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Caleb Williams’ Packers dagger gave the Bears more than just a win

Caleb Williams’ Packers dagger gave the Bears more than just a win

The Green Bay Packers have inflicted nothing short of psychological terror on the Chicago Bears over the last three-plus decades. Since the dawn of the Brett Favre era in 1992, the Packers have beaten the Bears in 78 percent of their matchups, and somehow it doesn’t even feel that close. The individual moments haunt Chicago’s collective conscience: there’s Robert Brooks’ 99-yard touchdown at Soldier Field in 1995 that broke my 8-year-old heart, Chris Conte blowing the coverage on Randall Cobb’s go-ahead score in 2013 that pushed the Bears out of the playoff picture, and Aaron Rodgers telling Soldier Field “I still own you” after a TD run in 2021. The trauma from the 2011 NFC Championship Game that put Green Bay into a Super Bowl it won still lives rent free inside my head, partly because there haven’t been many feel-good moments since.

For once, Chicago was confident going into Packers Week as the two teams met again in Week 16. The Bears entered at 10-4, and were in the process of being revitalized under first-year head coach Ben Johnson. They played the Packers close two weeks ago, roaring back to life in the second half to get to the doorstep of victory before Caleb Williams threw a rare game-ending interception. The Bears had the look of a young team potentially ready to grow into a real contender, while Green Bay had to deal with the loss of their biggest game-wrecker after Micah Parsons tore his ACL a week earlier.

For first 58 minutes of the Week 16 matchup, Chicago’s pregame optimism looked downright delusional. The Packers put the Bears in a headlock once again, dominating the time of possession to take a late two-score lead even after star QB Jordan Love joined Parsons on the injured list in the second quarter. Malik Willis and a power running game were willing the Packers to victory, and a city was forced into a sobering acceptance that even a feel-good Bears is still likely to be scarred by their cheese-wearing neighbors to the north.

Fast forward about 30 minutes of real time, and Chicago had the catharsis it desperately needed. The Bears beat the Packers, 22-16, in the most incredible comeback of a season full of them. Caleb Williams delivered a dagger straight into the heart of Green Bay with perhaps the greatest throw in the Bears’ 100+ year franchise history: a fadeaway dart that cut through a strong crosswind to sail 57 yards through the air and perfectly into the outstretched arms of D.J. Moore, who had maybe a half-step on a Green Bay defender. It literally isn’t possible for a Bears quarterback to have a better regular season moment:

For most of the night, the Bears were getting bullied by the Packers without Parsons and Love in a game that saw them get thoroughly out-played and out-coached. Somehow, it ended with Johnson launching into his signature “Good, Better, Best” locker room speech to a raucous audience, D.J. Moore was wearing a cheese grater hat, and Williams making the type of throw that validated his No. 1 overall draft status and “generational” hype.

A day later, Williams had the cheese grater hat and was still wearing it while giving back to the community in the city:

It took a miracle for the Bears’ win probability to go from 0.5 percent to the jubilation they felt after Moore tracked down the winning touchdown. The Packers had to go 0-for-5 on drives inside Chicago’s 10-yard-line, including a fumble forced by takeaway master Nashon Wright when Green Bay was near the goal line in the third quarter. It took Cairo Santos rushing to make a 43-yard field goal through the wind, the Bears recovering an onside kick that usually has a 90+ percent chance of failure, Williams finding Jahdae Walker at the back pylon for his second career catch to tie the game on 4th down, and Willis fumbling to end the Packers’ first possession of overtime. Somehow, the Bears won a game without making the Packers punt once, the first time they’ve done that since 1945.

It wasn’t the first walk-off bomb of Williams’ career. Seven years earlier, he was a high school sophomore at Gonzaga DC who hit a 55-yard Hail Mary to stun rival DeMatha in the state championship game. That was the start of Caleb’s legend, which made him a 5-star recruit that landed at Oklahoma before leaving for USC, and eventually winning the Heisman and being selected with the first pick in the draft. It took a wild set of circumstances for him to land in Chicago, and while it’s been a bumpy road at times to start his NFL career, the Bears have never had a QB cold enough to make that throw to beat Green Bay in that moment. When the pressure is on, Williams has consistently been at his best the all season. He’s taking the “Iceman” moniker given to him by rookie receiver Luther Burden and earning it almost every time out.

