Key Points

New Zealand finally got their first win of the Women's World Cup after two opening losses. Sophie Devine and Brooke Halliday staged a brilliant recovery with a 112-run partnership that lifted the team to 227. Bangladesh never found their footing in the chase, collapsing to 127 all out against disciplined bowling. The comprehensive 100-run victory gives New Zealand crucial momentum in the tournament.

Key Points: New Zealand Women Register First World Cup Win vs Bangladesh

  • Sophie Devine and Brooke Halliday rescued New Zealand with crucial 112-run partnership
  • Bangladesh collapsed to 127 all out after struggling against movement
  • Jess Kerr took 3/21 while Rosemary Mair claimed 2/20 in dominant bowling display
  • New Zealand recovered from 38/3 to post competitive 227/9 total
3 min read

Women's World Cup: New Zealand registers first win in tournament with 100-run drubbing of Bangladesh

Sophie Devine and Brooke Halliday's 112-run partnership powers New Zealand to 100-run victory over Bangladesh in Women's World Cup clash in Guwahati.

"Devine and Halliday combined at the crease, remained circumspect, avoided dealing with risk and went for 62 balls without a boundary."

Guwahati, October 10

New Zealand finally opened their victory account at the ongoing Women's World Cup after orchestrating a thumping 100-run win over Bangladesh at Barsapara Cricket Stadium in Guwahati on Friday.

New Zealand lost their opening two fixtures against defending champions Australia and South Africa.

Sophie Devine pulled off a rescue act for the third successive time with Brooke Halliday to bail New Zealand out after Bangladesh had them surrounded in a corner. Their 112-run partnership lifted New Zealand to a competitive 227-run total.

In reply, Bangladesh struggled to keep the momentum on their side from the outset. Rosemary Mair and Jess Kerr extracted substantial movement to leave Bangladesh jolted. Bangladesh went into their shell and kept losing wickets at regular intervals as their pursuit started to fall apart.

A couple of resistance acts towards the end from Fahima Khatun (34), Nahida Akter (17) and Rabeya Khan (25) delayed the inevitable but failed to prevent it. Bangladesh was bundled out on 127 in 39.5 overs and surrendered a 100-run defeat. Mair scalped two wickets for 20 runs while Kerr returned with figures of 3/21.

In the first innings, after winning the toss and opting to bat, New Zealand felt the pressure after slumping to 38/3 in the 11th over. Leg-spinner Rabeya Khan made the batters dance to her tunes with drift and sharp turn deliveries. Georgia Plimmer (4) went past one of her deliveries and got stumped. Amelia Kerr (1) was outfoxed by the one that gripped the surface and beat the outside edge to rattle the timber.

In the space of the two dismissals, former captain Suzie Bates was run out after a terrible mix-up with Kerr and saw her promising 29 off 33 meet a bitter end. Devine and Halliday combined at the crease, remained circumspect, avoided dealing with risk and went for 62 balls without a boundary.

After getting a grasp of the surface, the duo switched gears and went all guns blazing. Out of the two, Halliday was more adventurous, sweeping the Bangladesh spinners to rob them of their rhythm. Devine, known for her brute force, took the game deep, looking to free herself from the shackles in death.

In the 39th over, Bangladesh found a moment of reprieve when Halliday (69 off 104) top-edged her slog sweep to Fahima Khatun, marking the end of the 112-run partnership. Devine and Maddy Green continued to put runs on the board until Devine's attempted a shot across the line ended her crusade on 63.

Reduced to 179/5 with still six overs left to play, Isabella Gaze and Lea Tahuhu chipped in with their influential cameos. They muscled crucial blows towards the end to power New Zealand to 227/9.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As an Indian cricket fan, it's heartening to see Guwahati hosting World Cup matches. The Barsapara stadium looked fantastic on TV! Bangladesh needs to work on their batting - collapsing for 127 after New Zealand posted 227 shows the gap in quality.
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Sarah B
While the win is important for NZ, I feel the coverage could be better. Women's cricket deserves prime time slots and better commentary teams. The match timing wasn't ideal for working professionals in India to watch live.
A
Arjun K
Halliday's 69 was a game-changer! The way she handled Bangladesh's spinners reminded me of how our Indian women's team plays spin. Hope Bangladesh learns from this and comes back stronger. The Asian teams need to support each other! 🙏
M
Michael C
Jess Kerr's bowling figures of 3/21 were impressive! The movement she extracted troubled the Bangladeshi batters throughout. Good to see New Zealand bouncing back after two losses. The tournament is getting interesting now!
N
Nisha Z
Bangladesh showed some fight towards the end with Fahima Khatun's 34, but the top order collapse was too much to recover from. Need better planning and execution in the powerplay overs. Still proud of our neighboring team's efforts! 💪

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