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Shreyanka Patil (centre) and Titas Sadhu celebrate
Shreyanka Patil (centre) and Titas Sadhu celebrate the dismissal of Australia’s Beth Mooney in the first T20. Photograph: Rajanish Kakade/AP
Shreyanka Patil (centre) and Titas Sadhu celebrate the dismissal of Australia’s Beth Mooney in the first T20. Photograph: Rajanish Kakade/AP

Titas Sadhu sensational on her debut as India crush Australia in first Twenty20

This article is more than 4 months old
  • 1st T20: India, 1-145, beat Australia, 141, by nine wickets
  • Verma and Mandhana put on 137 for first wicket

India crushed Australia by nine wickets in the first women’s Twenty20 international in Navi Mumbai, taking a 1-0 lead in the three-match series while discovering a new star.

The teenage debutant Titas Sadhu’s sensational 17 for four led Australia’s demise to 141 all out before Shafali Verma (64 not out) and Smriti Mandhana (54) piloted a clinical chase at the DY Patil Stadium. After being whitewashed 3-0 in the one-day series, India could not have been more emphatic in blasting past Australia with 14 balls remaining.

“We didn’t play very well at all tonight,” the Australia captain, Alyssa Healy, said. “We left a lot out there with the bat and probably didn’t start too well with the ball either. Lots to work on for the next two games.”

Verma was reprieved twice, both return catches to Ash Gardner – a sitter on 51 and a difficult one on 61 – but otherwise she and Mandhana were imperious in putting on 137 for the first wicket, the highest by any team against Australia and the second best by any Indian pair. Verma was aggressive and convincing from the outset while Mandhana took 12 balls to get off the mark before flourishing.

India were given a massive headstart in their reply when an off-target Darcie Brown conceded 14 runs – all extras – in the opening over.

Australia continued to look off-colour when Tahlia McGrath later conceded 24 off her second over, which included seven wides. Australia’s only moment of joy in the field came when Mandhana, with five runs needed for victory, tried to finish it with a six only for her slog-sweep off the leg-spinner Georgia Wareham to be sensationally plucked high and one-handed by McGrath on the long-on rope.

India’s Shafali Verma (left) who scored 64 not out pats Smriti Mandhana on the back after departing for 54 against Australia. Photograph: Rajanish Kakade/AP

Earlier, the rising star Phoebe Litchfield (49) and established legend Ellyse Perry (37) resurrected Australia’s innings after the 19-year-old Sadhu had left the top-order in tatters. Sadhu took three huge wickets – Beth Mooney (17), McGrath (0) and Gardner (0) – to have 3 for 3 in her first two overs as Australia lost five wickets for four runs in 14 deliveries and end the powerplay on four for 33.

Litchfield, named player of the recently completed 50-over series after scoring 260 runs at 86.67, led Australia’s recovery but her departure in the 15th over sparked another six for 29 collapse.

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The India captain, Harmanpreet Kaur, took her women’s T20international record-equalling fourth catch to dismiss Annabel Sutherland (12) for Sadhu’s fourth wicket.

Sadhu briefly celebrated a fifth scalp when Wareham was adjudged lbw first ball but the decision was overturned on review. The spinners Shreyanka Patil (two for 19) and Deepti Sharma (two for 24) mopped up the tail.

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