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Australia beats India by nine runs at Edgbaston to win Commonwealth Games women’s T20 cricket gold

The Australian women’s cricket team now officially has it all.

The T20 and ODI World Cup winners are Commonwealth Games champions too after a nine-run win over India in front of a bumper crowd at Edgbaston.

When we talk about greatness in Australian team sports, surely now they must be counted amongst the very best we’ve ever seen.

“It was certainly a medal that we never thought we’d ever win, we never thought we’d be a part of a Commonwealth Games,” Australia all-rounder Ash Gardner said.

“We’ve won a lot of medals, but I think this one’s pretty special.”

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The Australians batted first and made 8-161, largely thanks to Beth Mooney’s 61 off 41 balls.

As she so often does, India captain Harmanpreet Kaur took control to put India in a dangerous position before Gardner dismissed her for 65.

“I thought they had control that chase for a long period of that batting innings of theirs,” Mooney said.

“But on the flip side, I thought that if we got a couple of wickets that we were in with a real shot of turning the screws and putting the squeeze on them, which is what happened.”

India needed 11 runs off the final over, with two wickets left.

But Jess Jonassen delivered the goods with the ball as the Australians claimed another major title.

A strange sideshow played out during the game.

On the morning of the match Australia all-rounder Tahlia McGrath tested positive to COVID-19, but she was still allowed to play.

Tahlia McGrath
Tahlia McGrath motions for her teammates to stay away after taking a catch. McGrath tested positive for COVID before the match started.(Getty Images: Ryan Pierce)

In bizarre scenes, McGrath had to socially distance from her teammates when she took a catch – never mind that they were all touching the same ball.

And all the COVID safe protocols were forgotten when she was swept up by her teammates in the festivities at the end of the match.

“It’d be pretty upsetting for someone like Tahlia who’s been in this team not being able to hug her teammates when we’ve won a gold medal,” Mooney said.

“So hopefully they turn a blind eye to that and forget that happened.”

Megan Schutt said the team felt bad for McGrath.

“It was so weird. We didn’t want to get in trouble,” Schutt told the Sydney Morning Herald.

“We felt bad for Tahlia at the end there.

“At the end, screw it. If we get COVID, so be it.”

Hockeyroos win silver after defeat to England

A group of Australian women's hockey players smile up at the camera as they take a selfie with their silver medals.
The Hockeyroos finished with silver in Birmingham, just like they did four years ago on the Gold Coast.(Getty Images: Mark Kolbe)

The Hockeyroos were outmuscled by England in the women’s hockey gold medal match at Edgbaston Hockey Club, with the home side deservedly winning 2-1.

The Hockeyroos lacked fluency and the killer instinct in the circle, while England was boosted by a buoyant home crowd to win gold for the first time.

But instead of slumping to the ground in tears, or comforting each other, for the most part, the Australians kept a smile on their face, patted each other on the back, and tried to appreciate what they’d managed to achieve.

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Several weeks after winning a bronze medal at the World Cup, the Hockeyroos wanted to make sure they celebrated winning silver.

Coach Katrina Powell — a two-time Olympic gold medalist — gathered all players and support staff in a huddle on the pitch, and passionately spoke to the team.

“[I told them] how proud I am of them and how we progressed while we’ve been away and how hard it is,” Powell said.

“Also [I gave them] a little reminder that you do win silver, hockey competitions are really interesting that [people think] you lose gold.

“We just won a bronze, so we saw how much happier we were than the silver medalists at the World Cup.

“And I think you miss out on that fun, that excitement, that experience, if you’re not happy with winning silver.”

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Commonwealth Games: Claire Colwill’s family create own Games village to cheer on Hockeyroos

When the family of a Commonwealth Games debutant realized they couldn’t make it to Birmingham, they brought Birmingham to them.

Mackay’s Claire Colwill only joined the Hockeyroos this year after years of representing Mackay and Queensland.

Through every major tournament, her 92-year-old granny has been there cheering from the sidelines.

But the long travel and the lingering threat of COVID meant Jill Loughnan stayed home on the Sunshine Coast, where her family has set up their own Games Village to cheer on Australia.

“Through Claire’s hockey career, my mum and I have been able to travel with her as she’s played for Queensland and that’s been a really special time for us,” Colwill’s mother, Sara, said.

A selfie with a young girl in sports uniform, her granny and mother, all smiling
Claire Colwill with her granny Jill Loughnan and mother Sara at her Hockeyroos debut.(Supplied: Sara Colwill)

“We were lucky to be there to see her debut for Australia in New Zealand.

“One of the things [Granny] has always enjoyed about coming on hockey trips is the company and being part of it.”

Sara said the family had been watching the Games live and the replays from the comfort of her mum’s living room.

“I’m sure there’ll be lots of cups of tea and Devonshire teas and all things British to create the Birmingham theme.”

‘I’ve got two goals in life’

A young girl on a hockey field, with a black, white and yellow uniform, running and smiling.
Claire Colwill represented Mackay, Capricornia and Queensland as a junior.(Supplied: Sara Colwill)

From a young age, Claire knew she wanted to be an Australian hockey player.

