Sat, Jun 13 2026
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Litchfield fit as Australia bat against SA

Rafiq Hasan · · 2 min read
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Litchfield Fit as Australia Bat Against SA

A fit Phoebe Litchfield made the cut in an allrounder-heavy XI as Australia opted to bat against South Africa on a used Old Trafford surface in their Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 opener. In a rematch of the semi-final of the 2024 edition, Australia went in with as many as four spinners with Alana King’s superior ODI record against South Africa (15 wickets in five matches, average 8.26) influencing the decision.

Captain Sophie Molineux, legspinner Georgia Wareham and offspinner Ashleigh Gardner were the other spinners. As a result, Australia have four seamers and four spinners to turn to with Molienux saying “bowling in the fourth innings might suit us”. Litchfield had missed Australia’s last warm-up game with a quad strain but had regained fitness in time for their first match in tournament proper.

South Africa’s Lineup

South Africa, meanwhile, welcomed Shabnim Ismail back. The right-arm quick had retired from international cricket after South Africa’s runners-up finish in the home T20 World Cup of 2023, but reversed that decision just before this tournament. However, there was no place for former captain Dane van Niekerk and regular opener Tazmin Brits. Instead, South Africa had seam-bowling allrounder Annerie Dercksen in at No. 3 with Marizanne Kapp at No. 4, with Sune Luus opening the batting with captain Laura Wolvaardt.

South Africa also had as many as nine bowling options, including five seamers. The pitch was the same on which Scotland won their first T20 World Cup match earlier in the afternoon. It was fairly central with one square side (60m) being only slightly shorter than the other (61m).

Team Lineups

Australia: 1 Beth Mooney (wk), 2 Georgia Voll, 3 Phoebe Litchfield, 4 Ellyse Perry, 5 Ashleigh Gardner, 6 Georgia Wareham, 7 Annabel Sutherland, 8 Nicola Carey, 9 Sophie Molineux (capt), 10 Kim Garth, 11 Alana King

South Africa: 1 Laura Wolvaardt (capt), 2 Sune Luus, 3 Annerie Dercksen, 4 Marizanne Kapp, 5 Chloe Tryon, 6 Nadine de Klerk, 7 Kayla Reyneke 8 Sinalo Jafta (wk), 9 Shabnim Ismail, 10 Ayabonga Khaka, 11 Nonkululeko Mlaba

Rafiq Hasan

Rafiq Hasan is the chief cricket correspondent for The Daily Star, Bangladesh's largest English-language newspaper. Over his two-decade career, he has chronicked the rise of Bangladesh cricket from perennial underdogs to a formidable force in world cricket. Hasan has covered every major ICC event featuring Bangladesh and reported from the press boxes of Lord's, the MCG, and Mirpur. He has a deep understanding of the country's cricket ecosystem—from the Dhaka Premier League rivalries to the politics of the BCB. Known for his balanced analysis and insider access to the dressing room, he wrote the widely acclaimed long-form series "Tigers' Roar: How Bangladesh Changed the Cricket Map." A graduate of the University of Dhaka, Hasan is also a respected voice on global cricket diplomacy, exploring how the sport affects the balance of power in South Asia.