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ಮುಖಪುಟ  »  ಕ್ರಿಕೆಟ್  »  ICC Women's T20 World Cup, 2026  »  Match 4 ಫುಲ್ ಕಾಮೆಂಟರಿ

New Zealand Women vs West Indies Women Match 4 Full Commentary

Result · Jun 13 2026, Sat - 11:00 PM (IST)
Match 4, - Hampshire Bowl
WI-W
163/3 (19.5)
NZ-W
162/6 (20.0)
West Indies Women beat New Zealand Women by 7 wickets
CRR:8.22
ಪಂದ್ಯದ ಪುರುಷೋತ್ತಮ
  • .

    Welcome back for West Indies' reply with the bat. The New Zealand players are in a huddle, having a detailed chat with captain Amelia Kerr, pumping up her ladies. Now, they spread out to take their respective fielding spots. Qiana Joseph walks out with Hayley Matthews to open for the Windies. And it will be Rosemary Mair to open the attack for the Kiwis. Joseph to face. Here we go...

  • .

    ... THE RUN CHASE ...

  • .

    Alleyne’s lethal spell - The bowling from the West Indies was highly disciplined for the most of the game, led by an exceptional performance from Alleyne. Alleyne was the undisputed standout performer as she single-handedly applied the brakes on NZ's scoring rate, striking three times in a span of just two overs to finish with magnificent figures of 4 for 27 from her four overs. Skipper Hayley Matthews chipped in with a wicket of her own to keep the pressure on. While the final target is not overly massive, the formidable bowling unit that the New Zealand side possesses means this will surely be a stiff challenge for the Windies if NZ can make early inroads into their top order.

  • .

    A quick word with Isabella Gaze - Isabella Gaze says it felt good and that they wanted to attack upfront. About the total, she says they are happy with the runs they have manage to put on the board. On the wicket, she notes it's a great surface where the ball comes onto the bat nicely. On the score, she credits Maddy for playing well at the death and adds that the bowlers will need to keep attacking the stumps. She says she's really excited to get going, pointing out that the team has been there for a few weeks and is happy to finally get out on the field. On advice for the bowlers, she suggests mixing up the pace, since anything on the quicker side tends to come onto the bat nicely.

  • .

    Flying catches and middle-order resilience - The West Indies maintained high intensity on the field, holding onto their catches remarkably well to stem the flow of runs. Devine was eventually sent packing in the 20s thanks to another piece of fielding brilliance, which saw Claxton take a spectacular diving catch to break the dangerous stand. Halliday then joined forces with Maddy Green to add a valuable 35 runs for the fifth wicket, with Halliday top-scoring for her side by fighting hard into the 40s. Even though Green, Devine, and Gaze all batted well for their respective contributions, the regular fall of wickets continuously bothered the New Zealand side, leaving them feeling a few runs short of where they could have finished.

  • .

    Blazing start followed by a sudden slump - New Zealand Women finish their 20 overs with a score of 162 on the board and will be reasonably happy with the competitive total they have posted. The White Ferns started the contest in an attacking manner, with Izzy Gaze smashing the absolute majority of the runs in a flying opening partnership that added 49 runs in just 5.5 overs. However, the West Indies quickly fought back to trigger a collapse, reducing New Zealand from a comfortable 49 for no loss to a shaky 56 for 3. With the batting side in a bit of disarray, skipper Sophie Devine was joined by Brooke Halliday, and the duo expertly stabilized the innings by adding 45 crucial runs for the fourth-wicket partnership.

  • 19.6

    Good awareness and running! New Zealand Women finish at 162/6. A slower one at 89.5 kph, on a length and outside the off stump. Kerr pulls it away along the ground towards deep mid-wicket, where the fielder is a bit slow to attack the ball. That delay costs a couple of runs. 11 runs off the final over.

  • 19.5

    Sensational delivery! Yorker around the fourth stump, at a good pace. Kerr tries to carve it away to the off side, but gets beaten.

  • .

    Izzy Sharp departs. Jess Kerr walks in to bat now.

  • 19.4
    Izzy Sharp c Zaida James b Deandra Dottin 5 (4)

    OUT! STRAIGHT UP AND GONE! Dottin gets her first wicket. Dropped fuller, slower one on middle. Izzy Sharp stays leg side of the ball to perhaps smash the ball down the ground, but the ball nips away and she skews it up towards backward point. Easy catch for Zaida James who moves a bit to her left to grab the ball around her chest. New Zealand Women are 160/6.

  • 19.3

    Smart review! Slips in a very high full toss, on off. Maddy Green is late on the shot and slices it flatly to backward point, where Karishma Ramharack spills it in front and they cross over for a single. Hayley Matthews opts for a review to check whether it is above the waist or dipped below. Ball Tracking comes up and the graphic shows that the ball is dipping below the waist and the on-field decision is overturned.