Williams has faced a ton of backlash since he entered the public eye as a college player. He was one of the first superstars of the NIL and transfer portal era, reportedly earning $10 million and a sweet downtown apartment in his dealing with USC. After winning the Heisman as a sophomore, Williams’ junior season didn’t feel quite as successful as the Trojans finished only 8-5. Williams was criticized for painting his nails, and crying in the stands with his mom after a loss. NFL scouts compared him to Prince like it was a bad thing.

The Bears never waived in their belief that Williams was their pick at No. 1, but his rookie year was marred by a thoroughly incompetent coaching staff led by Matt Eberflus. The QB who went behind him, Jayden Daniels, beat the Bears on a Hail Mary and looked like a future superstar right of the rip. Williams presided over a 10-game losing streak starting with the Commanders game, and Eberflus became the first head coach the team had ever fired in-season. The Bears somehow got the coaching search right when Ben Johnson, architect of the NFL’s most explosive offense in Detroit, picked Chicago this offseason mostly because he wanted to work with Williams.

Caleb’s second season has been a little rocky at times, but there have been major areas of growth from his rookie year. He’s cut way down on his sacks, he almost never throws an interception, and the Bears have been among the league-leaders in explosive plays on offense all year. Williams is a gun slinger with an incredible ability to escape pressure and extend plays. He might have the most powerful arm in the league this side of Josh Allen. His most freakish ability though might be his penchant for avoiding turnovers.

Maybe one day this throw will be remembered as the start of Bears’ new golden era. Johnson is only 39 years old and already looks like one of the NFL’s best head coaches. Williams is 24 years old, and should only keep getting better. With Rome Odunze (23 years old), Luther Burden (22 years old), and Colston Loveland (21 years old), the Bears have some serious weapons around their super talented QB with a genius playcaller leading the way. They all have multiple years left on their rookie contracts after this season, setting up the Bears for a three-year window where they can make a serious push in the NFC before they have to pay Caleb.

Of course, football nirvana rarely comes that easily. The Bears are currently 5th in the NFL in winning percentage, but they’re only No. 15 in point-differential, typically a better look at team quality. They’ve spent the entire season needing last-second wins to beat terrible teams who were usually playing their backup quarterback. Even skeptics started to believe when the Bears went on the road and beat the reigning champion Philadelphia Eagles the day after Thanksgiving. This win will give even more juice to the idea that this year’s Bears may not be great, but it’s possible they’re developing into a “team of destiny” during a season without a true front-runner looming as the Super Bowl favorites.

Williams’ throw felt like an exorcism, but the Packers won’t be expelled that easily. If nothing else, the Bears finally feel like they can go toe-to-toe with Green Bay for the first time in ages, and now they have a signature moment of their own to fuel hopes of regaining control of the rivalry. A great Bears season that still finishes 0-2 against Green Bay still isn’t acceptable. With one flick of the wrist, Williams even the scales. At least for a moment, the next 10 years of Bears-Packers doesn’t feel as doomed as the last 30.

