
Jemimah Rodrigues played the innings of her life, slamming a century for the ages as India pulled off a record chase to storm into the Women’s World Cup final after a five-wicket victory over defending champions Australia in Navi Mumbai on Thursday.
Chasing a record target of 339, Rodrigues anchored the innings brilliantly with an unbeaten 127 off 134 balls, while skipper Harmanpreet Kaur scored a crucial 89 off 88 deliveries.
Deepti Sharma (24) and Richa Ghosh (26) also chipped in with handy contributions as India overhauled the target with nine balls to spare.
India will face South Africa in the final.
Earlier, Phoebe Litchfield’s scintillating 119 and half-centuries from Ellyse Perry (77) and Ashleigh Gardner (63) helped Australia set India a 339-run target.
If not for a tidy third spell of 3-0-9-2, in which Shree Charani (2/49) dismissed Beth Mooney (24) and an in-form Annabel Sutherland (3), Australia might have finished with far more than they managed.
While the left-arm spinner displayed great control to help India pull things back in control, the other Indian bowlers struggled on a track which offered no assistance and several elementary errors in the fielding made matters worse for the hosts
In fact, Charani’s spell came amid a slowdown for Australia, who slipped from 220 for 2 to 265 for 6 at one stage, but Gardner’s quickfire 63 off 45 balls, featuring four sixes and as many fours, powered them past 300.
Australia were bowled out for 338 with one ball left in their innings.
It all began with India captain Harmanpreet Kaur spilling a regulation catch in the third over to give Alyssa Healy a lifeline, but the Australia captain, coming back into the playing eleven, fell cheaply in the sixth over.
Undeterred from an early blow, Litchfield’s third ODI ton which came off a mere 77 balls, set the platform for Australia to launch themselves to a huge total.
The 22-year-old came into this knockout game with only a fifty in her account so far in the competition, but batted as if she was always in a purple patch.
There wasn’t an area which Litchfield didn’t explore for runs and there was hardly a stroke she did not execute to perfection.
A fine exponent of the reverse-sweep, Litchfield thought she had played one straight to Amanjot Kaur off Charani on the final ball of the 16th over when she was on 62 and walked back, only to be recalled by the umpires for the ball had hit the turf before flying into the hands of the fielder at short third man.
Litchfield’s high quality knock included 17 fours and three sixes. Her lofted hits over the infield in the cover region were as spectacular as the two sixes she hit down the ground, one of which was hit on the second ball of the 27th over off Deepti Sharma.
Litchfield put on 155 for the second wicket before missing a lap shot off Amanjot with Perry, who made a valuable 77 off 88 balls (6x4s, 2x6s).
An early howler notwithstanding, Gaud removed Healy when the batter played one onto her middle stump in the sixth over right before a short rain intervention.
Despite Healy’s fall early on, India needed to be disciplined in the field as well as with the ball. But Gaud (158) was inconsistent with her lines, Renuka could not find the familiar in-swing while India’s highest wicket-taker Deepti (2/73) had to contend with two late wickets.










