ICC U19 Women’s T20 World Cup 2025: South Africa remain unbeaten to reach first-ever final

Ashleigh van Wyk was the star of the show, taking four for 17 as she helped restrict Australia to 105 for eight from their 20 overs.

By Press Release

Updated - 31 Jan 2025, 16:32 IST

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Reigning champions India will defend their ICC U19 Women’s T20 World Cup title after beating England in the semi-finals by nine wickets.

Although the final margin of victory was comprehensive, this was the hardest they have been pushed with England flying out of the blocks after electing to bat.

Davina Perrin smashed 45 runs before India’s slow bowlers pulled things back and restricted England to 113 for eight.

Parunika Sisodia chipped in with two wickets in an over and took three for 21 in all, with Vaishnavi Sharma taking three wickets of her own in just four balls.

England’s total was not enough, with Gongadi Trisha (35) and G Kamalini (56 not out), marshalling the comfortable chase.

Having won a rematch of the first final, India will now face South Africa in the final, after the Proteas beat Australia by five wickets in the first semi-final.

India's spinners pull it back after England get off to flyer

England dealt exclusively in boundaries early on, the openers putting on 37 in four overs as Perrin and Jemima Spence (9) used the pace of the quick bowlers to hit fours at will.

Sisodia’s introduction slowed them, as she bowled Spence with her first ball before Trudy Johnson followed suit two balls later for a duck.

That brought Norgrove to the crease – she and Perrin observed initially before going after the spinners, both hitting sixes off Sharma. They added 44 in as many balls before Aayushi Shukla got the crucial wicket of Perrin for 45, finding a way through her defences.

That proved the turning point, with Shukla removing the other set batter in Norgrove in her next over with England now 86 for four with six overs remaining.

The spinners sensed an opportunity, and Sisodia picked up her third wicket, bowling Katie Jones around her legs for a duck.

Sharma got in on the act with three wickets in four deliveries and suddenly England were in all sorts of trouble at 92 for eight.

Amu Surenkumar (14 not out) and Tilly Corteen-Coleman (7 not out) came together for the final four overs adding 21 to take England to 113 for eight from their 20 overs.

Openers fire India to comfortable chase

India's chase started strongly, with three boundaries off the second over as Kamalini and Trisha played with ambition.

They brought up the half-century stand in the eighth over, with England desperately in need of a wicket. It finally came with 60 on the board, Phoebe Brett getting through the defences of the in-form Trisha to remove her for 35. Kamalini almost followed in the next over, but Norgrove’s diving effort just touched the ground, giving the opener a reprieve.

Kamalini and Sanika Chalke (11 not out) batted sensibly, picking up singles with the odd boundary, helped by a pair of wides that raced past everyone for four.

With the finish line in sight, Kamalini stepped things up, with back-to-back boundaries off Brett taking her to a half-century.

And it was only fitting that she hit the winning runs, lifting the ball over midwicket to the boundary to seal it with five overs to spare.

South Africa became the first team to reach the ICC U19 Women’s T20 World Cup 2025 Final with a comfortable five-wicket victory over Australia at the Bayuemas Oval.

Ashleigh van Wyk was the star of the show, taking four for 17 as she helped restrict Australia to 105 for eight from their 20 overs.

It soon became clear that it would not be enough, particularly as Jemma Botha smashed 37 from just 24 balls to set South Africa on their way.

Skipper Kayla Reyneke took up the chase with 26 as South Africa got home to stay perfect in this year’s competition.

Bray resists as Van Wyk wreaks havoc

South Africa made the perfect start with Nthabiseng Nini trapping Ines McKeon leg before from the very first delivery of the match. Grace Lyons followed in the third over, run out after Lucy Hamilton had driven the ball straight only for Nini to get down and get a touch on it, diverting it onto the stumps with the wicket-keeper out of her crease.

Skipper Hamilton and Caoimhe Bray went about rebuilding, with the former hitting three boundaries in quick succession. She fell LBW sweeping to opposite number Reyneke to make it 30 for three, which brought Eleanor Larosa to the crease and she provided useful support for Bray. The 15-year-old all-rounder took the initiative, with the pair adding 27 in 7.5 overs before Larosa was caught and bowled by Seshnie Naidu for seven.

Hasrat Gill soon followed for one, becoming Van Wyk’s first victim as she was brilliantly caught on the run by Luyanda Nzuza. Bray was joined by Ella Briscoe as Australia looked to pick up the scoring rate. Bray finally departed for an invaluable 36, caught and bowled by Van Wyk.

The spinner added two more in the space of three balls to finish with figures of four for 17 but Briscoe smashed four boundaries to finish with an unbeaten 17-ball 27 to take Australia to 105 for eight.

Botha powers South Africa in controlled chase

Botha showed her intent from the start, finding the boundary through the offside twice in the first over. Simone Lourens got in on the act, leaving Australia in need of a wicket. Chloe Ainsworth provided it with her very first ball, bringing one back and bowling Lourens for five.

As Botha continued to find the boundaries, Fay Cowling joined in, hitting the first six of the match before miscuing one off Hasrat Gill to go for seven. That brought Reyneke to the crease, but she let Botha take the lead, showing her comfort against pace with powerful striking including two sixes of her own after surviving a run-out scare.

The game was in danger of getting away from Australia, but Hamilton struck an important blow, with Botha caught at cover by Juliette Morton to depart for a 24-ball 37, making it 56 for three in the eighth over.

Reyneke and Karabo Meso came together, adding 38, with the required rate not an issue as it hovered around three an over. They were able to keep the scoreboard ticking over with singles, while picking off the odd boundary until Meso was brilliantly caught in the deep by Lily Bassingthwaighte off Gill for 19.

The hard work was done by that point however, even after Reyneke fell for 26 to a brilliant catch by Bray with three still required.

They got there with 11 balls to spare, and will now prepare to take on India or England in their first final at this level.

Scores in brief

Australia v South Africa – Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur

Australia 105 for eight in 20 overs (Caoimhe Bray 36, Ella Briscoe 27 not out; Ashleigh van Wyk 4/17, Nthabiseng Nini 1/18)

South Africa 106 for five in 18.1 overs (Jemma Botha 37, Kayla Reyneke 26; Lucy Hamilton 2/17, Hasrat Gill 2/20)

Result: South Africa won by five wickets.

England v India – Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur

England 113 for eight in 20 overs (Davina Perrin 45, Abi Norgrove 30; Parunika Sisodia 3/21, Vaishnavi Sharma 3/23, Aayushi Shukla 2/21)

India 117 for one in 15 overs (G Kamalini 56 not out, Gongadi Trisha 35; Phoebe Brett 1/30)

Result: India won by nine wickets

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