Sarah Elliott
Encyclopedia
Sarah Jane Elliott is a female international cricketer for Australia. A right-handed batsman who also bowls leg spin
Leg spin
Leg spin is a type of spin bowling in the sport of cricket. A leg spinner bowls right-arm with a wrist spin action, causing the ball to spin from right to left in the cricket pitch, at the point of delivery. When the ball bounces, the spin causes the ball to deviate sharply from right to left, that...

, she made her international debut in 2005, but did not gain a regular position in the team until 2010.

Edwards made her senior debut for Victoria
Victorian Spirit
The Victorian Spirit are the women's representative cricket team for Victoria and they compete in the Women's National Cricket League. They are one of only two sides to win a WNCL title - 2002/3 & 2004/5....

 mid-way through the 2000–01 season soon after turning 19. At this stage of her career, Edwards was a specialist batsman and did not bowl her first ball in senior cricket until six years later. She was not productive with the bat in her first two seasons, and was dropped after making a duck in her only innings of the third season. Up to this point, she had made only 165 runs at 11.00. She regained her place in the 2003–04 season but averaged less than 10. Nevertheless, she was selected for the Australian Under-23 team and made 51 and 97 in matches against the Sri Lankan national team. Edwards made her breakthrough in the 2004–05 WNCL, scoring 281 runs, more than she had made in her first four seasons combined. She was selected for the 2005 tour of England, but was not selected in the Tests; she made her One Day International (ODI) debut in the last match but neither batted or bowled. Edwards was then dropped from the national team and did not play for Australia again until a solitary ODI at the start of the 2006–07 season. After scoring 332 runs in the WNCL season, she was given a consistent run in the national team for the first time, playing in just over half the matches during the year. She made only 37 runs at 7.40 and spent most of the following season's international fixtures watching from the sidelines as a reserve, playing in only two ODIs.

Edwards started the 2008–09 season by making her top-score in ODIs, 96, in her only innings in the series against India. However, she had a poor WNCL season with the bat, averaging 19.40. Although she began bowling regularly for the first time at senior level, and was successful with 11 wickets, Edwards was dropped from the ODI team, missing the 2009 World Cup
2009 Women's Cricket World Cup
The 2009 ICC Women's Cricket World Cup was the ninth edition of the tournament and was held in Australia from 7 to 22 March 2009, using the sport's One Day International format....

 and World Twenty20
2009 ICC Women's World Twenty20
The 2009 ICC Women's World Twenty20 competition took on a different format from that of the men's, having eight teams split into two pools followed directly by the semi-finals and final. All pool stage matches were played at the County Ground in Taunton...

.

In 2009–10 Edwards performed strongly with both bat and ball, scoring 300 runs and taking 14 wickets and was recalled to the national team. She played in all eight ODI matches against New Zealand in the Rose Bowl series at the end of the season, the first time she had played a full series for the national team. Edwards does not bowl regularly at international level as Lisa Sthalekar
Lisa Sthalekar
Lisa Carprini Sthalekar is a female cricketer who plays for Australia, and captains New South Wales. One of the key players in the team, she is a right-handed all rounder who bowls off spin, and was rated as the leading all rounder in the world when rankings were introduced...

 and Shelley Nitschke
Shelley Nitschke
Shelley Nitschke is a female cricketer who plays for South Australia and Australia. A left-handed batsman and left arm orthodox spinner, she is one of the leading all-rounders in the world....

—who are also spin bowling all-rounders—are ranked among the top ten bowlers in the world and do most of the slow bowling for Australia. She was a part of the team that won the 2010 World Twenty20
2010 ICC Women's World Twenty20
The 2010 ICC Women's World Twenty20 was an international Twenty20 cricket tournament which was held in the West Indies from 5 May to 16 May 2010. The group stage matches were played at the Warner Park Sporting Complex on Saint Kitts. It was won by Australia, who defeated New Zealand in the final...

, playing in all but one match.

