Australia win seventh Women's T20 WC title; Sachin hails their consistency

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Australia win seventh Women's T20 WC title; Sachin hails their consistency

Synopsis

Australia's seventh Women's T20 World Cup title at Lord's wasn't just a trophy — it was a dynasty statement. With Sophie Molineux steadying the ship after a difficult transition, Beth Mooney anchoring a record-breaking final chase, and Sachin Tendulkar calling out their consistency as the X-factor, Australia have reset the bar for women's cricket dominance.

Key Takeaways

Australia claimed their seventh ICC Women's T20 World Cup title in 2026 , their 14th ICC World Cup trophy across all formats.
They defeated England by seven wickets in the final at Lord's Cricket Ground , chasing down 150/4 to finish at 153/3 in 17.1 overs .
Beth Mooney scored 64 off 49 balls to anchor the highest successful run chase in a Women's T20 World Cup final.
Australia remained unbeaten throughout the tournament, winning all seven matches including the final.
Sachin Tendulkar praised Australia on X , crediting their 'stability' as the defining factor behind consistent World Cup success.
Captain Sophie Molineux led Australia to the title in her first major ICC tournament as skipper, months after a semi-final exit at the Women's Cricket World Cup.

Sachin Tendulkar has praised the Australian women's cricket team after their historic seventh ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2026 title, calling their unbeaten run through the tournament a masterclass in stability. The victory, sealed at Lord's Cricket Ground on Sunday, also brought Australia's overall ICC World Cup trophy count across formats to 14.

Tendulkar's Tribute

Taking to X (formerly Twitter), the India batting legend congratulated Australia with a pointed observation about what separates champions from contenders. Tendulkar wrote: 'Congratulations to Australia on another World Cup title! The unbeaten run really shows how well they managed different match situations and stayed consistent throughout. That kind of stability is usually what brings trophies home.'

How the Final Unfolded

In front of a record crowd of over 28,000 at Lord's, Australia ended England's perfect record at home Women's World Cups with a commanding seven-wicket victory. England, appearing in their first Women's T20 World Cup final in eight years, had previously won all four Women's World Cups — across the 50-over and T20 formats — that they had hosted. But Australia had won all six of the finals the two nations had contested before this meeting.

England entered the final having won six out of six matches in the tournament, yet their arch-rivals' all-round brilliance proved decisive. Australia overhauled England's total of 150/4 to post 153/3 in 17.1 overs, registering the highest successful run chase in a Women's T20 World Cup final.

Mooney and Molineux Lead the Charge

Beth Mooney anchored the chase with a composed 64 off 49 balls, steering Australia home with controlled aggression. Captain Sophie Molineux, who took over from Alyssa Healy in all three formats at the start of 2026, delivered on the faith selectors placed in her. The transition had come under scrutiny just months earlier, when Australia were knocked out of the most recent ICC Women's Cricket World Cup semi-finals by India, leaving their trophy cabinet bare. Sunday's triumph silenced those doubts emphatically.

A Dynasty Reinforced

Australia's seventh T20 World Cup title is unprecedented in the women's game. Notably, this is the first time they have claimed the title under Molineux's captaincy, and it comes off an unbeaten run across the entire tournament — a feat that underlines the depth and adaptability of the Australian programme. With 14 ICC World Cup trophies across formats, no other women's team comes close.

Point of View

Absorb a semi-final exit at the 50-over World Cup, and then go unbeaten through a home-soil T20 tournament for England speaks to a depth of institutional cricket culture that no rival has yet replicated. Tendulkar's word — 'stability' — is the right one, and it points to something structural: Australia do not rebuild, they reload. The real question for India, England, and the West Indies is not how to beat Australia in a final, but how to build the kind of programme that even gets them there consistently.
NationPress
6 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

How many Women's T20 World Cup titles has Australia won?
Australia have won the ICC Women's T20 World Cup a record seven times, with their latest title coming in 2026 at Lord's Cricket Ground. Across all formats, they now hold 14 ICC World Cup trophies.
What did Sachin Tendulkar say about Australia's win?
Sachin Tendulkar posted on X congratulating Australia and highlighted their unbeaten run as evidence of superior match management. He wrote: 'That kind of stability is usually what brings trophies home.'
Who won the Player of the Final or starred in the chase?
Beth Mooney anchored Australia's run chase in the final with 64 off 49 balls, guiding them to 153/3 in 17.1 overs — the highest successful run chase in a Women's T20 World Cup final.
Who is Australia's Women's T20 captain in 2026?
Sophie Molineux has captained Australia across all three formats since the start of 2026, taking over from Alyssa Healy. She led the side to their seventh T20 World Cup title at Lord's in her first major ICC tournament as skipper.
Why is this Australia win historically significant?
Australia ended England's perfect record of winning every Women's World Cup they hosted, a streak that had held across four previous tournaments. The seven-wicket final win also produced the highest successful run chase in Women's T20 World Cup final history.
Nation Press
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