  • 19.2

    FOUR MORE! Back of a length, around off and middle. Maddy Green plays off the back foot and pulls it to the right of the deep square leg fielder for a boundary at long leg.

  • 19.1

    FOUR! Into the gap! Touch full on the stumps. Maddy Green picks slower one and also the length nicely and heaves it to the leg side, splitting long on and deep mid-wicket perfectly for a boundary.

  • .

    Deandra Dottin to bowl the final over. Also, the West Indies Women have been penalised for not bowling their overs in time. They have to get an extra fielder inside the ring for the final over. Can New Zealand Women get past 160?

  • 18.6

    A length ball outside off and Sharp steps out to launch it straight down the ground. Dottin at long off dives to her right to cut it off but the ball squirts away from her. Luckily, the long on fielder was backing up right behind her, mopping it up quickly to restrict the batters to a couple.

  • 18.5

    Full and outside off, Maddy Green slices it in the air, hitting it down the ground. Deandra Dottin charges to her right to take the catch but loses the ball in the sun and bails out of the catch. Lets the ball hit her as she does manage to make the stop. One taken.

  • 18.4

    A risky run! A length ball around leg. Sharp plays the reverse sweep towards cover point. The fielder fumbles it, gifting the batters a single. Fletcher swoops in quickly though and fires a throw to the striker's end, but Green gets back in time to make her safe at the danger end.

  • 18.3

    Skids through, stays low on middle, on a length. Izzy Sharp adjusts on the back foot and heaves it wide and through mid-wicket for a couple of runs.

  • 18.2

    Low full toss, on off, driven down to long off for a single.

  • 18.1

    FOUR! Runs away! Tossed up and just around off. Green reverse sweeps it past the left of the short third fielder for a boundary.

  • .

    A timely wicket for West Indies Women. Aaliyah Alleyne ends her spell with figures of (4-0-27-4). Izzy Sharp is the new batter. Karishma Ramharack to bowl the penultimate.

  • 17.7

    OUT! MISCUED AND GONE! Best figures for Aaliyah Alleyne in T20Is, informs Ian Bishop on air. A pitched up delivery around fourth stump and Halliday goes for the big shot over mid on. Gets it off the toe end though, and the ball loops up towards mid on. Hector reacts well at mid on, shifting to her right and completing an easy catch with fingers pointed skywards near the edge of the circle. A fighting knock from Halliday and New Zealand Women are 140/5, 12 balls left.

  • 17.6

    FOUR! Up and over! Juicy half-volley on the stumps. Brooke Halliday gets under it nicely and pumps it over the bowler's head for a boundary, to the left of long off. Halliday moves to 40 (31). Has been a superb knock from her so far.

  • 17.5

    Full and around middle and off, Green smashes it to mid off for a quick single.

  • 17.4

    FOUR! Innovative from Green! A touch fuller on middle and leg, Maddy Green nails the reverse scoop towards deep fine leg for a boundary.

  • 17.3

    Had to hurry! Full in length, on the stumps, angling away. Brooke Halliday looks to tries to smash it behind cover, but gets a massive inside edge onto the pads. She searches for the ball and gets called through for a single by her partner before the keeper or the bowler charge to the ball.

  • 17.2

    WIDE! Back of a length, far down leg. Brooke Halliday looks to pull but misses. A slight appeal from the keeper for caught behind, but nothing doing.

  • 17.1

    Pitched way down leg, full in length. Brooke Halliday sits down to sweep but the ball grazes her gloves and yorks the keeper's gloves who dives to her right to grab it.

  • .

    Hayley Matthews ends her spell with figures of (4-0-31-1). Aaliyah Alleyne is back on.

  • 16.6

    A touch fuller and sliding into the batter. Brooke sits down on a knee and sweeps it hard to short fine leg. The fielder fumbles a bit there, allowing the batters to cross over.

  • .

    Gear up for a super weekend - If this triple delight wasn't enough, there's a cracker of a Sunday lined up too. June 14 brings a double header at Edgbaston, Birmingham, starting with Bangladesh Women against Netherlands Women, before one of the biggest rivalries in the sport takes centre stage as India Women face Pakistan Women. The first ball of the first game is scheduled to be bowled at 9.30 am GMT, followed by a non-stop cricketing action. But do join us in advance for the buildup. Until then, cheers!

  • .

    A perfect end to a blockbuster Saturday - Well and truly, this was the first nail-biter of this World Cup. Quick recap of how the day unfolded. It began with Scotland Women registering their maiden T20 World Cup win, getting the better of Ireland Women. That was followed by Australia Women putting on a one-sided show to absolutely decimate the Proteas at the Old Trafford. And in the third and final game, West Indies handed defending champions New Zealand a stinging defeat to set their campaign alight in this edition. West Indies Women now take a trip to Leeds, Headingly where they will go up against Scotland Women, on Thursday, 18th June. New Zealand Women, on the other hand, will stay in Southampton to face Sri Lanka Women on Tuesday, 16th June.

