RESULT
3rd ODI, Taunton, June 07, 2025, West Indies Women tour of England
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(21/21 ov) 106/8
(10.5/21 ov, T:106) 109/1

ENG Women won by 9 wickets (with 61 balls remaining) (DLS method)

Player Of The Match
3/21
sarah-glenn
Player Of The Series
, ENG-W
251 runs
amy-jones
Report

Nat Sciver-Brunt 57* leads England to 3-0 sweep in rain-wrecked final ODI

Sarah Glenn takes three as West Indies limp to 106 for 8 either side of a five-hour delay

Valkerie Baynes
Valkerie Baynes
07-Jun-2025 • 7 hrs ago
Sophia Dunkley fell lbw to Karishma Ramharack, England vs West Indies, 3rd Women's ODI, Taunton, June 7, 2025

Nat Sciver-Brunt takes the plaudits after sealing victory  •  Getty Images

England 109 for 1 (Sciver-Brunt 57*) beat West Indies 106 for 8 (Joseph 34, Glenn 3-21, Arlott 2-15) by nine wickets (DLS method)
Another experimental England side, led by Nat Sciver-Brunt's half-century and three wickets to Sarah Glenn, romped to victory at a rain-hit Taunton and a 3-0 sweep of their ODI series against West Indies, leaving the visitors winless from six matches all tour.
Having swept the T20 leg 3-0 and won the first two ODIs by more than 100 runs each, England mixed up their batting order, elevating captain Sciver-Brunt and Sophia Dunkley to open while Amy Jones, who had reprised her opening role with Tammy Beaumont for the first time in five years earlier in the series with great success, dropped back to the middle order and Beaumont sat out.
Dunkley took the lead initially, easing to 26 off 21 balls as she consistently punished any bad balls to the boundary. Sciver-Brunt, meanwhile, reached 2 off seven before her first boundary, smashing a short one from Jannillea Glasgow wide of midwicket in the fourth over. The pair put on 40 runs together before Dunkley was trapped lbw by Karishma Ramharack.
From there, Sciver-Brunt switched gears, powering to an unbeaten 57 off 33 balls to take England to victory by nine runs with 10.1 overs to spare.
Alice Capsey, promoted to No.3 in place of Emma Lamb, who scored a quick-fire half-century in that position during the second ODI, finished on 20 not out off 11 as England reached 109 for 1, easily passing their target of 106, set under the DLS method.
Play had resumed after a five-hour rain delay with West Indies 43 for 3 off 12.3 overs and the match reduced to a maximum of 21 overs per side. Qiana Joseph top-scored for the tourists with 34 while a late flourish from Aaliyah Alleyne with 27 off 18 pushed West Indies to 106 for 8 at the end of their innings.
Glenn cleaned up three wickets after the restart to keep a lid on West Indies' scoring after Em Arlott had made early inroads, reducing them to 4 for 3 inside four overs.
England won the toss and chose to bowl first under heavy skies and predictions of imminent rain, which arrived as the players ran onto the field.
They managed to start on time, and it was quite the beginning for England as Kate Cross removed youngster Realeanna Grimmond with the second ball of the match.
There was to be no repeat of Grimmond's fifty on ODI debut in the previous game when, standing in for injured captain Hayley Matthews at the top of the order for the second time in a row, she nicked through to the keeper while chasing one that moved away.
Two wickets in two overs from seamer Arlott had West Indies floundering. The first was full and straight, moving back in a touch as Zaida James played all around it and had her middle stump rattled. The second, an inswinger that rapped Stafanie Taylor on the front knee roll as she strode forward was given out on umpire's call despite Taylor's attempts to overturn Sue Redfern's lbw decision.
Arlott was back in the side after sitting out the second ODI in Leicester as England continued to rotate players through their XI. In addition to changing their batting line-up, England also rested seamer Lauren Bell and left-arm spinner Linsey Smith, making way for spinners Charlie Dean and Glenn.
West Indies, who confirmed on the eve of the match that Matthews would miss the game with the shoulder injury which kept her out of the second ODI, welcomed back Joseph at the top of the order after illness had kept her out of the previous game.
Joseph was unbeaten on 21 from 24 balls when the rain properly set in with just shy of an hour's play done, prompting the long stoppage.
Cross and Arlott were bowled out by the restart, given the reduction in overs, but when Dean resumed her second over, which had been interrupted by the rain delay, she struck first ball back as Shemaine Campbelle advanced on a fuller delivery which slid under the bat an into Jones' gloves to see West Indies' stand-in captain stumped for a sluggish 18 off 35 balls.
Glenn followed up next over by bowling Shabika Gajnabi and Alice Davidson-Richards plucked a sharp one-handed catch out of the air at mid-off to remove Jannillea Glasgow off Lauren Filer.
West Indies needed Joesph to swing the bat as she had to devastating effect at the T20 World Cup. She added 13 more runs to her tally before holing out to deep midwicket off Glenn, but it was Aaliyah Alleyne who produced the finish needed, striking five consecutive fours off Filer before she fell off the last ball, caught by Dunkley at point to give Glenn her third.

Valkerie Baynes is a general editor, women's cricket, at ESPNcricinfo

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