“When she was about nine, we were on the grass fields learning to hit and she came up to me and said very clearly, ‘Mum, I’ve two goals in life — I’m going to be a Hockeyroo and I’m going to run against Usain Bolt’,” Sara said.

She said her 20-year-old daughter had always been very focused; the second-year university student is balancing international sport with her studies de ella.

“She’s had to do one of her exams online from the Netherlands while she was away just before the World Cup started.

“She’s just set up a really good timetable and mapped it all out… so she knows exactly what she’s got to do.”

Members of the Australian women's hockey team pose with bronze medals, holding bouquets of flowers.
Claire Colwill (centre front) claimed her first World Cup medal in May when the Hockeyroos took bronze.(Twitter: HockeyRoos)

Speaking to the ABC when she was first named in the Hockeyroos squad, Colwill said it was a dream come true.

“It’s something you dream of as a kid, and every training session, it builds towards this moment,” she said.

“Starting back in school hockey in Mackay… it all adds up to where I am today.”

Proud family of supporters

A young man standing in front of a white wall, wearing a yellow shirt with a picture of a hockey player.
Colwill’s brother Tim has traveled from Ipswich to Birmingham.(Supplied: Sara Colwill)

While most of Colwill’s family will be at the proxy Games village on the Sunshine Coast, her older brother, Tim, is in Birmingham cheering from the sidelines.

Sara said her two children were close growing up and continued to have a strong bond.

“They might not say that, but they are,” she laughed.

“He’s actually got a T-shirt made up with a photo of Claire in her hockey uniform on the front, and on the back it’s got ‘Colwill #1 supporter’.

“Number one is also actually Claire’s playing number.”

While Birmingham was the first major tournament Sara and her mum would not be watching Claire from the sidelines for, she said she doubted that it would make her daughter nervous.

“She’s always been really independent and the group is so supportive. It’s just one big family.

“I think she’s just loving every minute of it and just wouldn’t want to be anywhere else… she just seems to be thriving.”

Colwill and the Hockeyroos will play for gold tonight after defeating India in a penalty shootout in the semi-finals.

A young woman in an Australian hockey uniform kneeling next to her grandmother and holding a hockey stick.
Until the Games Jill Loughnan has been on the sidelines to watch her granddaughter.(Supplied: Sara Colwill)

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Hockeyroos into gold medal match against England at Commonwealth Games after controversial penalty shootout

Hockeyroos forward Rosie Malone suspects she’s public enemy number one in India right now, after the Hockeyroos penalty shootout win over India in the women’s hockey semi-finals at the Commonwealth Games.

Not that it bothers her.

Malone was the first penalty taker in the one on ones, after the teams finished at 1-1 at full time.

She was never in control of her attempt, and for the first time in her international career, she missed.

But there was an unexpected let-off when she was called back to re-take the shot, because the eight second countdown on the scoreboard hadn’t started.

“I was just thanking the universe for a second chance,” Malone said.

“I knew all of India would hate me if I put it in. But I was just trying to think about my team, and that final.

“I just said to myself, if I get a second chance, I’m not missing it.”

Malone’s successful do-over set the tone for the rest of the Australians, as they secured an easy 3-0 shootout win.

Australian hockey players hug after a goal in the Commonwealth Games semi-final against India.
Rebecca Greiner had opened the scoring for the Hockeyroos before India hit back.(Getty: Robert Cianflone)

And it also characterized the difference between the revitalized 2022 Hockeyroos, and the 2021 outfit that dealt with a host of off-field issues, and lost to India in the Tokyo Olympics quarterfinals.

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Commonwealth Games live updates: Hockeyroos face India in semi-final, while men’s decathlon draws to a close

After a shocking upset loss to India in the quarter-finals at the Olympics last year, the Hockeyroos have a chance for revenge as they face off again for a spot in the Birmingham final.

Follow all the action from day eight in Birmingham with our live blog.

live updates

By Jon Healey

Hockey: Still 1-0 to Hockeyros through three quarters

Things are seriously tense at the University of Birmingham Hockey & Squash Centre.

Just one goal in the first quarter is all that separates Australia and India in this semi-final.

England awaits. Who will it be?

By Simon Smale

Key Event

Athletics: Steve Solomon makes the 400m final!

Get the spikes back out Steve! You’re running in the end on Sunday!

Great stuff for the Aussie, who qualifies in the last spot, but just 0.03 of a second, and will race in the final!

By Simon Smale

Athletics: Solomon still alive…

Steve Solomon told Channel 7 that he was happy to wrap his season up after that semi-final run.

He might still be in with a chance of sneaking into the final though, so he may want to reassess…

None of the non-automatic qualifiers managed to beat his 46.30 in that race, so there is still hope for the likable Aussie…

Jonathan Jones of Bahamas got the win in that second semi.

There’s one semi final to go…

By Simon Smale

Athletics: Steve Solomon will have to wait and see in the 400m

Three men run towards the camera.
Solomon (right) tied up in the final 100. (Getty Images)

Steve Solomon has just finished in fourth place in his 400m semi final…

It looked like he really struggled in the home straight, far from fluid as the race really heated up having exited the final bend in a second.

