain Wolvaardt on defeat to Australia

South Africa captain Laura Wolvaardt reflects on heavy defeat to Australia, vows to focus on positives ahead of Women's ODI World Cup semifinal against England.

"We'll try to forget about today and just focus on all the good we've been doing - Laura Wolvaardt"

Indore, Oct 24

After a heavy defeat to Australia in their final league match of the Women’s ODI World Cup, South Africa captain Laura Wolvaardt said the team would focus on the positives and quickly move on as they prepare for the semifinals despite suffering an embarrassing defeat to Australia in Indore on Saturday.

Leg-spinner Alana King’s historic 7-18 rolled over South Africa for 97 in 24 overs. Beth Mooney’s 42 and Georgia Voll’s 38 not out guided Australia to a seven-wicket win to seal the top spot in the points table. Alana was named Player of the Match for her magical spell at Holkar Cricket Stadium in Indore.

South Africa continued their losing streak against Australia in the World Cup as it was their ninth successive loss against the defending champions in the mega tournament.

“Yeah, definitely not the way we would have liked to end the group stages. We didn’t have enough runs with the bat. But I think we’ve done a lot of good things throughout this tournament, so we’ll just focus on that heading into the semifinal. Yeah, I didn’t think it was the worst thing in the world (having to bat first). We know it’s something we would have liked to practice again - obviously, the last time we did it didn’t go so well. But yeah, I thought it was a decent wicket to bat on. I thought King bowled excellently; we’d spoken about facing her quite a lot, but that didn’t quite go to plan. She bowled really well,” said Wolvaardt in the post-match presentation.

It wasn’t a bad start for South Africa as Wolvaardt and Tazmin Brits stitched a 32-run opening partnership before Alana wreaked havoc in the match. Proteas captain played a 26-ball 31 knock studded with seven fours and was looking confident in the middle.

“Yeah, it’s nice. I feel like I’m timing it well. So, yeah, I’ll try to forget about today a little bit and just focus on all the good we’ve been doing. Yeah, it’s very nice. It’s been a real team effort this tournament. It’s been great to see different players putting their hands up, and the bowlers too. Unfortunately, no one was able to do that tonight, really, but hopefully in the semifinal one or two players can step up again,” she said.

“Yeah, after that game it was about putting it behind us as quickly as we could, while still learning from what we did wrong - things like getting beaten on the inside edge and so on. But at the same time, it was important to forget about it and move forward. I think it’ll be a similar thing tomorrow: analyse what we could’ve done better tonight, then move straight ahead to that semi-final. Maybe tonight’s loss is just what we need to wake ourselves up a bit,” Wolvaardt said.

On facing England in the semifinal, against whom they collapsed for 69 in their tournament opener. The opening batter looked confident to take the challenge upfront and get over the line this time around to seal a spot in the final. “Not really - you can’t control that sort of thing. We’re happy to play England. We’re kind of used to meeting them in semi-finals at World Cups, so hopefully this time we can come out on top.”

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
Wolvaardt's positive mindset is commendable, but South Africa really need to address their batting collapses. 97 all out in a World Cup match is concerning, especially before semis. Hope they bounce back stronger!
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Sarah B
Watching this match in Indore must have been amazing! The Holkar Stadium always produces exciting cricket. Great to see women's cricket getting such good venues and crowds in India 🇮🇳
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Arjun K
Ninth consecutive loss against Australia in World Cups! That's some mental block South Africa need to overcome. But credit to Wolvaardt for staying positive - that's what champions are made of 💪
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Meera T
As a cricket lover from Mumbai, I'm really enjoying this World Cup! The quality of women's cricket has improved so much. Hope South Africa can give England a tough fight in the semis 🤞
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David E
Respect to Wolvaardt for her honest assessment. Sometimes a wake-up call before knockouts can actually help a team. Looking forward to an exciting semifinal between SA and England!

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