da jogodeouro: There have been many one-day games won and lost in the final over and won andlost by four runs or less
Rick Eyre22-May-2008There have been many one-day games won and lost in the final over and won andlost by four runs or less. But few had the importance, the occasion, thedrama of today’s final of the 2000 CricInfo Women’s World Cup.Today’s game – won by New Zealand by four runs with five balls remaining -was filled to the brim with drama and tension. For me, it surpasses theencounter at Lord’s in 1975 between the West Indies and Australia as thegreatest World Cup Final, men’s or women’s, of all time. It may even surpassthe 1999 semi-final at Edgbaston, the tied match between Australia and SouthAfrica, as the greatest World Cup match of all.It was a game with almost everything. A match which, on form, Australiashould have won comfortably – and looked like they would when New Zealandcrumbled to be all out for 184.But New Zealand quickly took the ascendancy with the early removal of the twooutstanding batsmen of the tournament, Lisa Keightley and Karen Rolton.Belinda Clark, whose World Cup with the bat started shakily but gatheredmomentum as the tournament progressed, played an elegant and controlledinnings. She dominated the Australian fightback, scoring roughly threequarters of her team’s runs while she was at the crease.Clark was playing the innings of her life and steering Australia toits fifth Women’s World Cup… until she was on 91. She attempted a sweep toa ball that many less talented players would have chosen to drive on the onside – and was bowled around her legs. It was a masterpiece of an innings,yet in the end so tantalisingly futile.And with the wickets tumbling and Australia’s required run-rate hoveringaround the run-a-ball mark, there was the most sensational of events at thestart of the 49th over when Cathryn Fitzpatrick’s leg bail fell to groundsome time after the ball has passed through to the keeper. Had the ballbrushed the stump or did the wind blow? The third umpire, after a long, longlook, gave Fitzpatrick out bowled.With the first ball of the fiftieth over, the seventh World Cup reached itsclimax, as Charmaine Mason got a faint nick to a ball from Clare Nicholsonwhich was taken by Rebecca Rolls. New Zealand, the host team, the underdogsof this final, had come from behind to win the most important title in thenation’s cricketing history.The game was also a fitting farewell to two of the legends of New Zealand’swomen’s cricket, Debbie Hockley and Catherine Campbell.A four-run victory to New Zealand, and it is just as well that the strayplastic cup inside the boundary rope this morning, shaving two runs off acertain Kiwi boundary, didn’t make a difference.In a World Cup tournament which has been very predictable in its overallresults (though never, I hasten to add, dull), the joyous unpredictability ofthe sport came home to roost on the final day. The form side of thetournament, and indeed one of the great national teams in the history ofAustralian women’s sport, had been held to second-best on the day when itreally mattered.