England, New Zealand and Australia triumph
Katherine Brunt, England's new-ball bowler, took 2 for 25 against Pakistan•Getty Images
But it was Laura Marsh who broke the Pakistan innings, taking 5 for 15•Getty Images
Lydia Greenway took a sharp catch to dismiss Sana Mir for a duck. Pakistan were all out for 78•Getty Images
Amy Satterthwaite led the recovery, dominating a 84-run stand for the third wicket with Haidee Tiffen•Getty Images
Suzie Bates took four wickets as South Africa collapsed without a fight•Getty Images
But Australia recovered through Shelley Nitschke, who scored 45•Getty Images
Stafanie Taylor scored 32 to lead West Indies' run chase before she was lbw•Getty Images
England's bowlers kept Pakistan on a tight leash. Holly Colvin bowled seven maidens and took 1 for 8 in her ten overs•Getty Images
Opener Bismah Maroof scored 13, Pakistan's second highest score•Getty Images
Charlotte Edwards scored an unbeaten 32 to lead England to an eight-wicket victory•Getty Images
Haidee Tiffen scored a sedate 16 off 57 balls•Getty Images
Cri-Zelda Brits was the only South African batsman to reach double figures as they were beaten by 199 runs•Getty Images
Jodie Fields contributed a steady 42•Getty Images
Erin Osborne dented West Indies' chase with two wickets•Getty Images
Sukhan Faiz , the No. 3 batsman, made only 7•Getty Images
At the Bradman Oval in Bowral, South Africa made a bright start against New Zealand, reducing them to 4 for 2•Getty Images
Sara McGlashan raised the scoring-rate by hitting 88 off 76 balls, leading New Zealand to 250 for 5•Getty Images
In Sydney, Shakera Selman struck early for West Indies, bowling Leah Poulton for a duck•Getty Images
Ellyse Perry scored 36 off 35 balls to lift Australia to 211•Getty Images
Deandra Dottin was the game's top scorer with 51 but West Indies still lost by 47•Getty Images