Australia ready to bury World Cup demons
The first rule of Australia's Women's Cricket World Cup campaign is not to talk about the last one.
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The first rule of Australia's Women's Cricket World Cup campaign is not to talk about the last one.
GUIDE TO AUSTRALIA'S 15-STRONG WOMEN'S CRICKET WORLD CUP SQUAD
The 12th Women's ODI World Cup kicks off on Friday in New Zealand with Australia looking to win the title for the first time since 2013.
Cape Town - Australia have a host of superstars in their world class line-up like captain Meg Lanning, wicket-keeper/batter Alyssa Healy and bowlers Jesse Jonassen and Megan Schutt, but arguably none are more box office than Ellyse Perry.
The countdown clock in the centre of Christchurch has ticked down to less than one day until the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2022 officially begins.
Mithali Raj will be eager to get her hands on a maiden title in what would be her last hurrah for India at the world stage, Heather Knight will hope to defend it while Meg Lanning seems primed to lead Australia to a seventh crown when the ICC Women's World Cup gets underway in Mount Maunganui on Friday. The tournament, which was postponed by a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, will be played across six venues with the ICC deciding that teams will stay in a 'managed environment' instead of stringent bio-bubbles. The marquee event will be played in the league format, where all eight teams will face each other once with the top four sides qualifying for the semifinals.
Duelling captains agree the ICC Women's World Cup might just be the most open in the tournament's history - that's if COVID-19 doesn't get in the way.