Aussie star unaware of own hat-trick as batting duo blow away India

Aussie star unaware of own hat-trick as batting duo blow away India
By Glenn Moore

An awesome display of hitting by Ash Gardner and Grace Harris secured Australia a 4-1 series win in their Twenty20 international series in India.

The duo smashed 129 in 10.2 overs in an unbeaten fifth-wicket partnership in Mumbai, providing the platform for an impressive 54-run win. Their exploits even overshadowed a hat-trick by Heather Graham, though that was also because six overs were bowled between her second and third dismissals.

Australia, put into bat, racked up 4-196 off their 20 overs. In reply, India could muster only 142, being all out off the final ball.

“I loved watching Ash and Grace today. We pride ourselves on fearless cricket, like to take the game on and stay ahead,” Australia’s stand-in captain Tahlia McGrath said.

As in the fourth match, Gardner was the all-round star. She claimed 2-20 and took two catches.

“I think it’s easy batting with someone like Grace, who has the power game to back up the chat,” Gardner said. “I’m just enjoying my cricket more than anything else, reaping the benefits on the field.”

Grace Harris smashed 64 off 35 balls in Mumbai.Credit:Getty

The NSW star cracked 66 off 32 balls with 11 fours and a six. Queenslander Harris bludgeoned 64 off 35 with six fours and fours sixes, her highest T20i score.

The onslaught put the game beyond India. After losing world-ranked No.3 batter Smriti Mandhana for four in the first over, wickets tumbled regularly. Harleen Deol (24 off 16 balls) got going but was run out by McGrath.

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Belated resistance came from Deepti Sharma, who smacked 53 off 34 balls before being last out, fittingly caught on the ropes by Gardner off Graham.

That gave Graham the remarkable figures of four wickets for eight runs off two overs, including a hat-trick taken off the last two balls of the 12th over and the first of the 19th.

Heather Graham celebrates the wicket of Renuka Singh.Credit:Getty

“Not sure how that [hat-trick] happened,” she said. “I really didn’t realise it was the hat-trick ball.”

Australia captain Alyssa Healy strained her calf while batting in the fourth match, so McGrath took the reins, Beth Mooney the gloves, and Phoebe Litchfield stepped in as opener. Australia also made a change to their bowling attack, with Kim Garth replacing Megan Schutt.

Litchfield, playing in her second international but making her batting debut, began well, straight-driving her second ball to the boundary.

However, off her ninth ball she was stumped for 11 as she sought to attack Sharma. That left Australia 2-17 midway through the third over as Mooney was already back in the hutch after chopping on the fourth ball for two.

By the end of the fifth over, with Australia 2-24, McGrath knew it was time to lead by example. Hitting sixes over extra cover and long-on, the No.1 women’s T20 batter took 17 off the sixth over, plus a wide.

However, with McGrath stumped for a run-a-ball 26, and the in-form Ellyse Perry caught at long-on for 18 off 14, Australia reached the mid-point at 4-72.

Gardner and Harris steadied matters, then cut loose with Gardner hitting four successive fours and Harris three sixes in seven balls. They kept that pace up, hitting at least two boundaries off each of the last eight overs as India wilted to the extent two more sets of four overthrows were conceded.

Between them, they had crushed India’s spirit and set Australia on course for victory.

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