  • .

    The victorious captain of West Indies Women - Hayley Matthews says the bowlers did a pretty good job pegging New Zealand back at regular intervals, and felt it was a good wicket to bat on. She admits they fell a bit behind the rate, but says having wickets in hand and a set batter was crucial. She heaps praise on Campbelle, calling her innings fantastic and noting how emotional she gets given how much heart and fight she plays with, adding that she stuck with it despite struggling at one stage. On doing it without Taylor and Henry, she says it means a lot, since people tend to associate West Indies with just a handful of names, so seeing someone like Aaliyah Alleyne step up with the ball gives the team a lot of confidence. She adds that once those players are back, the side's potential is limitless. On her own fitness, she says she's fine, just a bit of cramp. When asked about Taylor and Henry, she reveals that they're being monitored day by day and weren't too far off, so there's hope they could be back for the next match. On Campbelle, she says she kept telling her they needed to up the run rate, and even though it wasn't quite working, the team trusted her fully, knowing the longer she batted, the easier things would get. She adds that Campbelle has a lot of self-belief and kept reassuring her that things would come good eventually. On being asked what this win means for their qualification chances, she says it's really exciting, and the vibes are high, but stresses this is a World Cup, and they can't afford to lose focus. With Scotland up next, she says they can't take anyone lightly and need to stay sharp, enjoying the celebration without getting complacent.

  • .

    The captain of New Zealand Women - Amelia Kerr says there were ebbs and flows throughout, with West Indies pulling them back with wickets at key moments. On the total, she says she felt 160 gave them a good chance of defending it. On the dropped catches, she calls it a tough day for that to happen, especially in a World Cup, adding that the bowlers were creating chances but too many of them went down. On being asked if conditions played a part, she says they were good, with a bit of sun around, but stresses that wasn't a factor in the dropped catches, and there are no excuses to be made there. On positives to take away, she says the team stayed in the fight despite the drops and the lapses on the field, and singles out Campbelle's innings as a brilliant one, particularly her ability to turn ones into twos, noting that West Indies outran them in the field. On the conversation after the game, she says it's about acknowledging what went right, pointing to Maddy's finish with the bat and the bowling of Jess and Mair, while also looking honestly at where things went wrong tonight so the team can improve.

  • .

    ... Time to hear from the two captains ...

  • .

    Kiwis did not fly, literally - New Zealand built a solid platform with a 49-run opening stand, and the early loss of three quick wickets did little to deter Devine and Halliday, who kept hunting boundaries. Devine's dismissal in the 13th over triggered a rare lull, with the next 15 balls failing to produce a single boundary, before Green provided the perfect finishing touch to push the total past 160. Aaliyah Alleyne stood out for West Indies, picking up crucial wickets and finishing with her best T20 figures. The Caribbean side used as many as eight bowlers to not allow the batters to settle in and kept chipping away throughout, ensuring no New Zealand batter went on to a truly match-defining knock, even as the innings saw contributions across the board.

  • .

    Campbelle gets the job done - West Indies got off to the worst possible start, losing Qiana Joseph to a needless run out with just 12 on the board. Matthews survived two drops, first on 9 off Sharp and then on 21 off Green, and despite struggling with a hamstring pull midway through her innings, she kept fighting. Her recovery stand of 74 runs with Campbelle left New Zealand clueless. Matthews finally ran out of luck and fell in the 12th over, giving New Zealand a sliver of an opening. But Campbelle's counterpunch has slammed that door shut, swinging things firmly back in West Indies' favor. She produced a knock for the ages and ensured that she got the job done to coast her side safely.

  • .

    Self-inflicted wounds - A game to forget for the defending champions, who looked anything but like the title holders tonight. Six or seven dropped chances, a couple of missed stumpings, and countless fumbles in the field summed up the night. Amelia Kerr will have a tough job pulling her team back on its feet. And to think West Indies walked into this game without two of their biggest hitters, Stafanie Taylor and Chinelle Henry. Didn't matter much in the end, with New Zealand doing their best to hand them the game on a platter through their fielding. It wasn't all down to poor bowling either, the White Ferns created plenty of chances throughout their defence, and had even a couple of those stuck, this could have been a very different story.

  • .

    PLAYER OF THE MATCH - An emotional Shemaine Campbelle deservedly receives the award for her historic, match-winning knock of 90 (62)*. On her emotions after the knock, Campbelle says she kept telling herself she wanted to do it for her team, and adds that it feels great to have come through. When asked about what worked for her in this game, she says she simply backed her skills, knowing her calibre, and had told herself that if she could bat straight through the first 20 minutes, she could get the job done for the team. On her partnership with Matthews, she calls her a special person, someone who kept talking to her and backing her to play to her strengths. About what she said, looking up after hitting the winning runs, she says that she loves Jesus and wants to thank him for everything he's been doing for her and the team. On what this means for the team, she points out that with Stafanie and Henry unavailable, this was a great effort from the group and a big moment for them.

