England v South Africa, Women's World Cup, Bristol
Taylor, Beaumont set new World Cup record
Choosing to bat on a flat Bristol pitch, England made an excellent start. Lauren Winfield added 59 for the first wicket with Tammy Beaumont before falling for 24•Getty Images
With South Africa's bowling attack looking toothless, the second-wicket partnership grew to alarming proportions•ICC
The pair would eventually add 279 off 209 balls, a World Cup record and the second-highest partnership in the history of women's ODIs•Getty Images/ICC
Laura Wolvaardt played some attractive shots, but struggled to pierce the gaps in the infield•Getty Images
Walking in at No. 3, Sarah Taylor carried on the form she had shown during an unbeaten 74 against Sri Lanka•Getty Images
Beaumont used her feet excellently against spin, looking to go over mid-off at every opportunity•Getty Images/ICC
Both batsmen fell short of 150, but they had done plenty of damage to South Africa, leaving them to chase an improbable 374•ICC
Lizelle Lee hurried the scoring along at the other end, scoring 72 off 77 balls, out of an opening partnership of 128•Getty Images
The innovative Taylor rocketed along, peppering every boundary, particularly behind the wicket with a range of scoops and reverse-scoops•Getty Images/ICC
The chase began solidly if slowly, as Katherine Brunt bowled a miserly opening spell, conceding only nine runs in her first five overs•Getty Images/ICC
South Africa were never going to chase down 374, but they did become the first ever team in women's ODIs to score 300 batting second, thanks in large part to a 25-ball half-century from Chloe Tryon•Getty Images