Northern Diamonds 215-9
Southern Vipers 213-9
Diamonds won by two runs
Lauren Winfield-Hill and Linsey Smith made it third time lucky for Northern Diamonds as they finally beat Southern Vipers by two runs in a thriller at Lord’s to get their hands on the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy.
Diamonds had come up short against Vipers in the two previous finals, but Winfield-Hill hit 65 and Smith 27 in an opening stand of 83 to form the basis of their total of 215-9, Bess Heath later adding 44 while Georgia Adams returned figures of three for 34 and Paige Scholfield two for 36.
Adams then made 70 with the bat, while Maia Bouchier weighed in with a spectacular 48, but the spin wizardry of Smith (two for 24) and three victims behind the stumps for Winfield-Hill saw Vipers come up just short in a breathless finish.
The day also saw Charlie Dean playfully pretend to ‘Mankad’ Smith during the Diamonds innings, evoking thoughts of her runout by that means at the hands of India’s Deepti Sharma in the ODI 24 hours earlier.
Winfield-Hill, the tournament’s leading run-scorer towered over the opening stages of the final. The England international drove the ball exquisitely, mainly through the off-side, one back-foot punch through cover a thing of beauty.
Fellow opener Smith should have been stumped by Chloe Hill after dancing the pitch to Charlotte Taylor, but the chance went begging. Taylor though would soon extract revenge, Smith chipping one back to the spinner.
Winfield-Hill pressed on to an elegant 50 with seven fours, but Hollie Armitage, like Smith, struggled to time the ball. Nevertheless, the score reached 114-1 before Armitage took an ugly swipe at Scholfield and was bowled.
A dramatic collapse was triggered as Sterre Kalis fell first ball, Scholfield finding movement off the pitch to take the ball between bat and pad and uproot the off-stump once more. Phoebe Turner survived the hat-trick ball only to miss a straight one from Taylor in the following over and disaster followed as Winfield-Hill’s serene innings ended on 65, run out by Georgia Elwiss’ return from cover. Four wickets had fallen for five runs in 17 balls and Diamonds were teetering on the brink.
Heath and Leah Dobson stopped the bleeding, slowly at first before acceleration came late in a stand of 85. Heath struck Georgia Adams for three boundaries in quick succession before becoming the first of a trio of late wickets for the Vipers’ skipper, two coming off successive balls in the final over.
Chasing 216 Vipers lost Ella McCaughan to the miserly Smith and Elwiss was castled by a huge in-swinger from Lizzie Scott.
Bouchier led the fightback, hitting first Katy Levick back over her head for four before taking heavy toll of the spin of Leigh Kasperek as a 50 partnership with Adams rattled up in a hurry.
Diamonds needed inspiration but instead got a large slice of luck when Bouchier belted an Armitage full toss straight to Smith at cover.
That brought Windsor to the crease, who signalled her intent with a dreamy cover-drive for four, but Armitage would account for her too as she nicked one through to Winfield-Hill.
Dean though picked up where she left off with England 24 hours earlier as 13 came from Armitage’s penultimate over and the pendulum appeared to swing back towards Vipers once again.
She was given a life on 26 in Armitage’s next over when Levick grassed the chance at point. Fortunately, it wasn’t costly as she would clout a Kaseperek long-hop down the throat of short mid-wicket with 53 still needed.
Adams remained having gone almost unnoticed to 50 with only one four, but when she was stumped by Winfield-Hill from the bowling of Levick 20 were needed from the final two overs.
Smith bowled Scholfield amid rising tension and 13 from the final over proved just too many.
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Northern Diamonds wicketkeeper Lauren Winfield-Hill said: “I’m chuffed to bits. We’ve come close against the Vipers a few times now and we’ve got a few wounds against them you know where they have always managed to get over the line
“But this year our preparation, how tight we’ve been as a team and how different people have contributed at different times and that was the difference today.
“We’re all Captain Hindsight, aren’t we, but I think potentially they could have looked to accelerate a bit earlier. But it felt like one of those wickets where as soon as you tried to do that you were vulnerable. We just managed to hold our nerve and limit the boundaries.
“It’s no secret that I found the last winter hard, bubbles hard and being dropped from England hard and I was in a bad place in cricket, away from cricket everything. I could barely function as a human being.
“So, to be able to turn it around, fall in love with the game again and take pressure off myself has been the most enjoyable bit. I’ve loved every game and it’s reflected in the way I’ve performed.”
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Southern Vipers skipper Georgia Adams said: “Obviously we are absolutely gutted not to get over the line today but I think they were the better side in the end.
“We probably needed a few more partnerships with the bat and to rotate the strike a bit more. We left ourselves too much to do at the end.
“We suspected the pitch could take a bit of spin but we knew their spinners don’t tend to actually turn the ball. But they bowled well, kept coming at us and showed a little bit more fight there at the end.
“It felt like we were falling behind the rate and needed to get up to that run a ball. While it was a run-a-ball, we felt confident and comfortable. We felt we needed to go some and could get there as long as we stayed disciplined but it wasn’t to be.”