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Australia vs Pakistan Twenty20: Australia secure T20 series win in Hobart

Australia have wrapped up a Twenty20 series victory over Pakistan on the back of a clinical bowling effort and clean strikes from Beth Mooney.

The hosts used nine bowlers on Thursday night at Hobart's Blundstone Arena, restricting Pakistan to 7-96 and chasing down the target in 12.4 overs with eight wickets in hand.

Mooney returned to the top of the order after not batting in the first game of the series because of soreness, and hit 46 from 29 balls.

She shared a 60-run opening partnership with skipper Meg Lanning (31 from 32) to iron out most of the total.

The win clinches the three-game series for Australia, following their eight-wicket win in game one, with the final match in Canberra on Sunday.

Lanning shared the ball around in Australia's final series ahead of the T20 World Cup in South Africa beginning in February.

Spinner Alana King came on in the middle to late stages with great effect, picking up 2-10 from two overs.

King dropped Ayesha Naseem in the 13th over, but made up for it in the 14th when she trapped her plumb lbw for five.

Darcie Brown, Ashleigh Gardner, Jessica Jonassen, Grace Harris and Annabel Sutherland all chipped in with a wicket each.

Sutherland (1-15) bowled four overs for the first time in a T20 international.

Megan Schutt, who took 5-15 in the first game, only bowled one over and conceded 10 runs.

"It was just about getting some overs [under] some players' belts, bowling in different roles," Tahlia McGrath said.

"It's a real strength of ours, the depth, the amount of roles we can play. We go into that World Cup full of confidence."

Star all-rounder Gardner (1-20), who earlier this week expressed her discomfort with playing on January 26, also bowled four overs.

Gardner, a proud Muruwari woman, said January 26 was a day of hurt and mourning for Indigenous people.

Australia's squad attended a smoking ceremony and completed a walking tour of kunanyi/Mt Wellington in Hobart, and wore an Indigenous jersey, socks and wristbands for the match.

"We learned a lot. We really take pride educating ourselves in that area, everyone was ears wide open and just taking everything in," McGrath said.

"It's obviously a really sad and sensitive day for First Nations people and we tried to acknowledge that [on Thursday] and support and get those messages out there."

After Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat, opener Muneeba Ali top-scored with 33 from 43 balls, but she was one of only three in her side to reach double figures.

There was an awkward moment not long before the first ball, with the on-field sprinklers briefly coming to life.

Injured wicketkeeper Alyssa Healy (calf) was again left out, with Mooney taking the gloves in her absence.

Scorecard

Manhattan

Ball-by-ball

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