Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2005 Women's Cricket World Cup final

Cricket match


Cricket match

FieldValue
title2005 Women's Cricket World Cup Final
event
team1Australia
team1flagAustralia
team1score215/4
team1overs50 overs
team2India
team2flagIndia
team2score117
team2overs46 overs
detailsAustralia won by 98 runs
date10 April 2005
stadiumSuperSport Park
cityCenturion
man_of_the_matchKaren Rolton (Aus)
umpiresShaun George (SA) and Zed Ndamane (SA)
televisionSky, Foxtel, Austar,, Optus Television
previous2000
next2009

The 2005 Women's Cricket World Cup Final was a women's One Day International cricket match between Australia and India played on 10 April 2005 at the SuperSport Park in South Africa. It was the culmination of the 2005 Women's Cricket World Cup, the eighth tournament of the series. Australia (runners-up in the previous World Cup) won by 98 runs, clinching their fifth World Cup title, and their fourth on foreign soil. It was the first time that the Indian team had reached the final of a women's World Cup.

Australia won the toss, and their captain Belinda Clark opted to bat first. Her side scored 215 runs for the loss of 4 wickets (215/4) in their 50 overs. Their top scorer was Australian vice-captain Karen Rolton, who scored 107 runs batting at number three. Indian bowler Amita Sharma took two wickets for 39 runs (2/39). In their response, India failed to build a good opening partnership, as opener Jaya Sharma was dismissed for only 5 runs. India continued to score poorly and losing wickets regularly, and the last of their ten wickets fell at the end of their 46th over. Australia bowlers Shelley Nitschke and Cathryn Fitzpatrick each took two wickets. Rolton was named player of the match.

Route to the final

Main article: 2005 Women's Cricket World Cup

Group stage

The 2005 Women's World Cup was a round-robin tournament, in which each of the eight teams played all seven others and the top four progressed to the semifinals.

All of Australia' group stage matches were scheduled at Tshwane University of Technology Oval, Pretoria, except the one against West Indies. Their first match was against England, which "washed out after heavy rain lashed Pretoria". Then, Australia has five consecutive victories, against New Zealand, West Indies, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Ireland by 32 runs, 79 runs, 97 runs, eight wickets and ten wickets respectively.

access-date=8 April 2012 }}</ref>

India' group stage matches were also scheduled at Pretoria, except the one against New Zealand. Their first match was against Sri Lanka, which ended with no result. It won its next three matches, against Ireland, South Africa and England by nine wickets, four wicket and seven wickets respectively. It then faced it first loss in the tournament, facing a 16-runs loss from New Zealand.

Both the finalists faced each other in the last match of their group stage, but it was abandoned without a ball being bowled.

Semifinals

Australia played England in the first semifinal of the tournament. Australia won the toss and put England to bat. England finished on 158, with Fitzpatrick taking three wicket for 27 runs. Clark's tally of 62 runs and Sthalekar's 29 runs helped Australia to reach the required 159 in 47 overs to progress to the final. Clarke was named player of the match.

In the second semifinal India played New Zealand, which won the toss and elected to field first. The Indian openers were quickly dismissed, but Chopra scored 44 and Raj 91 not out, helping India to reach a total of 204 runs. New Zealand finished on 164, and Amita Sharma finished with three wicket for 24 runs. India won by 40 runs and progressed to the final, with Raj being the player of the match.

Buildup

Build up Before the tournament, Jenny Thompson of ESPNcricinfo identified Australia, India, England and New Zealand as the most likely winners. Australia were runners-up in the previous tournament in 2000. This was the first time that India had reached the final of a women's World Cup, but the seventh for Australia, and their sixth on foreign soil. Australia was the only team still unbeaten in the tournament. The one change in the Australian team was the inclusion of Clea Smith in place of Emma Liddell. India fielded the same side as in their semifinal win over New Zealand.

Match

Summary

Batting conditions were good, and Australia's captain Belinda Clark chose to bat first after winning the toss. The Indian bowlers started well: Clark was caught at wicket by wicket keeper Anju Jain, and in the 11th over, Keightley was caught at second slip by Dhar at second slip. Rolton batted at number three and Jones at number four, taking Australia to 50 runs in the 19th over during their 40-run third-wicket partnership. Jones was dismissed in the 25th over by David and Sthalekar came in, scoring 55 in a 139-run fourth-wicket stand with Rolton, during which Australia reached 100 runs in the 34th over. Sthalekar was caught and bowled by Dhar in the last over, after which Blackwell made 4 runs in 2 balls, giving Australia a total of 215 runs. Rolton remained not out, making 107 runs after she was dropped by Amita Sharma on 60. Goswami, Amita Sharma, Dhar and David each took one wicket for India.

