Alyssa Healy’s stated ambition on the eve of this Women’s Ashes was to “throw the first punch”. Mission very much accomplished. England limped away from North Sydney on Sunday evening with a bloody nose, whimpering to 204 all out in 43.1 overs – a total that, despite their best efforts, proved impossible to defend.
England undoubtedly missed the parsimonious bowling of Kate Cross, whose back injury continues to plague her; her fitness for the remainder of the series remains in doubt. But the real blame lay with the England batters, who played in classic “Jonball” fashion (the aggressive style to which coach Jon Lewis lends his name), lacking the patience required to see off Australia’s world-class attack. The hosts’ eventual margin of victory was just four wickets. Imagine what alternative outcome we might now be contemplating had England scored even 30 more runs.
Heather Knight and Danni Wyatt-Hodge tried their best, with scores of 39 and 38 respectively, but picked out fielders in the deep before turning their starts into anything substantial. So did England’s Great Ashes Hope Nat Sciver-Brunt, who mindlessly holed out to deep midwicket for 19, handing Ash Gardner a second wicket in as many overs. Alice Capsey smacked one straight to point; Amy Jones batted beautifully for 29 balls and then drove one back to Alana King as if she’d only just arrived at the crease. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.
At least the 6,236 spectators at North Sydney Oval got what they came to see: England humbled in an Ashes match (gender of the participants presumably irrelevant). The 25C sunshine was merely a nice bonus, as was local hero Healy’s match-winning 70 (78 balls) – her first half-century since March 2024, and a pleasing return to form after recent injury travails. Charlie Dean eventually snuck one under Healy’s bat and into her stumps in the 32nd over, but by then just 41 runs were needed, and Gardner and King finished the job with 67 balls to spare.
“Coming to a home Ashes with a sell-out crowd spurs you on to do well for your team and for your country,” Gardner said. “It was an awesome atmosphere today.”
The day had started with drama, after Megan Schutt bowled Maia Bouchier for a first-ball duck in the first over, only for it to be ruled a no-ball. But Bouchier continued to look overwhelmed by the occasion of her first Ashes match, repeatedly playing and missing to Kim Garth. Had there been any remaining doubts about Healy’s decision to keep wicket in this match (she was only ruled fit to do so 24 hours previously), they were quickly put to bed when she moved swiftly to her right to snaffle Bouchier’s edge, and hand Garth the first wicket of the Ashes.
“From a body point of view she [Healy] is going to take a lot of confidence out of keeping for as long as she did and then being able to back that up at the top of the order,” Gardner said.
A 50-run partnership between Beaumont and Knight helped take England to 92-2 in the first 19, but after Gardner’s double-strike in overs 20 and 22, the innings gradually ran out of steam, leaving the two Laurens Bell and Filer very little to bowl at. Filer’s opening spell did yield the wicket of Phoebe Litchfield, after she moved the ball across the left-hander and took her edge; it would have produced a second, had Capsey not embarrassingly shelled Ellyse Perry at deep backward square.
Fortunately Perry added just seven more runs before Bell rapped her on the pad and correctly convinced her captain to send the on-field not-out decision upstairs. “I’m really glad I stood my ground,” Bell said afterwards. England’s second drop of the day was more costly. Ecclestone had helped stall the Australian run-chase with her own bowling, but was left kicking herself when she put down Gardner at mid-off with 22 runs still needed. The catch looked such a sure thing that Bell admitted she was already celebrating when Ecclestone got up from the ground and revealed that the ball had actually popped out of her outstretched hands. “Sophie doesn’t drop many catches,” Bell said. “It could have changed the game – we’ll never know.” On such errors are Ashes victories forged.
Bell stressed that England would take confidence from the fact they had almost defended their below-par score, but a “reset” was required before the next match on Tuesday in Melbourne. “We’re one game into a pretty long series,” she said. “We’re 2-0 down but we’re going to have to start the next game and imagine it’s 0-0 and go again.”