Youth career

Edwards made was selected for the Victorian team for the national Under-19 tournament in January 2000, turning 18 during the early part of the competition. She made 55 in the third match against South Australia and recorded her top-score of 89 against the Australian Capital Territory. The Victorians won all of their seven matches except their round-robin match against New South Wales and the final against the same team. Edwards scored 224 runs at 32.00.

Domestic debut

At the start of the 2000–01 season, Edwards played in two Second XI matches for Victoria against New South Wales. She scored 7 and 46 and earned a call-up into the senior team for the double-header against New south Wales
New South Wales Breakers
The New South Wales Breakers are the women's representative cricket team for New South Wales and they compete in the Women's National Cricket League...

 in the Women's National Cricket League
Women's National Cricket League
The Women's National Cricket League is the national competition for women's cricket in Australia.The league competition involves the six member teams playing each other in two 50-over limited-over matches, with the side finishing at the top of the table after the preliminary rounds earning the...

 (WNCL). She scored 9 and 8 as the Victorians lost both matches. In the last match of the season against South Australia, she made 26 and ended the season with 46 runs at 11.50. At this stage of her career, Edwards played purely as a batsman and did not bowl at all in competition.

Edwards registered her maiden half-century in the first match of the 2001–02 WNCL against Queensland
Queensland Fire
The Queensland Fire are the women's representative cricket team for Queensland and they compete in the Women's National Cricket League.The Fire has played 104 matches for 36 wins, 1 tie, 4 no results and 63 losses.-External links:*The Homepage of...

, scoring 64 in a five-wicket win. She went into a form slump after that, failing to reach 15 in her remaining nine innings for the season, including three consecutive ducks. In the last two round-robin matches, against New South Wales, she made only five and seven in consecutive defeats, and when the teams met again a fortnight later for the finals series, she managed 13 and 5 as Victoria lost to the defending champions—who successfully chased down targets in both matches—2–0. Playing in all of Victoria's matches, Edwards ended her season with 119 runs at 11.90. These performances saw Edwards spend almost all of the 2002–03 season out of the state team; she made only one appearance, registering a duck against South Australia. Victoria went on to defeat New South Wales 2–0 in the finals. Up to this point she had a career average of 11.00.

Edwards regained a regular position for Victoria in the 2003–04 WNCL season, but again had little impact in the ten matches. Apart from 24 and 26 in the two matches against Western Australia, she failed to pass 15 in her six remaining innings, which included four scores below five. In one match, she not allowed to bat even after the fall of the seventh wicket, being shielded by her team despite nominally being a specialist batsman. Victoria met New South Wales in the finals, and lost 2–0. Edwards was again ineffective in the finals, scoring three and one. She ended the season with 77 runs at 9.62 and had problems running between the wickets, being run out three times out of eight dismissals.

Despite these consistently poor performances, Edwards was selected in the Australian Under-23 team captained by Leah Poulton
Leah Poulton
Leah Joy Poulton is a female Australian cricketer who plays for New South Wales and Australia. She is a specialist batsman who usually opens the batting....

 that toured Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka, officially the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka is a country off the southern coast of the Indian subcontinent. Known until 1972 as Ceylon , Sri Lanka is an island surrounded by the Indian Ocean, the Gulf of Mannar and the Palk Strait, and lies in the vicinity of India and the...

 in September 2004 to play the hosts' senior national team. She was not required to bat in the first one-dayer, before scoring 10 and 51 in the latter two fixtures. The visit ended with a first-class match between the two teams, and Edwards top-scored in the first innings with 97 as Australia took a 102-run lead. She made only five in the second innings before taking 1/10 to help seal a 130-run victory.

Edwards returned to Australia and performed much more productively in the 2004–05 WNCL than in previous years. She made 90 before being run out
Run out
Run out is a method of dismissal in the sport of cricket. It is governed by Law 38 of the Laws of cricket.-The rules:A batsman is out Run out if at any time while the ball is in play no part of his bat or person is grounded behind the popping crease and his wicket is fairly put down by the opposing...

 in the first match of the season against Western Australia, setting up a 74-run win. She made 35 in the second match the next day in a nine-wicket victory. In a round-robin match against reigning champions New South Wales, she reached 40 before being run out; Victoria went on to a three-wicket loss. The two teams met again in the finals series and Edwards halted her run of failures in finals. In the first match she made 64 but was unable to prevent a 21-run defeat. She then made 3 and 15 as the Victorians won the remaining finals by five wickets and 50 runs respectively to claim the WNCL. Edwards ended the season with 281 runs at 25.45. However, these performances were not enough for Edwards to win a position in the World Cup team.