  • .

    Women in Maroon outshine the White Ferns - A special, special moment for West Indies women's cricket. They have pulled off a stunning chase to crush New Zealand, and in doing so, completed the second-highest successful run chase in Women's T20 World Cup history. Tears streaming down Shemaine Campbelle's face, and every single one of them is earned. The jubilation is just beginning in the West Indies camp, and Campbelle is right at the heart of it. These two teams were meeting for the first time since their semifinal clash at the 2024 World Cup, and two years on, the women from the Caribbean have come out on top. Also, they have beaten the Kiwis for the first time after September 2022 in this format.

  • 19.5

    LEG BYE! This is probably the perfect way to seal the win as these two out in the middle have run New Zealand Women out in this contest. West Indies Women win by 7 wickets and a ball to spare. Good length, down the leg side, Jahzara Claxton goes for the flick and misses. The ball hits her pads and drops around the square on leg. Shemaine Campbelle runs for it and completes the single before the keeper runs forward and can take the bails off.

  • 19.4

    With this dot, the young Windies batter will be feeling the heat. Full and wide outside off, Jahzara Claxton swings and misses.

  • 19.3

    LEG BYE! SCORES ARE LEVEL! Yorker, on the pads, Shemaine Campbelle misses out on the flick, gets it clipped off her pads to short mid-wicket for a leg bye.

  • 19.2

    Yorker, on off, Shemaine Campbelle jams this to the right of the bowler. Sophie Devine as young as ever, puts in a dive and fields this.

  • 19.1

    Short and around off, Shemaine Campbelle goes deep inside her crease and cuts this to the right of backward point for runs. This was racing to the fence, but Izzy Sharp runs to her left, puts in a dive and makes a fine stop. Keeps it down to two.

  • .

    West Indies Women just need 4 runs from the final over now. Sophie Devine to bowl that over. Can she pull off a miracle for the New Zealand Women?

  • 18.7

    Good length, on the pads, Shemaine Campbelle guides this to short third and takes a single.

  • 18.6

    It is all happening as these two batters out in the middle are running almost for anything and everything. From around the wicket, this is a yorker just outside off, Claxton seems to have gotten a faint edge as she tries to play at it. The ball travels behind but Gaze doesn't collect it cleanly behind the stumps and the batters sneak a bye. She picks it up and has a shy at the stumps at the batting end but misses, and a direct hit would have had Campbelle by a mile. The ball rolls away to long on, and Campbelle wants another but is sent back. The throw comes in towards the keeper and Gaze fumbles again, giving Campbelle just enough time to dive full length and get home. Absolute chaos in the middle, but just a single taken after all the drama.

  • 18.5

    Low full toss, on off, Shemaine Campbelle pushes this to long on and this time they take just one as the ball was trajected straight to the fielder.

  • 18.4

    These two are so swift on their feet, they are snatching run left, right and centre. Good length, around off, Shemaine Campbelle hits this from the inner portion of her bat towards the right of long on. Shemaine Campbelle looked settled for one, but Jahzara Claxton pushed her, and they sneaked out another one.

  • 18.3

    FOUR! Shemaine Campbelle is playing a knock of her lifetime. Back of a length, wide of off, Shemaine Campbelle drags this with a pull through the square leg region for a boundary. The fielder from deep backward square leg runs to her left and dives full-length but her effort goes in absolute vain.

  • 18.2

    Good length, wide of off, Shemaine Campbelle slashes at it with fast hands but misses.

  • 18.1

    WIDE! Slower one, on a length, way too wide outside off. Shemaine Campbelle leaves it. Wided. 150 comes up for West Indies Women. Just 13 more needed now.

  • .

    14 runs needed from the final 2 overs now. Rosemary Mair to bowl the penultimate.

  • 17.7

    Floated around off, Jahzara Claxton is adament to hit the reverse sweeo as she goes for it and misses yet again.

  • 17.6

    WIDE! Full and way too wide outside off again. Jahzara Claxton was setting herself up for the reverse sweep again but leaves it.

  • 17.5

    Slider, around off, Jahzara Claxton goes for a fancy reverse sweep but misses out.

  • 17.4

    Full toss, around off, Shemaine Campbelle punches this down to long off for one.

  • 17.3

    Short of a length, around the pads, Shemaine Campbelle tucks this through mid-wicket for two more.

  • 17.2

    SIX!! Campbelle is taking the Windies home now. Flighted, around off, Shemaine Campbelle jumps down the track and launches this over the fence towards the deep mid-wicket region for a massive six.

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