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Deadspin | Nats’ Luis Garcia Jr., Astros’ Yordan Alvarez showing no mercy to pitchers this season  Jun 24, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals first baseman Luis Garcia Jr. (2) reacts after hitting a single against the Philadelphia Phillies during the fifth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images   Luis Garcia Jr. looks to continue his home run barrage as the Washington Nationals open a three-game home series against the Houston Astros on Monday.  The 26-year-old Nationals first baseman has been on a tear lately with nine homers in his last 12 games. He’s cranked 16 homers since May 25 and is second in the National League with 64 RBIs, but the Nationals are just one game over .500 after losing two of three to the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates.  Garcia set a career high with his 19th home run, a two-run shot on Sunday in an 11-5 loss to the Pirates. Garcia credits a swing adjustment for the hot streak.  “We found something special about my swing that we have right now and just trying to put the ball up in the air,” Garcia said after Friday’s 9-5 win in which he went deep twice against Pittsburgh. “That’s probably the success that we’ve seen the last couple of months.”  Washington manager Blake Butera didn’t waste any time Sunday getting rookie reliever Eddy Yean his first taste of big-league action. The right-hander took the roster spot of outfielder Robert Hassell III, who was designated for assignment on Sunday.  Yean made his major league debut when the native of the Dominican Republic entered in the third inning and posted two innings of scoreless relief, walking one and fanning three.  “It has been really good, the strike throwing,” Butera said. “It’s a good fastball, it’s a sinker profile, good velocity, 96-97 mph. He’s had a lot of success this year in Triple-A. Also, (he’s) just a really good person. I’m sure you saw the big smile. He’s excited to be here. His teammates love him, everybody in the organization loves him.”  Yean, who provided depth in the bullpen, was optioned back to Triple-A Rochester after the game.  On Sunday, the Astros offense was held to a pair of solo home runs from Christian Walker and Isaac Paredes, but starter Peter Lambert combined with relievers Steven Okert, Bryan King and Josh Hader for a 2-0, four-hit shutout of the visiting Tampa Bay Rays.  The Astros have won six of their last seven. Lambert said he trusts the relievers to finish games.  “They’ve been nails all year,” Lambert said.   Four-time All-Star Yordan Alvarez leads the majors in RBIs (67), on-base percentage (.429), slugging percentage (.637), OPS (1.065) and total bases (207) and also tops the American League in hits (104) and home runs (29). He’s the Astros’ top hitter with a .320 batting average.   Alvarez, 29, was voted in as the designated hitter for the American League in the July 14 All-Star Game.  “You can make an argument that, in my opinion, he’s the best hitter in the major leagues,” Astros manager Joe Espada said. “But I think we should also recognize who he is as an individual. I think that makes it more special for me to come here every day and watch him play.”  Mike Burrows (4-8, 5.58 ERA) is scheduled to start for Houston. He closed June by collecting his first victory of the month in a 6-4 home win against the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday. He allowed four runs on six hits with two walks and three strikeouts over five innings.  The right-hander has one career start against the Nationals. He didn’t factor into the decision and yielded three runs on five hits, walking one and fanning six over 4 1/3 innings in September 2025 while with the Pirates.  After one bullpen appearance on June 19, Burrows returned to the rotation and posted starts of six and five innings.  Washington is set to counter with right-hander Miles Mikolas (2-7, 5.44). In his last outing, Mikolas yielded six runs on nine hits with no walks and three strikeouts in seven innings in a 6-3 road loss to the Boston Red Sox on Monday.  It was his first start since May 12. He’s pitching while appealing a five-game suspension issued after Tuesday’s bench-clearing incident against the Red Sox.  Mikolas has four career starts against the Astros and is 1-1 with a 7.65 ERA. He has walked six and fanned 16 in 20 innings.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Nats #Luis #Garcia #Astros #Yordan #Alvarez #showing #mercy #pitchers #seasonJun 24, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals first baseman Luis Garcia Jr. (2) reacts after hitting a single against the Philadelphia Phillies during the fifth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images

Luis Garcia Jr. looks to continue his home run barrage as the Washington Nationals open a three-game home series against the Houston Astros on Monday.

The 26-year-old Nationals first baseman has been on a tear lately with nine homers in his last 12 games. He’s cranked 16 homers since May 25 and is second in the National League with 64 RBIs, but the Nationals are just one game over .500 after losing two of three to the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates.

Garcia set a career high with his 19th home run, a two-run shot on Sunday in an 11-5 loss to the Pirates. Garcia credits a swing adjustment for the hot streak.

“We found something special about my swing that we have right now and just trying to put the ball up in the air,” Garcia said after Friday’s 9-5 win in which he went deep twice against Pittsburgh. “That’s probably the success that we’ve seen the last couple of months.”

Washington manager Blake Butera didn’t waste any time Sunday getting rookie reliever Eddy Yean his first taste of big-league action. The right-hander took the roster spot of outfielder Robert Hassell III, who was designated for assignment on Sunday.

Yean made his major league debut when the native of the Dominican Republic entered in the third inning and posted two innings of scoreless relief, walking one and fanning three.

“It has been really good, the strike throwing,” Butera said. “It’s a good fastball, it’s a sinker profile, good velocity, 96-97 mph. He’s had a lot of success this year in Triple-A. Also, (he’s) just a really good person. I’m sure you saw the big smile. He’s excited to be here. His teammates love him, everybody in the organization loves him.”

