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Match Analysis

Healy and Australia ride the upswing after shoddy fielding show

Australia's dominance with the bat masked a surprisingly sloppy day in the field as they dropped six chances

Vishal Dikshit
Vishal Dikshit
16-Oct-2025 • 22 hrs ago
The edges were flying off Bangladesh left-hand opener Rubya Haider's bat against the new ball, off both Megan Schutt's swing as well as Darcie Brown's pace. One landed short of first slip, one flew wide, another just managed to get out of a diving Phoebe Litchfield's hands in the slips, and one leading edge fell safe not far from the pitch.
At the start of the tenth over, Brown drew another edge off Haider's bat and this time the ball was headed straight into Alyssa Healy's mitts. Healy barely had to take a step to her left for the catch around waist height, her gloves right behind the ball, but when she clasped her hands around it, the ball just popped out. Healy wore a rueful look while stealing a glance at her team-mates. She couldn't seem to believe she had put down a sitter.
Healy wouldn't have blamed herself as much when she sprinted to the stumps to try and get her gloves under a Shorna Akter leading edge in the 28th over - she couldn't make it, but this was the toughest of the lot. The list, however, kept getting longer for Australia. Three overs later, the safe hands of Beth Mooney couldn't hold on to one at first slip, and by the time the Bangladesh innings ended, Australia had put down six chances in all, four of them requiring diving efforts.
Healy was the first to admit after Australia's ten-wicket thrashing of Bangladesh that she "was a little bit poor behind the stumps" and their overall fielding effort was something to "reflect on" as they head to Indore for their last two league matches.
Player-of-the-Match Alana King, who finished with 10-4-18-2, said, "I think they were all probably tough catches. I don't think there was an easy catch. And no doubt we'll definitely review that. We pride ourselves on our fielding and something that we want to be putting on display. So I think just with those high balls and us probably being a bit aggressive in the field, we wanted to get the players to hit over us. So to have an attacking option and players diving for the ball, we love to see that. I think that creates great energy amongst the group and a positive mindset as well. So no doubt we'd love every catch to stick, but unfortunately the nature of cricket, that doesn't happen too often."
Just cricket - despite your best attempts, the laurels of the past, and all the trophies in the cabinet, some off-days slip in without a major reason.
Healy had gone through her intensive keeping drills each time Australia have turned out for a nets session. Yet, the ball had been evading her in strange ways. When King was turning the ball viciously from outside leg to around off, one just went straight past the batter's pads down leg and Healy was left watching with a sheepish grin. Against India too, one went right through her. Healy had more time to collect that ball off Annabel Sutherland. The ball went on to rattle the helmet behind her for five penalty runs.
Just like her keeping sessions, Healy had been sweating it out in the batting nets too, calling it a "frustrating experience" earlier because she had "no rhythm whatsoever". Since the last ODI World Cup, which Australia won under Meg Lanning in 2022 with Healy hitting back-to-back hundreds in the knockouts against West Indies and England, she hadn't scored the kind of runs she was used to.
Australia didn't play any more ODIs in 2022 after that World Cup, and when they returned to action in early 2023, Healy picked up a calf injury. When she turned out in the 2023 Ashes, she lasted all of 28 deliveries in three ODIs for scores of 8, 13 and 7. It took her another six innings to score a half-century. Though she started 2024 on a slightly better note, a foot injury at the T20 World Cup, a knee issue, and a recurrence of the foot injury kept her out of action for much of 2025.
After intense rehabilitation, she made it in time for this World Cup, but scored 30, 9 and 27 in the three bilateral ODIs against India in the lead-up. The big scores were still proving elusive when she fell for 19 and 20 in the opening two games, against New Zealand and Pakistan.
But like she did in the 2022 edition, it was only a matter of time before she brought out her best, in a high-profile game against India in front of a sold-out crowd in Visakhapatnam while chasing a record 331. She appeared a bit watchful for the first four overs, but took off with her trademark short-arm jab for four and soon dispatched Kranti Gaud, who had dismissed Healy three times in 35 balls in the bilaterals, for 6, 4, 4 and 4 for a 19-run over. Healy went on to knock the stuffing out of the India attack for her seventh ODI century that finally made her feel "it was my day today" after over three years.
She had to wait three years for that century but the next one took just three days, this time while chasing a modest 199 against Bangladesh. That she was now at ease and back in her rhythm was evident in how she let out a beaming smile from under the helmet after her 43-ball half-century. She made room with ease, shuffled across the crease for sweeps, raced from 50 to 100 in just 30 balls, and there were signs of the fear she used to make her oppositions feel. And she's back at the top of the run chart at this World Cup, like it was 2022.
"[It's] just incredible to see what she's done," King said of her captain after the game. "First of all, to do it against India, it was massive and she was pretty bloody determined to do so. But then to not let the foot off the throat and do it again tonight just shows where her mindset's at. And she's pinged the ball beautifully and to have Phoebe [Litchfield] down the other end in tandem, hitting the ball as clean as I've seen her, and to chase down a pretty big total, none down, I think that's something that's going to ooze confidence in our whole line-up."
Who knows how much Bangladesh would have scored had Healy taken that catch early on; who knows what would have happened if Fargana Hoque had held on to one at short fine-leg when she misjudged one completely with Healy on 67. For now, even though Australia are not at their best, they wouldn't want to take the "foot off the throat" of opponents, but hope that the catches stick - it's not really Australia till that happens.

Vishal Dikshit is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo