• Afghanistan beat Zimbabwe 2-1 in T20I series and 2-0 in ODI series    • New Zealand beat England by 423 runs in the third and final Test to win the series 2-1    • South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 109 runs in second Test to win two-Test series 2-0    • England beat New Zealand by eight wickets in first Test at Christchurch    • South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 233 runs in first Test at Durban    • Sri Lanka bowled out for 42 by South Africa in Durban, their lowest total in Test cricket    • Afghanistan beat Bangladesh in third ODI to clinch series 2-1    • New Zealand women beat South Africa women to lift ICC T20 World Cup title    • New Zealand, Australia make it to T20 World Cup semi-finals from Group A    • England beat Pakistan by innings and 47 runs in first Test    


Story

Laura, Sune fight back but India Women beat Proteas

02 Jul, 2024

India Women, riding on centuries from Shafali Verma, Smriti Mandhana and a 10-wicket haul from Sneh Rana win the one-off Test against South Africa in Chennai

India secured a 10-wicket triumph in the one-off Test against the South Africa Women after the visitors battled to take the match into the final session of the last day in scorching hot and humid conditions at the M.A Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on Monday.

Laura Wolvaardt starred with the bat for South Africa in the second innings, scoring her maiden century in red-ball cricket with 122 off 314 deliveries (16x4s). She was supported by Suné Luus (109 off 203 balls; 18x4s) and a resilient 185-ball 61 from Nadine de Klerk, helping the away side post 373 all out, in addition to their first innings score of 266.

This was in response to India’s opening effort of 603/6 declared, inspired by Shafali Verma’s 205 off 197 balls (23x4s, 8x6s) and Smriti Mandhana’s 161-ball 149 (27x4s, 1x6). The hosts then sealed the win by 10 wickets, chasing 37 runs for victory.

India spinner Sneh Rana was given the Player of the Match award for her career-best return in a Test match of 10/188.

Following a hard-fought penultimate day on Sunday, the Proteas Women resumed play on Day 4 at 232/2, trailing by 105 runs with overnight batters Marizanne Kapp and Laura at the crease, determined to bat as long as possible to secure a result.

That plan was soon derailed by the opposition after the pair brought up their half-century stand for the third wicket. Deepti Sharma (2/95) trapped Marizanne LBW for 31, which was quickly followed by the departure of Delmi Tucker (0) off the bowling of Rana.

Although Laura celebrated her first-ever Test hundred early in the day, becoming only the third player to score centuries across all three formats in women’s cricket, the South Africa captain became the third wicket to fall on the final day at the hands of Rajeshwari Gayakwad (2/55), leaving the Proteas Women at 281/5 and still 56 runs behind.

Following the skipper’s exit, Nadine de Klerk showcased her fighting spirit at the crease, partnering with the lower order. Beginning with Sinalo Jafta (15), they took South Africa into the lunch break on 302/5 before Sinalo retired hurt due to cramps.

Debutant Annerie Dercksen (5) then joined Nadine at the crease at the start of the second session before being sent back to the dugout by Pooja Vastrakar (1/35). With South Africa on 310/6 and just 27 runs short of making India bat again, Nadine found a willing partner in Tumi Sekhukhune (6). The duo combined for a laborious stand for the ninth wicket worth 14 runs in 13.5 overs before Tumi was run out after a mix-up with Nadine.

Sinalo returned after receiving treatment, but her stint was cut short again, this time through an edge to slip, becoming Sneh’s 10th scalp of the match.

With the visitors on the verge of taking the lead for the first time, Nadine combined well with Masabata Klaas (2) after tea to propel South Africa in front in the match with a 23-run partnership before Masabata was clean bowled by Shafali (1/7). A flurry of late runs from Nadine, largely through boundaries, saw the all-rounder celebrate a maiden Test half-century before becoming the last wicket to fall. South Africa concluded their innings on 373 all out after 154.4 overs.

Needing just 37 runs to clinch the win, Indian openers Shafali (24 not out) and Shubha Satheesh (13 not out ) expertly got their team over the line within 9.2 overs, securing a hard-fought 10-wicket victory and lifting the tour’s Test trophy.

 

India Women cricket team, South Africa Women