Yean, who provided depth in the bullpen, was optioned back to Triple-A Rochester after the game.

On Sunday, the Astros offense was held to a pair of solo home runs from Christian Walker and Isaac Paredes, but starter Peter Lambert combined with relievers Steven Okert, Bryan King and Josh Hader for a 2-0, four-hit shutout of the visiting Tampa Bay Rays.

The Astros have won six of their last seven. Lambert said he trusts the relievers to finish games.


“They’ve been nails all year,” Lambert said.

Four-time All-Star Yordan Alvarez leads the majors in RBIs (67), on-base percentage (.429), slugging percentage (.637), OPS (1.065) and total bases (207) and also tops the American League in hits (104) and home runs (29). He’s the Astros’ top hitter with a .320 batting average.

Alvarez, 29, was voted in as the designated hitter for the American League in the July 14 All-Star Game.

“You can make an argument that, in my opinion, he’s the best hitter in the major leagues,” Astros manager Joe Espada said. “But I think we should also recognize who he is as an individual. I think that makes it more special for me to come here every day and watch him play.”

Mike Burrows (4-8, 5.58 ERA) is scheduled to start for Houston. He closed June by collecting his first victory of the month in a 6-4 home win against the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday. He allowed four runs on six hits with two walks and three strikeouts over five innings.

The right-hander has one career start against the Nationals. He didn’t factor into the decision and yielded three runs on five hits, walking one and fanning six over 4 1/3 innings in September 2025 while with the Pirates.

After one bullpen appearance on June 19, Burrows returned to the rotation and posted starts of six and five innings.

Washington is set to counter with right-hander Miles Mikolas (2-7, 5.44). In his last outing, Mikolas yielded six runs on nine hits with no walks and three strikeouts in seven innings in a 6-3 road loss to the Boston Red Sox on Monday.

It was his first start since May 12. He’s pitching while appealing a five-game suspension issued after Tuesday’s bench-clearing incident against the Red Sox.

Mikolas has four career starts against the Astros and is 1-1 with a 7.65 ERA. He has walked six and fanned 16 in 20 innings.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Nats #Luis #Garcia #Astros #Yordan #Alvarez #showing #mercy #pitchers #season">Deadspin | Nats’ Luis Garcia Jr., Astros’ Yordan Alvarez showing no mercy to pitchers this season  Jun 24, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals first baseman Luis Garcia Jr. (2) reacts after hitting a single against the Philadelphia Phillies during the fifth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images   Luis Garcia Jr. looks to continue his home run barrage as the Washington Nationals open a three-game home series against the Houston Astros on Monday.  The 26-year-old Nationals first baseman has been on a tear lately with nine homers in his last 12 games. He’s cranked 16 homers since May 25 and is second in the National League with 64 RBIs, but the Nationals are just one game over .500 after losing two of three to the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates.  Garcia set a career high with his 19th home run, a two-run shot on Sunday in an 11-5 loss to the Pirates. Garcia credits a swing adjustment for the hot streak.  “We found something special about my swing that we have right now and just trying to put the ball up in the air,” Garcia said after Friday’s 9-5 win in which he went deep twice against Pittsburgh. “That’s probably the success that we’ve seen the last couple of months.”  Washington manager Blake Butera didn’t waste any time Sunday getting rookie reliever Eddy Yean his first taste of big-league action. The right-hander took the roster spot of outfielder Robert Hassell III, who was designated for assignment on Sunday.  Yean made his major league debut when the native of the Dominican Republic entered in the third inning and posted two innings of scoreless relief, walking one and fanning three.  “It has been really good, the strike throwing,” Butera said. “It’s a good fastball, it’s a sinker profile, good velocity, 96-97 mph. He’s had a lot of success this year in Triple-A. Also, (he’s) just a really good person. I’m sure you saw the big smile. He’s excited to be here. His teammates love him, everybody in the organization loves him.”  Yean, who provided depth in the bullpen, was optioned back to Triple-A Rochester after the game.  On Sunday, the Astros offense was held to a pair of solo home runs from Christian Walker and Isaac Paredes, but starter Peter Lambert combined with relievers Steven Okert, Bryan King and Josh Hader for a 2-0, four-hit shutout of the visiting Tampa Bay Rays.  The Astros have won six of their last seven. Lambert said he trusts the relievers to finish games.  “They’ve been nails all year,” Lambert said.   Four-time All-Star Yordan Alvarez leads the majors in RBIs (67), on-base percentage (.429), slugging percentage (.637), OPS (1.065) and total bases (207) and also tops the American League in hits (104) and home runs (29). He’s the Astros’ top hitter with a .320 batting average.   Alvarez, 29, was voted in as the designated hitter for the American League in the July 14 All-Star Game.  “You can make an argument that, in my opinion, he’s the best hitter in the major leagues,” Astros manager Joe Espada said. “But I think we should also recognize who he is as an individual. I think that makes it more special for me to come here every day and watch him play.”  Mike Burrows (4-8, 5.58 ERA) is scheduled to start for Houston. He closed June by collecting his first victory of the month in a 6-4 home win against the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday. He allowed four runs on six hits with two walks and three strikeouts over five innings.  The right-hander has one career start against the Nationals. He didn’t factor into the decision and yielded three runs on five hits, walking one and fanning six over 4 1/3 innings in September 2025 while with the Pirates.  After one bullpen appearance on June 19, Burrows returned to the rotation and posted starts of six and five innings.  Washington is set to counter with right-hander Miles Mikolas (2-7, 5.44). In his last outing, Mikolas yielded six runs on nine hits with no walks and three strikeouts in seven innings in a 6-3 road loss to the Boston Red Sox on Monday.  It was his first start since May 12. He’s pitching while appealing a five-game suspension issued after Tuesday’s bench-clearing incident against the Red Sox.  Mikolas has four career starts against the Astros and is 1-1 with a 7.65 ERA. He has walked six and fanned 16 in 20 innings.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Nats #Luis #Garcia #Astros #Yordan #Alvarez #showing #mercy #pitchers #season