International debut

After the 2005 World Cup in South Africa
South Africa
The Republic of South Africa is a country in southern Africa. Located at the southern tip of Africa, it is divided into nine provinces, with of coastline on the Atlantic and Indian oceans...

, several players retired and vacancies opened up in the national team. Edwards was selected for the senior Australian team to tour England
England
England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Scotland to the north and Wales to the west; the Irish Sea is to the north west, the Celtic Sea to the south west, with the North Sea to the east and the English Channel to the south separating it from continental...

 in mid-2005, but spent most of the tour on the sidelines. She did not play in the three One Day Internationals in Ireland
Ireland
Ireland is an island to the northwest of continental Europe. It is the third-largest island in Europe and the twentieth-largest island on Earth...

 at the start of the trip and was overlooked for the two Tests against England. It was not until the fifth and final ODI at the County Ground in Taunton
Taunton
Taunton is the county town of Somerset, England. The town, including its suburbs, had an estimated population of 61,400 in 2001. It is the largest town in the shire county of Somerset....

, Hampshire
Hampshire
Hampshire is a county on the southern coast of England in the United Kingdom. The county town of Hampshire is Winchester, a historic cathedral city that was once the capital of England. Hampshire is notable for housing the original birthplaces of the Royal Navy, British Army, and Royal Air Force...

 that she made her debut. She neither batted nor bowled; the hosts were all out for 256 and Australia reached the target with four wickets in hand, Edwards not being trusted to bat any higher than No. 9 if necessary, despite playing purely as a batsman. She played in the T20 international the day after, but was again not called upon to bat or bowl in her debut in the format.

During the 2005–06 season, Edwards scored 179 runs at 25.57, playing in all of Victoria's eight matches. Her best score was an unbeaten 72 against New South Wales, which was not enough to prevent a five-wicket defeat. She had earlier hit a 42 in a four-wicket win over South Australia. Victoria won only two of their matches and did not qualify for the final. Edwards was left out of the Australian side for the home ODI series and one-off Test against India held in Adelaide after the season. She was recalled for the five-match home ODI series against New Zealand at the start of the 2006–07 season, and played in the last match. She came to the crease at 5/108 with Australia in difficulty, still requiring a further 96 runs from 116 balls to reach their target of 204. Edwards scored an unbeaten 45 from 48 balls to guide Australia to a four-wicket win with 14 balls to spare in her first ODI on home soil at Allan Border Field
Allan Border Field
Allan Border Field is a small cricket ground in the Brisbane suburb of Albion in Queensland. The Australian Cricket Academy has been based at the oval since 2004 using it as a base for the development of elite cricketers throughout Australia....

.

Edwards performer consistently through most of the 2006–07 WNCL season, reaching 28 in each of her first six innings, including a 51 in a six-wicket win over New South Wales and an unbeaten 52 in another successful run-chase against Western Australia. After making single-figure scores in the last two round-robin matches against Queensland, she played in the three finals, which Victoria hosted after winning six of their eight qualifying matches. She made 22 and 25 in the first two matches and in the deciding match, made 38 before being run out
Run out
Run out is a method of dismissal in the sport of cricket. It is governed by Law 38 of the Laws of cricket.-The rules:A batsman is out Run out if at any time while the ball is in play no part of his bat or person is grounded behind the popping crease and his wicket is fairly put down by the opposing...

. New South Wales reached the target of 206 with three wickets in hand to defend their title. Edwards ended with 332 runs at 33.20. During the season, Edwards had defensive problems and was bowled in six of her ten dismissals. She also bowled for the first time at senior level, although it was not a success; her only over was hit for nine runs.

