Summary

  • India beat England by 13 runs to claim 2-1 series victory

  • Win follows 3-2 success in T20 series

  • England bowled out for 305 off penultimate ball in pursuit of record 319 chase

  • Captain Harmanpreet hits brilliant 102 off 84 balls as India post 318-5

  • Rodrigues 50, Deol & Mandhana both make 45

  • Listen to BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra reaction at top of page

  1. Postpublished at 19:51 British Summer Time 22 July

    Katherine Sciver-Brunt
    Ex-England bowler on BBC Test Match Special

    That's a great shot form Charlie Dean because the bowler did notice a change in movement. Very, very needed boundary.

  2. Eng 238-5published at 42 overs

    Need 81 from 48 balls

    Charlie Dean reverse sweeps the final ball of Shree Charani's over to the boundary.

    Some hope for England but they need more than 10 runs per over to win this now.

  3. India reviewpublished at 41.5 overs

    Eng 232-5

    UltraEdge shows no edge at all.

    India lose the review - they have none left.

  4. Postpublished at 19:48 British Summer Time 22 July

    Katherine Sciver-Brunt
    Ex-England bowler on BBC Test Match Special

    It's almost like Harmanpreet Kaur was waiting till the last second to make it dramatic.

  5. India reviewpublished at 41.5 overs

    Eng 232-5

    No boundary from this over by Shree Charani so far.

    And Richa Ghosh thinks Alice Davidson-Richards has nicked one off the penultimate delivery.

    Harmanpreet Kaur has decided to review this one.

  6. Postpublished at 19:46 British Summer Time 22 July

    Looking back now, was this the turning point of this contest?

    Media caption,

    'Oh no!' - Sciver-Brunt out for 98 after gloving ball to wicketkeeper

  7. How's stat?!published at 19:45 British Summer Time 22 July

    Rufus Bullough
    CricViz analyst

    If England were to chase down the 91 runs needed off 10 overs, it would be the second most runs ever successfully chased down in the final 60 deliveries of a women's ODI.

    The most ever achieved was by South Africa against England in 2016, when they scored 92 runs from in the final 10 overs to achieve victory.

  8. Postpublished at 19:45 British Summer Time 22 July

    Katherine Sciver-Brunt
    Ex-England bowler on BBC Test Match Special

    I want these two to be aggressive. There's no point in them just poking it about. If they do get out, there's still some big hitters to come.

  9. Eng 229-5published at 41 overs

    Need 90 from 54 balls

    Just when you thought India were starting to feel the pressure, they strike.

    Charlie Dean is at the crease now and it's not looking good for England now.

  10. Postpublished at 19:43 British Summer Time 22 July

    Katherine Sciver-Brunt
    Ex-England bowler on BBC Test Match Special

    We've seen this before from Sophie Dunkley, it's something you do at younger age cricket. She's middled it so automatically thinks that she can run. It's dangerous, the more it keeps happening, the harder the situation gets.

    It's a shame because she came out and was hitting it freely, with confidence

  11. Postpublished at 19:41 British Summer Time 22 July

    Prakash Wakankar
    BBC Test Match Special commentator

    That's the last thing that England wanted. What a mix up.

  12. wicket

    WICKETpublished at 40.2 overs

    Dunkley run out (Goud) 34 (Eng 228-5)

    Media caption,

    'That's a horrible mix-up!' - Dunkley run out for 34

    England throw away a wicket!

    Sophia Dunkley drills one straight to the point and wants a single but Alice Davidson-Richards is not interested.

    Kranti Goud does well to pick up and throw to Richa Ghosh, who takes off the bails to end Dunkley's outing.

  13. Postpublished at 19:40 British Summer Time 22 July

    Phil Long
    BBC Test Match Special statistician

    If England are successful it would be a world record chase. Even if they get close to it, it should give them great confidence going into the World Cup.

  14. Postpublished at 19:40 British Summer Time 22 July

    England are ahead of India after 40 oversImage source, BBC Sport/CricViz

    Tell you what, England are ahead of India at this stage...

  15. Eng 228-4published at 40 overs

    Need 91 from 60 balls

    A total of eight runs from that over.

    England still hanging in there as we enter the final 10 overs of this series decider.

  16. Eng 225-4published at 39.2 overs

    Need 94 from 64 balls

    After two overs without a boundary, Sophia Dunkley turns innovative and reverse sweeps Radha Yadav towards third.

    Important runs for England.

  17. Postpublished at 19:37 British Summer Time 22 July

    Katherine Sciver-Brunt
    Ex-England bowler on BBC Test Match Special

    It's a big ask, especially when they just lost Nat Sciver-Brunt. It's more the mental side of losing such a big player like that. Sometimes I think they need to believe in each other a bit more though because they can do it without her.

  18. Eng 220-4published at 39 overs

    Need 99 from 66 balls

    A very disciplined over from Deepti Sharma to pile some more pressure on England.

    Only three runs coming from it.

    Alice Davidson-Richards is already into double digits from nine balls while Sophia Dunkley is now on 28 from 30.

  19. Postpublished at 19:35 British Summer Time 22 July

    Katherine Sciver-Brunt
    Ex-England bowler on BBC Test Match Special

    India are playing very defensive and it's just not necessary. They have the position of power, they could play offensive and have the game finished.

  20. How's stat?!published at 19:34 British Summer Time 22 July

    Rufus Bullough
    CricViz analyst

    Nat Sciver-Brunt highest scores in ODI chases + results:

    • 148* v Australia - Lost
    • 111* v Australia - Lost
    • 109* v Australia - Lost
    • 98 v India - Today*
    • 76* v New Zealand - Won
    • 74* v India - Won
    • 66 v Australia - Won
    • 65* v New Zealand - Won

    Nat Sciver-Brunt has never scored a hundred in a winning ODI chase for England, however, when she scores between 62-98 in chases, England win 100% of the time.