Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
Sport

Alyssa Healy-Meg Lanning showdown in WPL final is off after UP Warriorz beaten by Mumbai Indians

Alyssa Healy's Warriorz were ousted in comprehensive fashion by the Mumbai Indians. (Getty Images: Pankaj Nangia)

Alyssa Healy's dream of taking her UP Warriorz side to the final of the inaugural Indian Women's Premier League against Meg Lanning's Delhi Capitals has been shattered in Mumbai.

The final could have had a distinctly green and gold tinge with Healy, Grace Harris and Tahlia McGrath on the books at the Warriorz, and Lanning leading Jess Jonassen and another Harris sister, Laura, at the Capitals.

Instead, Lanning will be up against the only team yet to field an Australian player, with home favourites Mumbai Indians beating the Warriorz by 72 runs in a one-sided semifinal 'eliminator' at DY Patil Stadium.

English pace bowler Issy Wong proved Mumbai's star, picking up a mid-innings hat-trick — the first in the new tournament — to rip the heart out of the Warriorz chase as Healy could only look on forlornly from the bench.

Healy (11 off six balls), Grace Harris (14 off 12) and Tahlia McGrath (seven off six) were the key players in the pursuit of a formidable Mumbai total of 4-182 but all succumbed quickly as the Warriorz were skittled for 110.

The comprehensive victory means Mumbai, captained by India skipper Harmanpreet Kaur, will face her Australian counterpart Lanning's league leaders Delhi, who also have Aussie spinner Jess Jonassen in their ranks, in what should be a compelling final in Mumbai's Brabourne Stadium on Sunday.

Nat Sciver-Brunt was player of the match as her unbeaten 72 off 38 set up the Indians' big total of 4-182. (Getty Images: Pankaj Nangia)

Healy acknowledged afterwards: "The two best teams are in the final."

She had no regrets about asking Mumbai to bat after winning the toss and felt the game would have been very different if English ace Nat Sciver-Brunt had not been dropped in the deep when on six by compatriot Sophie Ecclestone.

Sciver-Brunt went on to smash 72 not out off 38 balls in what proved a match-winning effort.

New Zealander Amelia Kerr, who chipped in with 29 off 19 balls, said her teammate's dazzling knock showed that the English all-rounder was "the best in the world".

Warriorz needed a Healy special but, watched in the stands by husband Mitchell Starc after his own recent ODI heroics in India, she miscued an easy catch to Harmanpreet in just the third over off Wong.

Grace Harris, one of the players of the tournament, threatened before chipping a soft one off Sciver-Brunt straight to Wong at long-on, before McGrath was run out trying to take an ill-judged single.

Wong then enjoyed her magical third over, getting Kiran Navgire caught on the deep-midwicket boundary before bowling Simran Shaikh and Ecclestone in successive deliveries for the historic hat-trick and ending up with figures of 4-15.

"We were probably outplayed tonight, especially with the bat, we just couldn't get any momentum our way and get into that chase at all," Healy said.

"But I'm really proud of this group, to fight the way we have. It was a really proud effort from our group to give it a crack."

AAP

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.