After the end of the Australian season, Edwards was selected for the ODI team for a four-nations tournament in Chennai
Chennai
Chennai , formerly known as Madras or Madarasapatinam , is the capital city of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, located on the Coromandel Coast off the Bay of Bengal. Chennai is the fourth most populous metropolitan area and the sixth most populous city in India...

, India
India
India , officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the seventh-largest country by geographical area, the second-most populous country with over 1.2 billion people, and the most populous democracy in the world...

. In addition to the hosts and Australia, New Zealand and England were also participating, and each team played each other twice in the round-robin phase. Edwards was allowed to bat at No. 5 at the start of the competition, but failed to make an impression. She made a duck and one in the first two round-robin matches against New Zealand and India, which Australia lost, and was dropped. She was recalled for the final qualifying match, scoring 20 from as many balls as Australia defeated the hosts by four wickets. She was then unbeaten on 8 from 16 balls as Australia defeated New Zealand by six wickets to win the tournament. Edwards ended the Indian tour with 29 runs at 9.66 at a strike rate of 58.00, and was retained for the Rose Bowl series against New Zealand hosted by Australia in the tropical northern city of Darwin
Darwin, Northern Territory
Darwin is the capital city of the Northern Territory, Australia. Situated on the Timor Sea, Darwin has a population of 127,500, making it by far the largest and most populated city in the sparsely populated Northern Territory, but the least populous of all Australia's capital cities...

 in the winter of 2007. She made four in the only T20 match, which Australia won by one wicket/run and continued to struggle in the five-match ODI series. After not being required to bat in the seven-wicket victory in the opening match, she struggled and made two from 21 balls in a 35-run defeat in the second match and was dropped. She was recalled for the fourth match and made six from 15 balls, and was omitted from the final match of the series. In all, she played in seven of Australia's twelve matches for the calendar year and made 37 runs at 7.40 with a strike rate of only 38.54.

Transformation into an all-rounder and omission from the 2009 World Cup

Edwards had a consistent season with the bat in 2007–08, scoring 214 runs at 30.57, playing in all of Victoria's eight matches. Her state won only three of their match and did not make the final. Edwards' best score was an unbeaten 44 in a seven-wicket loss to New South Wales. She also began bowling with regularity for the first time, delivering 23 overs and conceding 91 runs without taking a wicket, an economy rate of 3.95. In two T20 matches for Victoria, Edwards scored 55 not out and took 2/7 from two overs and two catches in a 102-run win over Queensland. She then made 20 in a nine-wicket defeat to South Australia. Just before the start of the Australia's international campaign, she hit an unbeaten 50 and took two catches in a nine-wicket win over the touring England,

These performances earned Edwards a recall into the national side for the bilateral series against England. She was not selected in the one-off T20 match and then was not included until the second ODI at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. She was not required to bat in her first international match in her home town, as Australia made 4/240 won by 84 runs. The third match was washed out and Edwards made 17 from 35 balls in the fourth match at the Sydney Cricket Ground; she batted at No. 8, typically a specialist bowler's position, despite playing purely as a batsman. Edwards was dropped for the final ODI and not selected in the one-off Test against England before the Australians headed to New Zealand for the Rose Bowl series. She made one in the T20 match, which Australia lost by four wickets and did not play in any of the five ODIs.

Edwards was selected for the home series against India before the 2008–09 WNCL. She was not required to bat in a six-wicket Australian win in the T20 match and was not used until the third ODI at North Sydney Oval
North Sydney Oval
-Development:* The first cricket pitch was laid on 6 December 1867, making it one of the oldest cricket grounds in Australia.* The first structure built, in 1879, was a simple pavilion overlooking the cricket ground...

, where she was allowed to bat at No. 3, the highest position she had occupied in an ODI. She top-scored with 96 from 129 balls including nine fours, to set up a 54-run win. She did not bat in the two remaining matches as Australia's top-order lost no more than three wickets in securing victories in both.