India played a poor innings, losing their first wicket in the 8th over, as Jaya Sharma got run out by Sthalekar and Price. Jain, who made 29 runs, got caught by Sthalekar with an easy catch at mid-wicket. Chopra run out by Julie Hayes on ten runs. Then skipper Raj got leg before wicket by Nitschke, playing across the line. Dhar and Kala were run out in consecutive overs, at 6 and 3 runs respectively. Later Amita Sharma and Goswami made 22 and 18 runs respectively. Amita Sharma got leg before wicket by Sthalekar, and Goswami was caught by substitute Kate Blackwell on backward point. David and Khadeer made ducks. Only four Indian players scored double figures, and the team wa all out for 117 runs in 46 overs. Australia's most successful bowler was Nitschke, who took two wickets for 14 runs.

Rolton was named player of the match and player of the series.

Match details

TossAustralia elected to bat first

Scorecard

BatsmanMethod of dismissalRunsBallsStrike rate
Belinda Clark *c Jain b A Sharma193357.57
Lisa Keightleyc Dhar b Goswami51926.31
Karen Roltonnot out10712883.59
Mel Joneslbw b David174736.17
Lisa Sthalekarc & b Dhar557573.33
Alex Blackwellnot out42200.00
Cathryn Fitzpatrickdid not bat
Julia Pricedid not bat
Julie Hayesdid not bat
Shelley Nitschkedid not bat
Clea Smithdid not bat
Extras(2 leg byes, 2 wides, 4 no-balls)8
Totals(50 overs)215/4
BowlerOversMaidensRunsWicketsEconomy
Jhulan Goswami924515.00
Amita Sharma1023913.90
Rumeli Dhar603415.66
Nooshin Al Khadeer1013513.50
Neetu David1013913.90
Deepa Marathe502104.20
BatsmanMethod of dismissalRunsBallsStrike rate
Anju Jainc Sthalekar b Smith295255.76
Jaya Sharmarun out52619.23
Anjum Choprarun out103132.25
Mithali Raj *lbw b Nitschke61442.85
Rumeli Dharrun out61250.00
Hemlata Kalarun out31323.07
Amita Sharmalbw b Sthalekar225143.13
Jhulan Goswamic sub (Kate Blackwell) b Fitzpatrick183847.36
Deepa Marathenot out72528.00
Neetu Davidb Fitzpatrick070.00
Nooshin Al Khadeerb Nitschke080.00
Extras(2 byes, 3 leg byes, 5 wides, 1 no-balls)11
Totals(46 overs)117
BowlerOversMaidensRunsWicketsEconomy
Cathryn Fitzpatrick812322.87
Clea Smith1052012.00
Julie Hayes1012802.80
Shelley Nitschke9143521.55
Karen Rolton51901.80
Lisa Sthalekar411814.50

Key

    • – Captain
  • – Wicket-keeper
  • c Fielder – the batsman was dismissed by a catch by the named fielder
  • b Bowler – the bowler who gains credit for the dismissal
  • lbw – the batsman was dismissed leg before wicket
  • sub – substitute

Reaction

Both teams received enthusiastic welcomes on their return home, but neither the Australian nor the Indian press paid much attention to the match. The Indian side received 10,000 South African rand for being the runners-up.

References

References

  1. (3 April 2005). "Sky to broadcast final stages of World Cup". ESPNcricinfo.
  2. "Women's World Cup, 2004/05 - Australia Women / Records / Match results". ESPNcricinfo.
  3. (22 March 2005). "World Cup washout". ESPNcricinfo.
  4. "Cricket Records – Women's World Cup, 2004/05 – Most wickets". ESPNcricinfo.
  5. "Women's World Cup, 2004/05 - India Women / Records / Match results". ESPNcricinfo.
  6. "25th Match: Australia Women v India Women at Pretoria, Apr 3, 2005". ESPNcricinfo.
  7. Jenny Thompson. (20 March 2005). "All to play for in Pretoria".
  8. "Final: Australia Women v India Women at Centurion, Apr 10, 2005". ESPNcricinfo.
  9. "ICC Women's World Cup History". [[Yahoo! Cricket]].
  10. "1st SF: Australia Women v England Women at Potchefstroom, Apr 5, 2005". ESPNcricinfo.
  11. "2nd SF: India Women v New Zealand Women at Potchefstroom, Apr 7, 2005". ESPNcricinfo.
  12. Nagraj Gollapudi. (10 April 2005). "Indian coach hits out at 'very bad display'". ESPNcricinfo.
  13. Jenny Thompson. (10 April 2005). "Sublime Rolton guides Australia to fifth World Cup". ESPNcricinfo.
  14. Nagraj Gollapudi. (13 April 2005). "'Playing the series in India helped a lot'". ESPNcricinfo.
  15. Anand Vasu. (13 April 2005). "Women bask in the limelight". ESPNcricinfo.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2005 Women's Cricket World Cup final — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report