Breaking
FR«La pire attaque depuis le début de la guerre en Ukraine» : ce que l’on sait des frappes russes sur Kiev, qui ont fait au moins 30 mortsFRAffaire Jubillar : Cédric Jubillar reconnaît sa culpabilité dans la disparition de son épouseFRDes scientifiques et personnalités réclament une "loi d'urgence climatique"FRLe Brésil éliminé de la Coupe du Monde par la NorvègeFRFunérailles d'Ali Khamenei : une procession géante à TéhéranFRWhite Pass & Yukon Route : un voyage spectaculaire en train en Alaska et au YukonFRTour de France: Third stage to Les Angles without public due to wildfireFRLa Chine effectue un tir d'essai de missile dans le PacifiqueFRPFAS : une dépollution coûteuse et inefficace pour l'EuropeFREspagne-Portugal : les duels qui décideront du choc des huitièmes de finale du MondialFR«La pire attaque depuis le début de la guerre en Ukraine» : ce que l’on sait des frappes russes sur Kiev, qui ont fait au moins 30 mortsFRAffaire Jubillar : Cédric Jubillar reconnaît sa culpabilité dans la disparition de son épouseFRDes scientifiques et personnalités réclament une "loi d'urgence climatique"FRLe Brésil éliminé de la Coupe du Monde par la NorvègeFRFunérailles d'Ali Khamenei : une procession géante à TéhéranFRWhite Pass & Yukon Route : un voyage spectaculaire en train en Alaska et au YukonFRTour de France: Third stage to Les Angles without public due to wildfireFRLa Chine effectue un tir d'essai de missile dans le PacifiqueFRPFAS : une dépollution coûteuse et inefficace pour l'EuropeFREspagne-Portugal : les duels qui décideront du choc des huitièmes de finale du Mondial
Newsgather
BackEngland Secures Convincing Win Over Scotland in Headingley Grudge Match
England Secures Convincing Win Over Scotland in Headingley Grudge Match
Sports
Guardian Sport6/20/2026Sports3 min read

England Secures Convincing Win Over Scotland in Headingley Grudge Match

Quick Look

  • England defeated Scotland by 38 runs at Headingley, maintaining their top spot in Group B of the World Cup.
  • Sophia Dunkley scored a half-century in the absence of captain Nat Sciver-Brunt, leading England to 200/5.
  • Scotland managed 162, with Kirstie Gordon taking two early wickets.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

England played Scotland in a cricket match at Headingley, with England winning by 38 runs. Captain Nat Sciver-Brunt was absent due to injury.

Font size

England’s grudge match against Scotland at Headingley ended in a convincing win for the World Cup hosts by 38 runs, to ensure they maintained their position atop Group B.

England were without their captain Nat Sciver-Brunt, who is missing this match and Wednesday’s game against West Indies after aggravating her existing calf injury. Sciver-Brunt is England’s best batter, and has looked it so far in this World Cup with scores of 46 and 48, so there was some concern as to how the lineup might fare in her absence.

They need not have worried: Sophia Dunkley struck a half-century from the No 3 position, Alice Capsey hit 40, while Freya Kemp and Dani Gibson hammered 59 runs from the final three overs, as England amassed 200 for five.

Scotland have proven themselves a force to be reckoned with so far in this World Cup, running West Indies close at this same ground on Thursday. On that occasion the 21-year-old opener Darcey Carter limped her way to 59, despite a leg injury, but the Scots fell eight runs short of what would have been a famous win.

Here, though – faced with a much higher total and with Ailsa Lister missing through injury – Scotland never threatened a similar upset. Lauren Bell and Linsey Smith took some punishment up top as Scotland raced to 32 from the first three overs, but stand-in skipper Charlie Dean brought herself on to bowl the fourth and took out the stumps of Katherine Fraser.

Sophie Ecclestone then did the same to Kathryn Bryce and Darcey Carter post-powerplay, getting some sharp turn, while Sarah Bryce slapped Lauren Bell over backward point for a six but fell trying to clear midwicket.

England weren’t quite ruthless enough to finish the job, allowing Scotland to post 162 without being bowled out. Nevertheless, by the time the game reached its climax the 11,000-strong Yorkshire crowd were so confident of an England win that the fans on the Western Terrace decided it was time to liven things up with constructing some beer snakes - a true marker of equality with the men’s game.

It was a tad ironic that Dunkley unleashed her cleanest hitting of the summer in a match which, but for Sciver-Brunt’s dodgy calf, she wouldn’t have been playing in. This was Dunkley’s lucky day: catapulted up to No 3, she was dropped three times en route to her half-century - on four, 43 and 45 - although admittedly only the last of the three was a straightforward chance, shelled by Megan McColl at point.

As for the most hotly-anticipated encounter of the tournament, former England player Kirstie Gordon versus her old team? Gordon was so champing at the bit to get going that her captain Kathryn Bryce agreed she should open the bowling, despite the fact that she is normally held back until post-powerplay. And the result was a beautiful redemption arc for the left-arm spinner whom England discarded as surplus to requirements: running in with tartan on her chest once more, she took a wicket with the very first ball of the match - Amy Jones tonking her straight to cover - and followed it up with another from the first ball after drinks, as Danni Wyatt-Hodge chipped a catch up to mid-on.

The rest of Scotland’s fielders leaked boundaries in the deep in any number of comedic ways, but Gordon was so determined to raise her game that she several times pegged it halfway to the leg-side boundary to field off her own bowling, took a catch at short fine leg to see off Heather Knight, and even chipped in with 23 runs from No 8. Despite the final result, the scoreline of this particular battle-within-a-battle is surely Gordon 1, England 0.

Open Questions

  • Will Sciver-Brunt return for future matches?
  • How will Scotland perform in their next game?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

Related Stories

More on this topiccricket