In the first match of the new WNCL season, Edwards struck 65 to set up a 45-run win over South Australia. In the next double-header against Queensland, she had success with the ball for the first time at WNCL or ODI level, taking 3/24 from ten overs to set up a four-wicket win, before taking another wicket in the second match the following day. She then had a prominent role with both bat and ball in the double-header against Western Australia. She scored 45 and took 3/22 to help secure a 47-run victory, before taking 2/34 and making 30 in a six-wicket win the following day. However, she was unable to produce this form against defending champions New South Wales, making a duck and 10 and taking only one wicket in their round-robin matches, both of which were lost. The teams met again in the final the following week, and she made 14 as her team were dismissed for 117. She took 1/11 from five overs as New South Wales won their fourth consecutive WNCL by six wickets. Edwards ended the tournament with only 194 runs at 19.40 and took 11 wickets at 16.27 at an economy rate of 3.37. In two T20 matches, she scored 15 runs at 7.50 and took three wickets at 11.00 at an economy rate of 5.50.

The selectors responded to Edwards' form slump with the bat by dropping her for the 2009 Rose Bowl series and the Women's World Cup held in New South Wales and Canberra. She was also omitted from the team for the World Twenty20 in England in 2009 and the bilateral series hosted by England immediately thereafter.

International recall

The WNCL was expanded in 2009–10 with the addition of the ACT, so ten round-robin matches were scheduled, and Edwards—now competing under her married name of Elliott—played in all but one. Having been dropped from the Australian team the previous season, she started well, making 52 and 30 as Victoria won both matches against Western Australia. She had trouble against New South Wales, making 16 and 11 before running into form against South Australia. She took 3/29 from ten overs in a 108-run win in the first match, before amassing 92 the next day and taking 2/45 in a 67-run win. In the next match against the ACT, she took 3/23 from her quota and then scored an unbeaten 53 to help Victoria avoid a defeat, scraping home by one wicket. Victoria met New South Wales in the final and were denied the title for the second season in a row. Elliott took 2/28 from her two overs and made 17 before being run out as the defending champions won by 59 runs. She ended the season with 300 runs at 33.33 and took 14 wickets at an average of 19.64 and an economy rate of 2.93.

Elliott had a successful time in the domestic T20s, now part of a full interstate tournament, scoring 144 runs at 36.00 and taking 13 wickets at 8.61 at an economy rate of 4.54 in seven matches. Elliott started the tournament by top-scoring with 63 and taking 3/11 from her four overs in a 74-run defeat of Western Australia. Against New South Wales, she scored 52 not out and then took 2/25 from her quota of overs to help secure a seven-run win. In the round-robin stage, Victoria won their first five matches before losing their last fixture against the ACT. They met New South Wales in the final, where Elliott made 17 before taking 1/13 from three overs as New South Wales were bowled out for 75, handing Victoria a 51-run win and the title.

Elliott's performances during the domestic season earned her a recall to the national team for the 2010 Rose Bowl series, and she played in each of the five ODIs during the Australian leg of the competition, and was used almost entirely as a specialist batsman at No. 4, as fellow spin bowling all-rounders Lisa Sthalekar
Lisa Sthalekar
Lisa Carprini Sthalekar is a female cricketer who plays for Australia, and captains New South Wales. One of the key players in the team, she is a right-handed all rounder who bowls off spin, and was rated as the leading all rounder in the world when rankings were introduced...

 and Shelley Nitschke
Shelley Nitschke
Shelley Nitschke is a female cricketer who plays for South Australia and Australia. A left-handed batsman and left arm orthodox spinner, she is one of the leading all-rounders in the world....

, ranked in the top five in the world, were used to do most of the slow bowling. Elliott started poorly with single-digit scores in the first two matches at the Adelaide Oval
Adelaide Oval
The Adelaide Oval is a sports ground in Adelaide, South Australia, located in the parklands between the Central Business District and North Adelaide...

, which Australia won. In the third match of the series at the Junction Oval
Junction Oval
The Junction Oval is an historic sports ground in the suburb of St Kilda in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Its location near the St Kilda Junction gave rise to its nickname...