Ah, Australia.

How on earth a team could be this good. Even in transition, apparently.

Sophie Molineux and Co. lifted the Women’s T20 World Cup on a gloriously sunny Sunday afternoon. Expectedly. In style. With yet another dominant show.

They crushed England by seven wickets with 2.5 overs to spare. England’s 150 for four, after being asked to bat first, was never going to be enough against the strong and incredibly deep Australian batting line-up.

A full house, mostly made up of English fans, had come to watch the final at Lord’s. All their loud cheers and all their prayers, could not stop the Australians from winning their seventh title in the tournament, of which this is only the 10th edition.

ALSO READ | Around the World: How Lisa Sthalekar is bringing fans to the Women’s T20 World Cup

Opener Beth Mooney led Australia’s with a superb knock (64, 49b, 10×4). She showed her class and experience, not allowing England to really come back into the match. It was a well-composed innings, doing precisely what is required in chase like this, in a match like this.

It was her second-wicket stand of 100 off 67 balls with Phoebe Litchfield (48, 35b, 6×4, 2×6) that virtually shut the door on England. The host may have felt it had a chance when opener Georgia Voll played on against Lauren Bell. The seamer clenched her fists in delight. The crowd roared.

It didn’t take Mooney and Litchfield long to silence them. By the time Litchfield fell, bowled by Charlie Dean, Australia was not far from home: only 34 runs were required.

Mooney was trapped lbw by Sophie Ecclestone, but it was too late.

Earlier, the England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt got her team out of serious trouble once again. She remained unbeaten 58 (53b, 5×4). Her unbroken fifth-wicket partnership with Freya Kemp (44 n.o., 28b, 4×4, 1×6) gave England a competitive total.

Just two days after playing that semifinal-winning knock against South Africa, Sciver-Brunt had to walk out to the middle in just the second over after opener Amy Jones failed yet again. The England wicketkeeper has had a dismal time with the bat after scoring 53 in the opening match against Sri Lanka in the opening match of the World Cup.

Jones fell to a sharp, low catch at backward point by Voll off Lucy Hamilton’s second ball. Her opening partner Dani Wyatt-Hodge was in awesome in the group stage, but had failed in the semifinal.

And she disappointed again. She was beautifully caught behind the stumps by a diving Beth Mooney. It had taken a review by Australia to get that wicket though; the umpire had called that ball from Annabel Sutherland a wide, but the replays revealed Wyatt-Hodge had gloved it.

