Wednesday, 2 March 2022

Women's World Cup Preview: Who is going to stop the Australian juggernaut?

 Who is halting Australia?

In the last 30 ODIs, Australia have won 29. Add several T20 world cup wins in that period and for as unforgiving as it might sound, if any group other than Australia will win the world cup, it will be an astonishment.

The Meg Lanning-drove side was prodded on to such accomplishment by the hurt of a single misfortune in the 2017 world cup, and they are probably not going to pass on any stone unturned in their interest to hold onto the prize back in 2022.

Assuming there was any motivation to accept Australia could be any more grounded, they have demonstrated that over the most recent one year with the type of all-rounder Tahlia McGrath, who is presenting a decent defense for herself to be the most incredible on the planet. Ellyse Perry, after a short time of break, is additionally tracking down her touch back and the side goes into the competition ailing in no office - there is profundity in batting, bowling and in any event, wicketkeeping choices. They have structure as well as experience on their side, and there is not an obvious explanation for them to be happy with everything except a definitive greatness.

Logical XI: Alyssa Healy (wk), Rachel Haynes, Meg Lanning (capt), Ellse Perry, Beth Mooney, Tahlia McGrath, Ashleigh Gardner, Annabel Sutherland, Jess Jonassen, Alana King/Darcie Brown, Megan Schutt

Will New Zealand be mean has once more?

The last time the ladies' reality cup was played in New Zealand, in 2000, the hosts had won the competition. On the off chance that the development to the 2022 version is any sign, they look all around ready to give the cricketing elites - England and Australia - an intense rivalry for the title.

The arrangements for the Sophie Devine-drove side has been close awesome, with most players in the crew having gotten more than adequate game time as well as a potential for success to have up and take the group to triumph from precarious circumstances - against groups like India and Australia. The champion entertainer among those has been Amelia Kerr, who has gotten back to the side after a break and claimed the No 3 situation with unbelievable achievement.

They may not be the most grounded group on paper, neither the most experienced unit, yet they are going into the competition in great structure - independently and aggregately. Anything short of a semi-last compartment would be a failure for them.

Reasonable XI: Suzie Bates, Sophie Devine (capt), Amelia Kerr, Amy Satterthwaite, Maddy Green/Brooke Halliday, Katey Martin (wk), Lea Tahuhu, Hayley Jensen, Jess Kerr, Frances Mackay, Hannah Rowe

Will the Sune Luus-drove South Africa really be the surprisingly strong contenders?

The quintessential surprisingly strong contenders of the world cups, South Africa guarantee to not be anything different this time around. Perhaps the most grounded competitor for the main four, they will be driven by Sune Luus. Despite the fact that they will be without the harmed Dane Van Niekerk, it's a side loaded up with a few in-structure match-victors, who look sufficiently able to contend and beat any test.

The center of the group has to a great extent stayed undisturbed over these years. There are a lot of fit and experienced players, who might be conveying the experience of their previous outcomes - to improve things or the more awful. There will unquestionably be no absence of inspiration, however it is not yet clear on the off chance that they can at last satisfy their charging and be something other than condition spoilers.

Logical XI: Lizelle Lee, Laura Wolvaardt, Sune Luus (capt), Lara Goodall, Mignon du Preez, Marizanne Kapp, Chloe Tryon, Sinalo Jafta (wk), Shabnim Ismail, Ayabonga Khaka, Masataba Klaas

Would Pakistan be able to flip their reality cup story?

For a group that has lastingly under-accomplished by its own guidelines in the 50-over world cups, the 2022 release would be an optimal competition to flip that account. Indeed, even as they have been lucky to get more than adequate game time collectively - universally and locally - in the pandemic-upset two years, which included 12 ODIs, their prosperity rate has been low.

To accomplish what they target - a semi-last billet, with something like three dominates in seven matches, they would require the whole unit to fire as one. Notwithstanding a spate of misfortunes over the most recent one year, there have been individual improvements of players. Youthful players have given indications of progress, with the triplet of Nida Dar, Aliya Riaz and Diana Baig bearing greater part of the group's weight. A great deal lays on the type of the veteran batting couple Bismah Maroof - who is getting back to cutthroat cricket following two years - and Javeria Khan - who has been shy of runs of late - to guarantee that they turn up a vastly improved side than they did in the past version, where they lost all their seven games.

Probable XI: Nahida Khan/Sidra Ameen, Muneeba Ali (wk), Javeria Khan, Omaima Sohail, Bismah Maroof, Nida Dar, Aliya Riaz, Fatima Sana, Diana Baig, Nashra Sandhu, Anam Amin/Aiman Anwar

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