Tim de Lisle 

Scotland v Ireland: Women’s T20 World Cup – live

Over-by-over updates: Join Tim de Lisle as two sides fresh off successful qualifiers meet at Old Trafford
  
  

Alice Tector of Ireland takes catch of Katherine Fraser of Scotland.
Alice Tector of Ireland takes catch of Katherine Fraser of Scotland. Photograph: Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty Images

7th over: Scotland 47-2 (K Bryce 13, S Bryce 1) Gaby Lewis keeps Canning on for a third over. The Bryces take a single apiece and then Kathryn goes on the attack again with a lofted cut for four, a force for two and a pull for two more. She has raced to 13 off only nine balls.

6th over: Scotland 37-2 (K Bryce 4, S Bryce 0) So the powerplay ends with Ireland on top. But the Bryce sisters are inn early and they are the big guns. Sraah starts more watchfully than her sister as Maguire’s over yields only two runs.

Wicket! Carter b Maguire 14 (Scotland 36-2)

One brings two! Gaby Lewis goes back to Aimee Maguire’s spin and her arm ball proves too much for Carter. With both openers back in the hutch, the fielders can feel good as they take drinks. Hot ones, I presume.

5th over: Scotland 35-1 (Carter 14, K Bryce 3) In comes Kathryn Bryce and she starts with a ramp for two. Very cool.

WIcket! Fraser c Tector b Canning 15 (Scotland 30-1)

It’s been coming. Fraser goes for another big hit and gets a top edge. The ball sails into the grey sky and somewhere in the deep, Alice Tector does very well to hold onto it. I say somewhere because the cameras lost track of the ball. That’s how windy it is.

Alice Tector of Ireland takes catch of Katherine Fraser of Scotland.
Alice Tector of Ireland takes catch of Katherine Fraser of Scotland. Photograph: Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty Images

Updated

4th over: Scotland 28-0 (Carter 12, Fraser 13) As Kelly continues, it’s Fraser’s turn to live dangerously. She clunks the first ball close to mid-on but collects two and celebrates with a four, chipped over mid-off. The Irish women think they’ve got her stumped, but she gets her foot down just in the nick of time.

3rd over: Scotland 21-0 (Carter 12, Fraser 6) Now it’s medium pace from both ends as Ava Canning replaces Maguire. Carter keeps swinging, chopping over the covers, pulling over midwicket, keeping every fielder interested but picking up two twos. With a pair of singles and a wide, the scoreboard is ticking over nicely.

Updated

2nd over: Scotland 13-0 (Carter 7, Fraser 4) It’s seam from the other end, from Arlene Kelly, though Hunter stays up to the stumps. Fraser picks up two with a tuck and a single with a pull. Kelly keeps Carter quiet and beats the bat outside off, but then Carter slogs to leg and again comes close to being caught in the deep.

1st over: Scotland 7-0 (Carter 5, Fraser 1) It’s Aimee Maguire, slow left-arm with a bustling run-up. She starts with a small stroke of luck as Darcey Carter misses a clip to leg. Then Carter clumps a single down the ground. Katherine Fraser, greeted by a short mid-on, reacts by trying to play square and misses with a sweep. She changes tack, dances down the pitch, drives for a single – that’s better. Carter follows suit, goes big and flirts with danger but just gets her on-drive over the woman at deep mid-on. Scotland are away!

Updated

The Irish keeper , Amy Hunter, has her helmet on. So Gaby Lewis is handing the new ball to a spinner.

The anthems: a win for Scotland

Out come the players, each holding the hand of a mascot. Tweenagers rather than tinies, the mascots oook a bit sheepish. The spectators, in their hoodies and kagoules, are invited to stand if they are able. The Irish anthem comes first and it’s fine, but Scotland have the edge with a re-recorded version of Flower Of Scotland. It’s sung by a girls’ choir from George Watson’s College, the sporting powerhouse that produced Kathryn Bryce, her sister Sarah, and the 18-year-old seamer Gabriella Fontenla. And it’s piercingly good: there may be goosebumps in the crowd, and not just because of the cold.

Updated

About last night

This World Cup started with a bang, not a whimper, thanks to Danni Wyatt-Hodge. Last month she gave birth to a daughter, Daisy; last night she blew Sri Lanka away.

The teams

Scotland 1 Darcey Carter, 2 Katherine Fraser, 3 Kathryn Bryce (capt), 4 Sarah Bryce, 5 Megan McColl, 6 Priyanaz Chatterji, 7 Ailsa Lister (wkt), 8 Rachel Slater, 9 Chloe Abel, 10 Kirstie Gordon, 11 Gabriella Fontenla.

Ireland 1 Amy Hunter (wkt), 2 Alana Dalzell, 3 Gaby Lewis (capt), 4 Orla Prendergast, 5 Rebecca Stokell, 6 Leah Paul, 7 Alice Tector, 8 Arlene Kelly, 9 Ava Canning, 10 Cara Murray, 11 Aimee Maguire.

Updated

It's not raining!

… but it is cold. And so windy that, at the toss, everybody’s trousers were billowing like billy-ho. So both sides should be very much at home.

Toss: Ireland put Scotland in

Gaby Lewis of Ireland wins the toss. “We’re going to have a bowl,” she says. “It’s obviously overcast and the wicket’s been under cover.” Kathryn Bryce is honest enoiugh to say that she would have bowled first too.

Preamble

Morning everyone and welcome to a rather different World Cup. One in which expanding the tournament means going from ten nations to 12. One in which we never hear a word from a tinpot dictator. One in which every match official makes it through the airport.

Today begins with a small piece of cricket history: the first meeting between Scotland and Ireland in a women’s World Cup. As Raf Nicholson, our resident expert, said in her tournament preview, it should be a cracker.

By mid-afternoon, we’ll almost certainly have another piece of history: the first win for either of these sides in a T20 World Cup. Ireland have made it to the finals four times before, playing 17 games and losing the lot. Scotland appeared for the first time in 2024, playing four games and also losing the lot. In sport, as Emma John observed in a wise column about the Ben Stokes shemozzle, everyone’s a loser.

Gaby Lewis, Ireland’s captain, says there’s a “massive rivalry” between the two nations. History is on Ireland’s side: in 15 T20 meetings with Scotland, all in the past eight years, they have won nine and lost six. But form is with Kathryn Bryce and Scotland, who won the last three of those games, including the latest, a World Cup qualifier in Nepal.

Both may be eyeng more than just a first victory. They’re in the gentler of the two groups with only one big gun – their mutual foes, England. Second place is expected to go to New Zealand (who are 4th in the world rankings), Sri Lanka (6th) or West Indies (7th), but Ireland (9th) and Scotland (11th) are entitled to dream of an upset. And both of them, when they face that lot, should have the edge in one crucial aspect of the game: reading the weather.

The Manchester climate may have something to say today with showers forecast around the start, though they’re unlikely to prevent a result. All being well, I’ll be back soon with news of the toss and the teams.

 

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