Scotland beat Ireland for maiden T20 World Cup win


In Saturday's opening Group B match in Manchester, Scotland defeated Ireland by a whopping 40 runs to earn their first Women's T20 World Cup victory. A defining 106-run stand between Kathryn and Sarah Bryce helped Scotland post a competitive total before Kirstie Gordon's and Katherine Fraser's three-wicket hauls dismantled Ireland's batting order. On a cloudy and chilly morning at Old Trafford, Scotland were given the order to bat first. The Scottish openers were forced to work hard for their runs because they were unable to middle the ball early and the rain-soaked outfield was predictably slow. Scotland fell to 37/2 after both openers received early reprieves but failed to capitalize, losing in consecutive Powerplay overs. The Bryce sisters then came together and accelerated after a brief period of consolidation. After the halfway point, the pace picked up significantly, and Sarah Bryce scored 20 runs off an over by Cara Murray. After 16 overs, the partnership reached three figures, putting Scotland in a strong position at 142/2. However, Ireland responded by taking wickets at the final over. In the 17th over, Sarah Bryce was the first to fall, one run short of her fifty. The 19th over saw Ava Canning dismiss Kathryn Bryce and Ailsa Lister to further stifle Scotland. Scotland won by 161/5 after the final four overs with no boundaries. Kathryn Bryce, captain, held on to a sharp return catch to dismiss Alana Dalzell in the first over, denting Ireland's chase after leading with the bat. In the fourth over, Gaby Lewis launched a counterattack by hitting Gabriella Fontenla with three boundaries, but Ireland only managed 31/1 in the Powerplay. When Lewis was run out by Fraser in the eighth over, Scotland were rewarded for their continued effort to exert pressure. After that, Orla Prendergast and Amy Hunter put together a 30-run stand to keep Ireland in the race, but Fraser came back to bowl out Hunter in the 12th over. That wicket set off a collapse, and Gordon, playing her first international since 2018 and representing Scotland, took three wickets in the next over. Prendergast and Arlene Kelly put on a brisk 38-run stand that looked like a recovery, but in the 17th over, a bad second run cost Prendergast her wicket. In the subsequent over, Kelly attempted a similar second run but was run out. In the end, Ireland were run out for 121 in the final over. On June 18, Scotland plays West Indies in Leeds, and on June 16, Ireland plays host England in Southampton.