India's semi-final against England abandoned without a ball bowled.
South Africa fall five runs short in rain-truncated second semi-final.
Australia made it to the ICC women’s T20 World Cup final, battling through a nerve-shredding semi-final against South Africa, at the Sydney Cricket Ground, on Thursday.
Meg Lanning led from the front to score 49 before taking two brilliant catches in the Proteas’ chase of 98 in 13 overs, adjusted by the DLS method following rain at the SCG.
Dane van Niekerk’s side gave it their all but fell five runs short of a maiden final, with Australia now just one win away from a fifth Women’s T20 World Cup title.
They’ll face India at the MCG on March 8 - International Women’s Day. India's semi-final against England was abandoned without a ball bowled.
“We’ve had a lot thrown at us this tournament and to be able to come together at a really big moment is certainly special,” said Lanning. “We’ll enjoy the win knowing there’s something massive coming up in the next few days.
“You can never rest and think you’ve got it in the bag, not even with the last few balls. South Africa played really well and took it right to the end.
"We never came into this World Cup thinking it would just happen and it was going to be easy. We knew it was in for a fight and that's exactly what happened.
“We weren't owed anything. We're not here to defend it, we're here to win it.
“We were confident if we bowled well we would get a result. We had our moments of good and bad but we managed to hold on until the end.”
Van Niekerk elected to bowl first with further bad weather forecast but Australia openers Alyssa Healy (18) and Beth Mooney (28) started in good fashion.
Ayabonga Khaka broke the partnership on 34 with Van Niekerk snaffling Healy at midwicket, though Mooney and captain Lanning avoided any further damage early on.
South Africa dried up the runs with nearly six overs between boundaries after Mooney’s dismissal, bowled by Nadine de Klerk – playing just her second game of the tournament.
She wasn’t done there either, having Ashleigh Gardner caught behind before bowling Rachael Haynes (17) to finish her four overs with three for 19.
Jess Jonassen also fell cheaply as Australia lost three wickets for three runs to sit at 71 for four in the 11th over.
Lanning, who boasts a superb record in T20I knockout cricket, then continued her form to guide the innings with Haynes and then Nicola Carey.
Australia finished on 134 for five but the Proteas’ chase was initially halted by rain, with Van Niekerk and Lizelle Lee preparing for a revised target when the weather relented.
A superb slog sweep from Van Niekerk got them going but when the captain was bowled by a wonderful Megan Schutt (2 for 17) in-swinger, her side were 23 for two at the end of four overs.
Lee had earlier fallen in Molineux’s first over of the women’s T20 World Cup before Mignon du Preez was dismissed by Delissa Kimmince, thanks to a wonderful low catch from Lanning.
It was then up to Sune Luus and Laura Wolvaardt (41 not out) to strive for the 43 needed from 24 balls, with the latter picking up where she left off against Pakistan with some glorious cover drives.
Luus then holed out to long-off off Schutt, while skipper Lanning again took a blinder to dismiss the dangerous Chloe Tryon as South Africa fell agonisingly short of their maiden final.
“We’ve only been in three knock-out games, Australia have been in countless,” said Van Niekerk.
“I have to give them credit for getting from where they started the tournament to where they are now. You can never write off the number one team in the world and they showed tonight why they are.
“It comes with experience and confidence. They are the deserved number ones at the moment.
“I can’t take anything away from anyone. The culture of this team is incredible.
“I really hope we can get a win over Australia soon. I thought tonight was the night but it wasn’t meant to be. I was really calm when I arrived at the ground. I really hope the final gets the 90,000 people the tournament deserves.”
Brief scores (semi-finals):
India v England: Match abandoned, Sydney Cricket Ground
Australia beat South Africa by five runs (DLS method), Sydney Cricket Ground
Australia 134-5, 20 overs (Meg Lanning 49 not out, Beth Mooney 28; Nadine de Klerk 3-19)
South Africa 92-5, 13 overs (Laura Wolvaardt 41 not out, Megan Schutt 2-17)
Final: March 8, India v Australia, Melbourne Cricket Ground
- ICC Media
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