Laura Wolvaardt was made for days like these. With Southern Brave chasing a low-ish total, she scored one of the coolest, calmest 50s of her career to get her side home. The scorecard says Brave won with just 6 balls to spare, but it was possibly the longest 6 balls in history – as WinHer reflects, the result was absolutely never in doubt.
Having been put into bat, London Spirit didn’t get off to a great start – Kira Chathli, who veers from the sublime to the sordid like a character in one of the 19th Century Russian novels she likes to read, holed out in the first set to one of the worst shots I’ve ever seen. Spirit then limped to 24-1 at the end of the powerplay, with neither Cordelia Griffith nor Georgia Redmayne playing with much… well… “spirit”.
When Redmayne – such a critical cog in the Spirit machine that won this competition 12 months ago – was dismissed to a stunning low catch from Mady Villiers off her own bowling, things quickly went from bad to worse as Grace Harris delivered a classic “Six and Out” – slogging just (just!) over Maia Bouchier at long on for a maximum, and then sending the very next ball in exactly the same direction but a foot or two shorter, allowing Bouchier to make the catch at the second time of asking.
Griffith continued to stutter, with her Strike Rate falling back into the low 70s at one stage; but crucially she hung in there long enough to remind Mady Villiers that fielding might be easy but sometimes bowling isn’t – Griffith taking her for 19 runs in a set, including two sixes. This one set threatened to turn the tide in favour of the Spirit, giving them a platform to push on towards 150; but they blew it big-time. Dani Gibson first ran out Charli Knott; then after (just) failing to run out Issy Wong, ran herself out for 9.
This exposed the lack of power in Spirit’s tail, as they scored just 22 runs in the final 25-ball phase, with the only boundary coming by sheer luck, after a fortunate deflection off non-striker Sarah Glenn wrong-footed Maia Bouchier on the long on boundary.
Needing 126, Brave lost Danni Wyatt-Hodge early after Issy Wong somehow persuaded Charlie Dean to review an LBW that everybody in the stadium except Wong (including, crucially, the umpire) thought was going down leg, but proved to be just straightening enough to get the decision – a millimeter of difference would have been umpire’s call, and Wyatt would have survived.
Wyatt-Hodge was Brave’s top run-scorer in the tournament coming into this match; but today they didn’t need her. Wolvaardt and Bouchier took control of the game, pushing just hard enough to stay ahead of the rate whilst keeping their wickets in hand. Bouchier did eventually lose her concentration, possibly demonstrating why Emma Lamb is going to the World Cup and she isn’t, as she was caught on the ring.
But Wolvaardt stayed cool, even as Brave’s run-rate dropped unnervingly towards the end, with 4 consecutive sets between balls 70 and 90 going for 3 or less. Others would have been panicked into going for the big hit, but Wolvaardt just rotated the strike in the knowledge that was all she needed to do; before Sophie Devine finished things off to maintain Brave’s unbeaten season and catapult them straight into the final back here at Lord’s next weekend.
Who they will meet there remains of course to be decided. London Spirit could yet defend their title – they finished third in the group stages last year and went on to win it – but they will need to be much more convincing in their final match against Invincibles, as well as hoping other results go their way, if they are to repeat the trick.
