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ICC Women's World Cup 2017: Skipper Mithali Raj eyes record in must-win tie against Australia

Mithali Raj is just 34 runs away from becoming the highest run-getter in the history of Women's One-day cricket. The record currently belongs to former England captain and opener Charlotte Edwards, who has 5992 runs to her name in 191 matches.

Reported by: IANS New Delhi Published on: July 11, 2017 15:19 IST
ICC Women's World Cup 2017
Image Source : GETTY IMAGES Mithali Raj of India bats during the England v India group stage match

Fresh from their defeat in the last match, six-time champions Australia will take on a high-spirited India in a group match of the ICC Women's Cricket World Cup at the Bristol County Ground, England, on Wednesday. The Australian girls lead in head-to-head comparison with eight wins while Indian eves have won only twice.

Rewind the clock to the 2009 World Cup when the Indians won two back-to-back matches, at the Australian edition of the World Cup. 

Indian skipper Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami, Punam Yadav and Harmanpreet Kaur are the survivors of those unbelievable World Cup victories. The recipe is simple -- get the best batters in for 50 overs and launch an attack from the first ball of the innings. 

Back then, wicket-keeper opener Anagah Deshpande unleashed her cuts and pulls to rattle the Australian attack. Anjum Chopra joined the party with a gritty 76 to emerge as the Player of the Match. 

On Wednesday, the Indians need a similar effort with the bat from Smriti Mandhana and Mithali. Mithali will have to emerge from the first golden duck of her career and focus on most coveted achievement of the highest One-Day International (ODI) scorer in the world.

The Indians have the highest scorer in Mithali and highest wicket-taker in Jhulan in the same team, a first in the history of women's cricket. 

The Indians are fairly lucky with the toss, they have won three tosses out of five so far. They have to bat first as they have been lucky against the world's top team. 

During India's 2016 tour of Australia, Mandhana and Mithali scored India's second highest ODI partnership of 150 runs.

Harmanpreet should rise to the occasion and justify her selection as a senior all-rounder. The Indian batting looks deep till the ninth spot but they have to continuously rotate strike which could be tough, considering the Indians are playing their first match at Bristol against the fierce Australian bowling attack.

Statistically, in the 25 games of this World Cup, the team reaching 250 runs in the first innings has won. The match between Sri Lanka and Australia is the only exception.

The Australians will be smarting from the recent three-run defeat to hosts England in their last match on Sunday. 

The pain must be overbearing as this is their first loss to England at the World Cup in the last 24 years. 

Meg Lanning leads the batting attack for six-time world champs Australians. The experienced campaigner in her 21 outings at the World Cup has scored 1,232 runs at a staggering average of 72. 

The Australian line-up also includes Kristen Beams, the best bowler in the World Cup with nine wickets at 16.22.

The Indian bowling has to be special on Wednesday, like in 2009 when leg-spinner Reema Malhotra and left-arm spinner Gauhar Sultana stifled Australians and won by 16 runs. 

Ekta Bisht and Deepti Sharma will have to tweak a more and deceive frequently and hope Sushma Verma does the rest behind the wickets.

India are currently at the third spot in the pool. They will hope to secure a win and move swiftly towards the classification round. 

After this match, India will play New Zealand in the final round robin match and hope to secure better win and run rate. 

This World Cup can turn into a dream swan song for Mithali.

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