England lost their first match of the Women's World Cup as they suffered a six-wicket defeat by the formidable defending champions Australia in Indore.Australia suffered a top-order wobble, falling to 24-3 and 68-4, only for a flawless partnership of 180 between Annabel Sutherland and Ash Gardner to lead them to victory with 9.3 overs to spare.Sutherland, who also took three wickets in England's 244-9, finished with 98 and Gardner made a sensational 104 from 73 balls as Australia's astonishing batting depth came to the fore again.England had their moments, notably the positive start from openers Tammy Beaumont and Amy Jones as they punished an uncharacteristically sloppy start from the Australian bowlers, adding 55 in eight overs.But Jones' dismissal, bowled by a Sutherland beauty, put the brakes on.Beaumont found much-needed form as she top scored with 78 but the middle order came to a standstill that was instigated by leg-spinner Alana King, who took 1-20 in 10 overs.England's middle-order glue in Heather Knight and Nat Sciver-Brunt only managed 20 and seven respectively, Sophia Dunkley stuttered to 22 from 48 balls and Emma Lamb's struggles at six continued with another single-figure score.Charlie Dean again rescued England somewhat with the bat, adding a valuable stand of 61 from 52 balls with Alice Capsey, who made an entertaining 38, but Australia's superstar all-rounders proved that the total was still significantly below par when faced with such a stellar batting line-up.The pair started cautiously in rebuilding the innings before racing through the gears to punish an England bowling attack that had no answers, neither offering a chance in a masterclass of one-day batting.There was not much on the line, given the fact that both teams had already qualified for the semi-finals, but it was another reminder to the rest of the world about what will be required to dethrone the juggernaut.Australia have had a few batting wobbles throughout the tournament so far, notably with top-order slumps against New Zealand and Pakistan, but what makes them so admirable is that someone will always step up when others fail.Despite her bowling brilliance, Sutherland's previous returns in the tournament with the bat were five, one and nought but here, she was blessed with time and showed extraordinary composure.England had a dream start, with Lauren Bell bowling Phoebe Litchfield with a stunner in the first over followed by Georgia Voll swiping across the line to Linsey Smith, before Ellyse Perry chipped back to the same bowler for 13.Firstly with the left-handed Beth Mooney, Sutherland steadied the ship by mostly dealing in accumulating singles, before the former was fantastically caught by Sciver-Brunt at mid-wicket off Sophie Ecclestone to shift momentum back to England.From there, England were not given a sniff. Sutherland took on the responsibility with a patient fifty from 66 balls, and found the perfect companion in Gardner's counter-attack.England's heads dropped in the face of such class as they went searching for wickets which started to leak runs at a canter. Gardner's second century of the tournament came from 69 balls, after it became a race between the two all-rounders for who could get there first.Having reached the milestone, Gardner tried to block out a few overs to give Sutherland the opportunity, but as she could not get the boundary required, Gardner thumped the winning runs off Ecclestone with her 16th four.It was the much-anticipated Ashes reunion after the 16-0 thrashing England suffered at the beginning of the year, but on this occasion England were blessed with decent form behind them, having been previously unbeaten and boosted by a big win against India in their previous outing.The early signs were promising, of an England side that might have put the scarring behind them and were prepared to take the attack to the world's best.Megan Schutt and Kim Garth were wayward, bowling very full and searching for swing that was not on offer, and Beaumont and Jones capitalised by finding the boundary with ease square of the ground.Both openers have a half-century to their name in consecutive matches after a tricky start to the tournament, a welcome one here for Beaumont as she dealt in boundaries, facing 39 dots in her 59-ball fifty.The game was turned on its head by the remarkable Sutherland, now the tournament's leading wicket-taker, who took out Jones' off stump for 18 and they turned the screw.From there, England's Ashes nemesis King was unplayable once more. There were 41 dot balls in her 10-over spell and she found an incredible 4.7 degrees of spin but England were very passive against her, unable to find ways of rotating the strike and put the pressure back on.Capsey and Dean were proactive, adding 76 in the final 10 overs as Australia lost their discipline a little, but it was the passage of play between overs 21-30 which cost England, where they only added 26 runs.In contrast, Australia added 77 in the same phase, and there lies the gulf between them.
Click here to read article