Alice Capsey was determined to support her captain and the duo tried to rebuild the innings. They were cautious to begin, but the younger partner gave England a much-needed boost when she went after Ashleigh Gardner, hitting her for two fours and a six – the first of the innings — as 16 came off the ninth over.

That helped, but it would not prove enough against an all-time great team.

Published on Jul 05, 2026

#Australia #beats #England #win #record #7th #Womens #T20 #World #Cup #title">Australia beats England to win record 7th Women’s T20 World Cup title  Ah, Australia.How on earth a team could be this good. Even in transition, apparently.Sophie Molineux and Co. lifted the Women’s T20 World Cup on a gloriously sunny Sunday afternoon. Expectedly. In style. With yet another dominant show.They crushed England by seven wickets with 2.5 overs to spare. England’s 150 for four, after being asked to bat first, was never going to be enough against the strong and incredibly deep Australian batting line-up.A full house, mostly made up of English fans, had come to watch the final at Lord’s. All their loud cheers and all their prayers, could not stop the Australians from winning their seventh title in the tournament, of which this is only the 10th edition.ALSO READ | Around the World: How Lisa Sthalekar is bringing fans to the Women’s T20 World CupOpener Beth Mooney led Australia’s with a superb knock (64, 49b, 10×4). She showed her class and experience, not allowing England to really come back into the match. It was a well-composed innings, doing precisely what is required in chase like this, in a match like this.It was her second-wicket stand of 100 off 67 balls with Phoebe Litchfield (48, 35b, 6×4, 2×6) that virtually shut the door on England. The host may have felt it had a chance when opener Georgia Voll played on against Lauren Bell. The seamer clenched her fists in delight. The crowd roared.It didn’t take Mooney and Litchfield long to silence them. By the time Litchfield fell, bowled by Charlie Dean, Australia was not far from home: only 34 runs were required.Mooney was trapped lbw by Sophie Ecclestone, but it was too late.Earlier, the England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt got her team out of serious trouble once again. She remained unbeaten 58 (53b, 5×4). Her unbroken fifth-wicket partnership with Freya Kemp (44 n.o., 28b, 4×4, 1×6) gave England a competitive total.Just two days after playing that semifinal-winning knock against South Africa, Sciver-Brunt had to walk out to the middle in just the second over after opener Amy Jones failed yet again. The England wicketkeeper has had a dismal time with the bat after scoring 53 in the opening match against Sri Lanka in the opening match of the World Cup.Jones fell to a sharp, low catch at backward point by Voll off Lucy Hamilton’s second ball. Her opening partner Dani Wyatt-Hodge was in awesome in the group stage, but had failed in the semifinal.And she disappointed again. She was beautifully caught behind the stumps by a diving Beth Mooney. It had taken a review by Australia to get that wicket though; the umpire had called that ball from Annabel Sutherland a wide, but the replays revealed Wyatt-Hodge had gloved it.Alice Capsey was determined to support her captain and the duo tried to rebuild the innings. They were cautious to begin, but the younger partner gave England a much-needed boost when she went after Ashleigh Gardner, hitting her for two fours and a six – the first of the innings — as 16 came off the ninth over.That helped, but it would not prove enough against an all-time great team.Published on Jul 05, 2026  #Australia #beats #England #win #record #7th #Womens #T20 #World #Cup #title

Around the World: How Lisa Sthalekar is bringing fans to the Women’s T20 World Cup

Opener Beth Mooney led Australia’s with a superb knock (64, 49b, 10×4). She showed her class and experience, not allowing England to really come back into the match. It was a well-composed innings, doing precisely what is required in chase like this, in a match like this.

It was her second-wicket stand of 100 off 67 balls with Phoebe Litchfield (48, 35b, 6×4, 2×6) that virtually shut the door on England. The host may have felt it had a chance when opener Georgia Voll played on against Lauren Bell. The seamer clenched her fists in delight. The crowd roared.

It didn’t take Mooney and Litchfield long to silence them. By the time Litchfield fell, bowled by Charlie Dean, Australia was not far from home: only 34 runs were required.

Mooney was trapped lbw by Sophie Ecclestone, but it was too late.

