
Australia again introduced its renowned depth of launch in the collision of the World Cup of Women with Pakistan at the R premadasa stadium in Colombo. On Wednesday, October 8, Alan King created a rough half -century that saved Australia from a dangerous position. The 29 -year -old Allrounder advanced when Aussies rolled up to 76 at 21.2 overs after he was first asked for a bat.
The king remained undefeated at 51 out of 49 balls, hit three or six as many as Australia recovered to publish a competing 221 for nine for 50 overs. King, who comes to No. 10 with a score at 115 at eight, combined peace with the intention and created a 48-moon fifty, who changed the modest sum into combat.
Alan King shines in Colombo
Her knocking came at a time when Nasha Sandhu torn the best Australian and middle order with three goals, while Rameen Shamim and Fatima Sana got angry with two. Just as Pakistan looked ready for his first victory over Australia in the female international, the king turned the tide.
Australia vs Pakistan, update of the Women’s World Championship
She found an ideal partner in Beth Mooney, who anchored shifts with excellent 109 out of 114 balls. While Mooney held one end, King’s late onslaught of the much needed dynamics when she cleverly turned the strike before she started a sharp counterattack on the sailors of Pakistan.
The shifts also described King’s highest ODI score, which last year exceeded her previous best of 46 against Bangladesh in Mirpur-Calls about her development as a reliable lower-order dough. The ninth goal stand ensured that Australia had detonated 50 overs.
Since ODI debuted in 2022, King recorded 264 runs in 42 matches on average 18.85, emphasizing its growing value as a finisher in the Australian line -up. With the ball King flourished across all three formats for his national team.
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Published:
Sabyasachi Chowdhury
Published on:
8 October 2025