Nat Sciver-Brunt shines as England recover to sweep aside Sri Lanka

3 days ago 10

A patient hundred from captain Nat Sciver-Brunt saved England from embarrassment against Sri Lanka in Colombo, enabling them to recover from 168 for six and win by 89 runs.

Sciver-Brunt was dropped on three by Udeshika Prabodhani at midwicket and went on to score a run-a-ball 117, before being caught at long-on off the penultimate ball of the innings. Tammy Beaumont’s 32 was the next highest contribution.

Sciver-Brunt’s rescue effort enabled England to regain their spot at the top of the World Cup table, and means she has now surpassed coach Charlotte Edwards’s record for most hundreds scored in an 50-over World Cup: this was her fifth. It is also the first since her wife Katherine Sciver-Brunt gave birth to their son, Theo, back in March, and featured the memorable sight of the England captain lofting a six over deep extra cover to bring up the milestone, then cradling her bat like a baby while looking up to Katherine and Theo in the stands in celebration.

Sri Lanka started positively with the bat, reaching 95 for one after 20 overs, but an extraordinary 10-over spell from Sophie Ecclestone, which included three maidens, put a wrecking ball through their chase. Hasini Perera and Harshitha Samarawickrama were caught trying to hit out, while Kavisha Dilhari was bowled by Ecclestone attempting the slog sweep.

But the biggie came in the 29th over, when captain Chamari Athapaththu – returning to the middle after being stretchered off in the sixth over with cramp – was deceived by Ecclestone’s flight and bowled through the gate.

Sciver-Brunt followed up her match-defining innings with a couple of scalps of her own, while Charlie Dean tossed up a beauty to Vishmi Gunaratne and held onto an excellent diving catch at midwicket to dismiss Dewmi Vihanga, as Sri Lanka collapsed to 164 all out in 45.4 overs.

Sophie Ecclestone celebrates the wicket of Hasini Perera
Sophie Ecclestone celebrates the wicket of Hasini Perera, one of four the England bowler picked up. Photograph: Eranga Jayawardena/AP

On the eve of this match England had talked about having to “earn runs” in the subcontinent, but – Sciver-Brunt aside – their batters failed to display the patience required in tropical Sri Lankan conditions. First, Tammy Beaumont stitched up Amy Jones by haring off for a non-existent single after hitting the ball straight to Dilhari at cover, leaving Jones short of her ground running to the striker’s end. Then left-arm spinner Inoka Ranaweera took three for 33, including removing Emma Lamb and Alice Capsey in the space of four balls in the 35th over.

The 39-year-old Ranaweera, now into her 13th year of international cricket, has already proven that age really is just a number this tournament, finishing with four wickets against India – including three in the same over. Here, she was just as dangerous against England’s right-handers, getting plenty of turn and dip to bowl Lamb behind her legs, and having Capsey stumped after sliding her back foot just out of the crease.

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Had Sri Lanka held on to that early chance against Sciver-Brunt, the match might have unfolded very differently: as so often, the England captain played a lone hand, in an innings which was without extravagance until its very final stages. She ground out runs – 52 of her 117 came in singles – but came alive in the final four overs of the England innings, striking six boundaries and enabling England to add 44 more to their total.

Fortunately, Ecclestone’s efforts meant Sciver-Brunt was only required to send down five overs. England remain in Colombo until their next match on Wednesday against Pakistan, and may need another mammoth effort from Sciver-Brunt in what are likely to be very similar conditions.

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