Women's Ashes: Australia retain Ashes as England subside in Canberra

Australia celebrate Tammy Beaumont wicketImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Australia have won three of the last four Ashes series, drawing the other

Women's Ashes, First one-day international, Manuka Oval

Australia 205-9 (50 overs) Mooney 73 (91); Cross 3-33, Brunt 3-40

England 178 all out (45 overs) Sciver 45 (66), Brown 4-34

Australia win by 27 runs and retain Ashes

Australia retained the Women's Ashes as England subsided to a 27-run defeat in the first one-day international in Canberra.

Chasing a below-par 206, the tourists collapsed in a disappointing batting performance to be bowled out for 178 in 45 overs.

They were 10-2 when captain Heather Knight was out lbw for a first-ball duck and, hurt by regular dismissals, never really took control of their chase.

Amy Jones was controversially given out caught off a waist-high full toss for 16 and the tourists slipped further to 103-6 when Nat Sciver was caught and bowled by 18-year-old seamer Darcie Brown for 45.

Katherine Brunt hit 32 not out, putting on 24 with number 11 Kate Cross to give England hope of an unlikely win, but Cross, after being dropped on seven, was caught and bowled by Jess Jonassen for 17 to confirm defeat.

Australia were earlier rescued by Beth Mooney's 73 as they scraped to 205-9 from their 50 overs.

Amid an excellent England performance in the field, one ultimately wasted by the batting, Mooney led a recovery from 67-4 after three wickets fell for seven runs, and added a crucial eighth-wicket stand of 52 from 152-7 with Alana King.

As holders, Australia only had to draw the series to retain the Ashes and now lead 8-4 in the multi-format Ashes series with two ODIs to play.

England, who could still draw the series with two points available for an ODI win, have now gone four series since they last won the Ashes in 2014.

Australia victorious as batting costs England

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Jonassen claimed the match-winning wicket by having Kate Cross caught and bowled

This victory seals a series result the vast majority predicted before it began.

Frustratingly, though, England were well-placed at the halfway stage after their bowling efforts but again, as it did in Sunday's dramatic Test finale, the batting cost Knight's side.

They effectively had to win all three ODIs to take the series but when Knight was pinned missing a straight ball by Brown, a ball after opener Tammy Beaumont had edged to slip for three, England were always in trouble.

The run-rate was never an issue but the regular loss of wickets was.

Opener Lauren Winfield-Hill picked out deep mid-wicket off Megan Schutt while Jones was caught in similarly disappointing fashion at deep square leg - albeit off a delivery that looked as though it should have been called as a no-ball.

Lower-order runs kept England in it - Danni Wyatt made 20 at number seven before being bowled by Schutt, but ultimately the lack of a meaningful top-order partnership cost them.

Cross overturned an lbw decision on review and was put down in poor fashion by Perry before the result, closer in scoreline than reality, was confirmed.

England's bowling wasted as Mooney and Brown impress

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Seamer Brown was playing in only her fourth one-day international

Cross, who bowled well in the Test only for dropped catches to see her go wicketless, had earlier been the standout bowler in a display in the field that included a fine stumping by Jones, a run-out and two good catches.

A superb Cross delivery cut back significantly off the pitch to bowl Australia captain Meg Lanning through the gate for 28, ending a promising-second-wicket partnership of 47 with Alyssa Healy, and her probing lengths also dragged Healy out of her ground as she was brilliantly stumped by Jones standing up to the stumps.

In between those wickets, Ellyse Perry chipped back to Sophie Ecclestone for a first-ball duck at which stage England were well on top.

But what proved the most crucial was the innings of Mooney, the left-hander who is still playing with metal plates in her jaw after fracturing the bone in the nets a little over two weeks ago.

Like England, Australia lost regular wickets but she hung in - becoming increasingly aggressive with shots down the ground and a swept six over mid-wicket before being caught at mid-off off the last ball of the innings.

When it came to defending their total it was not the experienced Perry who tormented England but teenager Brown who continues to impress.

She added the wicket of Ecclestone, lbw for three, to the big wickets of Beaumont, Knight and Sciver to finish with 4-34.

Her emergence is a worry for England's hopes in the World Cup but also for many Ashes series to come, it seems.

'We're not far away' - reaction

England captain Heather Knight on Test Match Special: "The way we bowled was outstanding, we were unlucky not to take more wickets.

"We weren't with the bat, they bowled pretty well but we just needed that one big partnership. In the three games we've played we have not had a complete performance with bat and ball.

"We're really not far away from Australia."

Former England spinner Alex Hartley: "England are not far behind. In 2019 they were beaten easily and only won the final T20. They seemed overawed playing Australia. They've not been here."

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