Earlier, the England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt got her team out of serious trouble once again. She remained unbeaten 58 (53b, 5×4). Her unbroken fifth-wicket partnership with Freya Kemp (44 n.o., 28b, 4×4, 1×6) gave England a competitive total.

Just two days after playing that semifinal-winning knock against South Africa, Sciver-Brunt had to walk out to the middle in just the second over after opener Amy Jones failed yet again. The England wicketkeeper has had a dismal time with the bat after scoring 53 in the opening match against Sri Lanka in the opening match of the World Cup.

Jones fell to a sharp, low catch at backward point by Voll off Lucy Hamilton’s second ball. Her opening partner Dani Wyatt-Hodge was in awesome in the group stage, but had failed in the semifinal.

And she disappointed again. She was beautifully caught behind the stumps by a diving Beth Mooney. It had taken a review by Australia to get that wicket though; the umpire had called that ball from Annabel Sutherland a wide, but the replays revealed Wyatt-Hodge had gloved it.

Alice Capsey was determined to support her captain and the duo tried to rebuild the innings. They were cautious to begin, but the younger partner gave England a much-needed boost when she went after Ashleigh Gardner, hitting her for two fours and a six – the first of the innings — as 16 came off the ninth over.

That helped, but it would not prove enough against an all-time great team.

Published on Jul 05, 2026

#Australia #beats #England #win #record #7th #Womens #T20 #World #Cup #title">Australia beats England to win record 7th Women’s T20 World Cup title

Ah, Australia.

How on earth a team could be this good. Even in transition, apparently.

Sophie Molineux and Co. lifted the Women’s T20 World Cup on a gloriously sunny Sunday afternoon. Expectedly. In style. With yet another dominant show.

They crushed England by seven wickets with 2.5 overs to spare. England’s 150 for four, after being asked to bat first, was never going to be enough against the strong and incredibly deep Australian batting line-up.

A full house, mostly made up of English fans, had come to watch the final at Lord’s. All their loud cheers and all their prayers, could not stop the Australians from winning their seventh title in the tournament, of which this is only the 10th edition.

ALSO READ | Around the World: How Lisa Sthalekar is bringing fans to the Women’s T20 World Cup

Opener Beth Mooney led Australia’s with a superb knock (64, 49b, 10×4). She showed her class and experience, not allowing England to really come back into the match. It was a well-composed innings, doing precisely what is required in chase like this, in a match like this.

It was her second-wicket stand of 100 off 67 balls with Phoebe Litchfield (48, 35b, 6×4, 2×6) that virtually shut the door on England. The host may have felt it had a chance when opener Georgia Voll played on against Lauren Bell. The seamer clenched her fists in delight. The crowd roared.

It didn’t take Mooney and Litchfield long to silence them. By the time Litchfield fell, bowled by Charlie Dean, Australia was not far from home: only 34 runs were required.

Mooney was trapped lbw by Sophie Ecclestone, but it was too late.

Earlier, the England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt got her team out of serious trouble once again. She remained unbeaten 58 (53b, 5×4). Her unbroken fifth-wicket partnership with Freya Kemp (44 n.o., 28b, 4×4, 1×6) gave England a competitive total.

Just two days after playing that semifinal-winning knock against South Africa, Sciver-Brunt had to walk out to the middle in just the second over after opener Amy Jones failed yet again. The England wicketkeeper has had a dismal time with the bat after scoring 53 in the opening match against Sri Lanka in the opening match of the World Cup.

Jones fell to a sharp, low catch at backward point by Voll off Lucy Hamilton’s second ball. Her opening partner Dani Wyatt-Hodge was in awesome in the group stage, but had failed in the semifinal.

And she disappointed again. She was beautifully caught behind the stumps by a diving Beth Mooney. It had taken a review by Australia to get that wicket though; the umpire had called that ball from Annabel Sutherland a wide, but the replays revealed Wyatt-Hodge had gloved it.

Alice Capsey was determined to support her captain and the duo tried to rebuild the innings. They were cautious to begin, but the younger partner gave England a much-needed boost when she went after Ashleigh Gardner, hitting her for two fours and a six – the first of the innings — as 16 came off the ninth over.

That helped, but it would not prove enough against an all-time great team.

Published on Jul 05, 2026

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