Australia Women 70/1 in 6.4 overs | T20 Women’s World Cup Final, England Vs. Australia Live score: First blow for Australia! Georgia Voll falls for England at 150/4

Women’s T20 World Cup Final Live Score: England will look to end Australia’s dominance in women’s T20 cricket when the two teams meet in the final of the Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 at Lord’s on Sunday.

A full house of 31,180 fans is expected at the iconic venue as England aim to maintain their remarkable record in World Cups at home. The hosts have never lost a World Cup on home soil, having won all four previous editions hosted in England.

Standing in their way are six-time champions Australia, who are chasing a record-long seventh Women’s T20 World Cup title.

Familiar opponents will meet again in the final

It will be the fourth Women’s T20 World Cup final between England and Australia. The two sides have previously met in title fights in 2012, 2014 and 2018.

England are chasing just their second Women’s T20 World Cup crown after winning the inaugural tournament in 2009, also played at Lord’s. Current England head coach Charlotte Edwards captained this historic triumph.

Australia, meanwhile, have dominated the competition over the years, winning the trophy in 2010, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2020 and 2023.

Australia enter the final with confidence

Australia will go into the final full of confidence after their dominant performances throughout the tournament.

They also have a psychological advantage, having handed England a 16-0 Ashes lime in Australia earlier last year, including a 3-0 sweep of the T20I series.

Led by new captain Sophie Molineux, Australia continue their winning streak. Molineux was also their leading goalscorer with 10 goals in six games.

The defending champions booked their place in the final by knocking out India at Lord’s before beating the West Indies by eight wickets in the semi-final.

Australia were boosted by the return of Phoebe Litchfield from a quadriceps injury in the win over India. However, veteran all-rounder Ellyse Perry’s fitness remains a concern after she suffered a quadriceps injury in the semi-final against West Indies. However, Perry was training on the eve of the final.

England bolstered by return of captain

England received a big boost with captain Natalie Sciver-Brunt returning to form at the perfect time. Against South Africa, she played a match-winning knock of 75 off 47 balls to help England reach the final.

Opener Danni Wyatt-Hodge also enjoyed an excellent tournament. She is currently the leading run-scorer in the competition with 294 runs and will once again be key to England’s hopes of lifting the trophy in front of their home crowd.