, she scored 62 of Australia's 7/238, hitting five boundaries in a 101-ball innings. She then took 2/14 as Australia won by 102 runs and took an unassailable 3–0 lead. She did not take another wicket in the series and her only other double-digit score was a 25 from 52 balls in the final match. Elliott ended with 96 runs at 24.00 with a strike rate of 57.14, and two wickets at 10.50 at an economy rate of 2.33 as Australia whitewashed their visitors.

The ODIs were followed by five T20 internationals, three at Bellerive Oval
Bellerive Oval
Bellerive Oval, also known as its sponsored name Blundstone Arena, is primarily a cricket and Australian Rules Football ground located in Bellerive, City of Clarence, on the eastern shore of Hobart, Tasmania, Australia...

 in Hobart
Hobart
Hobart is the state capital and most populous city of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Founded in 1804 as a penal colony,Hobart is Australia's second oldest capital city after Sydney. In 2009, the city had a greater area population of approximately 212,019. A resident of Hobart is known as...

 and the last two in New Zealand. Elliott played in the first two matches scoring five and seven and taking one wicket in the first match. Australia lost both matches and she was dropped, before being recalled for the final match after two more victories to New Zealand. EElliott was out for four as New Zealand won all the T20 matches.

The competition ended with three ODIs on New Zealand soil, and Elliott scored consecutive half-centuries, 59 and 56 not out in the last two matches in Invercargill
Invercargill
Invercargill is the southernmost and westernmost city in New Zealand, and one of the southernmost cities in the world. It is the commercial centre of the Southland region. It lies in the heart of the wide expanse of the Southland Plains on the Oreti or New River some 18 km north of Bluff,...

. Both matches were won by six wickets and Elliott ended the series with 125 runs at 62.50 in a 3–0 whitewash. Her 59 in the second match came from only 62 balls to help Australia to their target of 256 and her unbeaten 56 the next day took 80 balls. In contrast, her only outing with the ball was not successful, conceding 22 runs from two overs.

2010 World Twenty20 triumph

Elliott was part of the 2010 World Twenty20
2010 ICC Women's World Twenty20
The 2010 ICC Women's World Twenty20 was an international Twenty20 cricket tournament which was held in the West Indies from 5 May to 16 May 2010. The group stage matches were played at the Warner Park Sporting Complex on Saint Kitts. It was won by Australia, who defeated New Zealand in the final...

 winning team in the West Indies and played in all but one of Australia's matches. In the first warm-up match against New Zealand, which Australia lost by 18 runs, Elliott took 1/17 from three overs, removing top-scorer Suzie Bates
Suzie Bates
Suzannah Wilson Bates is a New Zealand cricketer. She plays for the White Ferns and the Otago Sparks in the State League as well as for her national team...

 for 51. She then made 4 from 7 balls at the end of Australia's innings. In the last warm-up match against Pakistan, Elliott came in with two balls remaining and made 2 from 2 balls before being run out from the last ball as Australia made 5/166. She took one catch and did not bowl as Australia won by 82 runs.

Australia were grouped with defending champions England, South Africa and the West Indies. In the first match, Elliott did not bowl as England set Australia 105 for victory. She came in at 4/45 in the 10th over and struggled, scoring 4 from 15 balls before being dismissed. During her time at the crease, Australia lost 3/18 in 29 balls, and by the time she left, they needed 42 runs from 34 for victory with three wickets in hand. Eventually, Australia recovered, before Rene Farrell
Rene Farrell
Rene Farrell is an Australian cricketer. A fast-medium pace bowler, she is a current member of the Australian team.Although Farrell was successful in age-group interstate cricket, she did not make her senior debut for New South Wales until late in the 2006–07 season a month before turning 20...

 was run out
Run out
Run out is a method of dismissal in the sport of cricket. It is governed by Law 38 of the Laws of cricket.-The rules:A batsman is out Run out if at any time while the ball is in play no part of his bat or person is grounded behind the popping crease and his wicket is fairly put down by the opposing...

 going for the winning run from the third last ball available, leaving the scores tied.

