Australia Win Record 7th ICC Women's T20 World Cup Title

Australia Win Record 7th ICC Women's T20 World Cup Title

By: Women Entrepreneurs Review Team | Monday, 6 July 2026

Australia reclaimed the ICC Women's T20 World Cup crown after defeating hosts England by seven wickets in the final at Lord's Cricket Ground, London, on July 5, 2026. The victory secured a record-extending seventh Women's T20 World Cup title and their 14th ICC women's world title across the T20 and ODI formats. Australia completed the tournament unbeaten, marking a return to the summit of women's T20 cricket after missing out on the previous two ICC white-ball events.

Key Highlights

  • Australia beat England by seven wickets to claim a record seventh Women's T20 World Cup title
  • Beth Mooney starred with 64 and won both Player of the Final and Player of the Tournament
  • Australia completed an unbeaten campaign and recorded the highest successful chase in a Women's T20 World Cup final

Captain Sophie Molineux won the toss and elected to bowl on a slow Lord's surface before a record tournament crowd of more than 28,000 spectators. Australia's disciplined bowling attack immediately placed England under pressure, dismissing Amy Jones for six and Danni Wyatt-Hodge for eight during the powerplay. England slipped further when Heather Knight departed cheaply, leaving the hosts struggling at 70-4.

England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt once again demonstrated her class, anchoring the innings with an unbeaten 58 from 53 deliveries. Freya Kemp provided valuable support with an unbeaten 44 off 28 balls as the pair added an unbroken 80-run partnership to lift England to 150-4 from 20 overs. Despite the defeat, Wyatt-Hodge finished the tournament with 302 runs, becoming the first player to surpass 300 runs in a single Women's T20 World Cup edition.

Australia's chase began with the early dismissal of Georgia Voll for nine, but Beth Mooney and Phoebe Litchfield quickly seized control of the contest. The pair combined for a match-winning 100-run second-wicket partnership in just 67 deliveries, taking Australia from 17-1 to 117-2 and removing any pressure from the chase.

Mooney produced another outstanding innings, scoring 64 from 49 balls to register her ninth Women's T20 World Cup half-century, equalling Sciver-Brunt's record for the most fifties in the tournament's history. Litchfield narrowly missed her half-century, contributing an assured 48 from 35 deliveries before Australia comfortably reached 153-3 in 17.1 overs, completing the highest successful run chase ever recorded in a Women's T20 World Cup final.

Mooney's remarkable performance earned her both the Player of the Final and Player of the Tournament awards, making her the first cricketer to claim both honours twice after achieving the same feat in 2020.

ICC Chairman Jay Shah described women's cricket as being in a "golden era", praising the record-breaking attendance and global interest generated by the tournament. He congratulated Australia on another outstanding campaign while commending England for reaching the final. The 2026 edition concluded as the biggest Women's T20 World Cup in history, highlighting the sport's continued growth and expanding global appeal.

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