Key Points

Australia continued their incredible winning streak with a comprehensive victory against Pakistan in the Women's World Cup. Beth Mooney played a remarkable innings, scoring a brilliant century after her team was struggling at 76/7. The Australian bowlers then dismantled Pakistan's batting lineup, securing a dominant 107-run win. This performance further solidified Australia's reputation as the tournament's most formidable team.

Key Points: Beth Mooney's Century Leads Australia to 17th World Cup Win

  • Beth Mooney's century anchored Australia's recovery from 76/7
  • Record 106-run ninth-wicket partnership with Alana King
  • Kim Garth and Megan Schutt decimated Pakistan's top order
  • Australia maintains unbeaten 17-match winning streak
2 min read

Women's World Cup: Mooney's ton, fine bowling help Australia win 17th match against Pakistan

Australia crushes Pakistan by 107 runs with Beth Mooney's heroic 109 and dominant bowling performance in ICC Women's World Cup

"A remarkable rescue act in Women's World Cup history - Match Commentator"

Colombo, Oct 8

Beth Mooney's brilliant century and a ruthless display by Australia's pace attack helped the defending champions crush Pakistan by 107 runs in their ICC Women's World Cup 2025 clash at the R. Premadasa Stadium here on Wednesday.

The emphatic win not only extended Australia's unbeaten record to 17-0 but also lifted them to the top of the points table with two wins and one no result from three matches.

After being reduced to 76/7, Mooney produced one of the finest rescue acts in Women's World Cup history, scoring a composed 109 off 114 balls to anchor Australia's recovery. She found an inspired ally in Alana King, whose unbeaten 51 off 49 balls guided Australia to 221/9, a total that looked improbable when Pakistan's spinners had the upper hand.

The Mooney-King pair added 106 runs for the ninth wicket, setting a new record for the highest ninth-wicket partnership in Women's ODIs. King's innings was also the highest individual score by a batter at number 10 or below in Women's ODIs.

Mooney's knock, her first century in a World Cup match, ensured Australia posted their third-lowest innings total in a Women's ODI World Cup, featuring a centurion -- 221/9 (after 211/3 vs New Zealand, 1988 and 215/4 vs India, 2005).

Pakistan's bowlers had earlier dominated through their spin trio, with Nashra Sandhu (3/37), Rameen Shamim (2/29), and Sadia Iqbal (1/32) exploiting the conditions superbly. But the missed chances to close out the innings cost them dearly.

Chasing 222, Pakistan's top order crumbled under the new-ball pressure applied by Kim Garth (3-14) and Megan Schutt (2-25). The pair reduced Pakistan to 6/42 inside the powerplay, effectively sealing the contest.

Only Sidra Ameen (35) offered any resistance, while Rameen Shamim's 15 was the only other double-digit score. The middle and lower order were mopped up by Annabel Sutherland (2/15), Ashleigh Gardner (1-17), Georgia Wareham (1-15), and Alana King (1-19) as Pakistan were bowled out for 114 in 36.3 overs.

For Pakistan, the late partnership between Shamim and Sandhu delayed the inevitable, but Australia's depth and discipline proved too strong once again.

Brief scores:

Australia 221/9 in 50 overs (Beth Mooney 109, Alana King 51; Nashra Sandhu 3-37, Rameen Shamim 2-29) beat Pakistan 114 all out in 36.3 overs (Sidra Ameen 35, Rameen Shamim 15; Kim Garth 3-14, Annabel Sutherland 2-15) by 107 runs.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Pakistan had them on the ropes at 76/7 but couldn't finish the job. That ninth-wicket partnership of 106 runs is unbelievable! King's 51 at number 10 shows Australia's incredible batting depth.
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Sarah B
As a cricket fan from India, I must say this Australian team is just too good. 17-0 unbeaten record is insane! But honestly, I wish our women's team could develop this kind of killer instinct. We have the talent but need that finishing ability.
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Ananya R
Pakistan's spinners bowled so well initially, but their fielding and catching must have let them down. You can't drop chances against teams like Australia. Still, good to see women's cricket getting competitive! 💪
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Michael C
Mooney's century when the team was collapsing shows real character. This is why Australia dominates world cricket - they have players who step up when it matters most. Respect!
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Kavya N
While Australia's performance was brilliant, I feel Pakistan needs to work on their batting temperament. 6/42 in powerplay is just not acceptable at this level. They have good bowlers but batting needs serious improvement.

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