A Super Over eventuated, and both teams made 2/6, suffering run outs in an attempt to secure a seventh run on the final ball. Australia was awarded the match because they had hit more sixes in the match—Jess Cameron
Jess Cameron
Jessica Evelyn Cameron is an Australian cricketer. A batsman, she is a current member of the Australian women's cricket team.Cameron made her debut for Victoria in the 2006–07 Women's National Cricket League...

 scored the solitary six.

In the next match against South Africa, Elliott came in and made eight runs from six balls before being run out. This was part of a collapse in the death overs and Australia were bowled out for 155 in the last over after losing 6/16. During the run-chase Elliott ran out Alicia Smith
Alicia Smith
Alicia Ester Smith , is a South Africa cricketer. She has made three Test and 37 Women's One Day International appearances for South Africa since 2003.-External links:...

. She bowled two overs but was expensive, conceding 22 runs without taking a wicket, as Australia completed a 22-run win.

Elliott had not had an impact with either bat or ball, and for the final group match against the hosts, she was dropped. The specialist off spin
Off spin
Off spin is a type of bowling in the sport of cricket which is bowled by an off spinner, a right-handed spin bowler who uses his or her fingers and/or wrist to spin the ball from a right-handed batsman's off side to the leg side...

ner Erin Osborne
Erin Osborne
Erin Alyse Osborne is a female cricketer who plays for New South Wales and Australia. An off spin bowler, she made her international debut in early 2009 after topping the wicket-taking aggregates in her debut season for New South Wales in the Women's National Cricket League...

 was brought in to strengthen the bowling. Osborne was not required to bat as Australia finished on 7/133, and was then expensive with the ball, taking 0/20 from two overs as Australia won by nine runs to finish the group stage unbeaten at the top of their quartet.

Australia went on to face India in the semi-final, and Elliott was brought back in place of Osborne. Elliott was required to neither bat nor bowl as the Indians ended with 3/119, which was chased down by the Australians with seven wickets and seven balls to spare.

Australia batted first in the final against New Zealand. A fourth-wicket partnership of 30 between Leah Poulton
Leah Poulton
Leah Joy Poulton is a female Australian cricketer who plays for New South Wales and Australia. She is a specialist batsman who usually opens the batting....

 and Cameron ended with both falling in the space of three balls, bringing Elliott and wicket-keeper Alyssa Healy
Alyssa Healy
Alyssa Jean Healy is a cricketer who plays for New South Wales and the Australian women's team...

 to the crease with the score at 5/51 in the 13th over. The pair put on 21 runs from 18 balls before Healy was run out
Run out
Run out is a method of dismissal in the sport of cricket. It is governed by Law 38 of the Laws of cricket.-The rules:A batsman is out Run out if at any time while the ball is in play no part of his bat or person is grounded behind the popping crease and his wicket is fairly put down by the opposing...

 attempting a second run after being dropped by Sara McGlashan
Sara McGlashan
Sara Jade McGlashan is a New Zealand cricketer who has played two women's test matches, 80 women's one-day internationals and 16 Twenty20 matches for the New Zealand. She is the sister of Peter McGlashan. She plays for the Central Districts in the State League.-References:...

.

Elliott made 19 not out from 20 balls, and together with Lisa Sthalekar
Lisa Sthalekar
Lisa Carprini Sthalekar is a female cricketer who plays for Australia, and captains New South Wales. One of the key players in the team, she is a right-handed all rounder who bowls off spin, and was rated as the leading all rounder in the world when rankings were introduced...

 put on 27 from 22 balls before the latter fell in the penultimate over. The Australians ended at 8/106. In the sixth over, Elliott ran towards the leg side from mid-off and caught Suzie Bates
Suzie Bates
Suzannah Wilson Bates is a New Zealand cricketer. She plays for the White Ferns and the Otago Sparks in the State League as well as for her national team...

 who skied a pull shot from Ellyse Perry
Ellyse Perry
Ellyse Alexandra Perry is an Australian sportswoman who made her debut for both the Australian cricket and football teams at the age of 16. She played her first cricket international in July 2007 before earning her first football cap for Australia a month later...

straight down the ground, as New Zealand collapsed to 4/29 in the eighth over. Australia went on to win by three runs.
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