From there though, he went backwards.

He has told Channel 7 that he just didn’t have the running in his legs after a rough six months of injuries and has resigned himself to not racing in Sunday’s final.

I ran to 46.30, which will unlikely be good enough to see him qualify, I’d think.

By Jon Healey

Hockey: Australia gets out of jail to keep lead at half-time

The Hockeyroos have lost their referral pretty dubiously.

Kaitlin Nobbs challenged a penalty corner ruling, and it looked for all money like she’d done so successfully, but the third umpire found a way to confirm it.

All this while Shanea Tonkin was serving time in the penalty box on a green card.

The penalty corner didn’t come off for India, and Australia kept its 1-0 lead at the break despite being pinned in their own quarter of the field for most of the period.

India had five penalty corners in the first half, but couldn’t capitalize, while the Hockeyroos’ sole goal came from the field via Rebecca Greiner.

By Simon Smale

Squash: The Battle of the Lobbans

We have a winner in the battle of the Lobbans…

And it’s Donna Lobban who gets bragging rights with her partner Cameron Pilley!

The Aussie pair (and defending champions) came from behind to beat Scotland’s pairing of Greg Lobban and Lisa Aitkin 3-0.

They won the final game 11-8 to complete the turnaround.

Donna told the Commonwealth Games media team that if Greg won he’d have to make dinner for a month…

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Does that mean dinners are on her for the foreseeable?

Perhaps after the Comm Games are over – Donna and Cameron have worked to do and a medal to win for Australia.

By Simon Smale

Athletics: Decathlon to go down to the wire

Lindon Victor has re-taken the lead in the decathlon after a superb javelin throw.

He leads The Gap’s Cedric Dubler by 161 points heading into the 1500m.

Daniel Golubovic is third, just four points behind Dubler after throwing a season’s best of 58.26m in the javelin.

Alec Diamond is fifth.

It’s ever so close and the 1500 will be a belter when it takes place at 6:30am AEST.

By Jon Healey

Hockey: Australia on the board in opening quarter of women’s semi-final

Australian hockey players celebrate a goal against India at the Commonwealth Games.
(Getty)

Looking for redemption for the quarter-final loss at last year’s Olympics, the Hockeyroos have struck first in the semi against India.

Rebecca Greiner did the damage from the field.

By Simon Smale

Key Event

Athletics: Australia will have one runner in the 200m final

Gutting news for Jacinta Beecher, who misses out on a spot in the 200m final by 0.12.

Jacinta Beecher looks on with a neutral look on her face
So near, yet so far for Jacinta Beecher (Getty Images)

Ella Connolly is the slowest of the qualifiers to make it through and actually ran 0.01 seconds slower than Jacinta Beecher.

But, because the qualification is done on placings in the semi finals (top two qualify automatically, plus the two fastest non-qualifiers) then Beecher misses out.

The favorite Elaine Thompson-Herah qualified fastest.

By Simon Smale

Athletics: Ella Connolly qualifies for the 200m final!

Ella Connolly sprinting
Ella Connolly gave it her all (Getty Images)

Oh my goodness that was so, so close!

did Ella Connolly get second there?

AND IT IS! By 0.01 of a second!

A photo finish of a sprint race
This is what 0.01 seconds looks like (Commonwealth Games)

At the moment, Jacinta Beecher is there too, by just 0.02 seconds…

But there’s one semi to go…

By Simon Smale

Squash: Battle of the Lobbans

Quick update from the University Squash Center and the wife has leveled things up at one game each after she and Cameron Pilley took the second 8 – 11.

It’s coming down to decide…

By Jon Healey

Hockey: Hockeyroos semi-final against India underground

This is for a spot in the final against England.

By Simon Smale

Athletics: 200m semi-finals

A woman is shown side on with a neutral expression on her face
Getty Images

Jacinta Beecher has gone in the first semi final of the women’s 200m and I don’t think she’s done enough to get through, sadly.

Beecher came home in fourth spot with a time of 23.40, a fair way off her PB of 22.70 but she was running into a serious headwind of +1.9.

Like I said, I don’t think that will be enough to get one of the two fastest qualifying spots, but we’ll wait and see.

By Jon Healey

Key Event

🤕 Athletics: Nicola Olyslagers is out of the women’s high jump final

Australian Olympic silver medalist Nicola Olyslagers has had to withdraw from tonight’s high jump final with a calf injury.

She said it was “disappointing and devastating not to be able to compete.”

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“What was thought to be a tight calf after my qualifying round turned out to be a torn muscle in my jumping leg,” she said.

“Of all the emotions and shock I could feel in the moment, I still have peace. Winning bronze at the Commonwealth Games four years ago allowed my professional career as a high jumper to begin, it was a competition that changed the trajectory of my life .

“My prayer is that someone else’s dream comes alive tomorrow as I cheer them on from the sidelines. Let’s go cheer Eleanor on as she jumps for Australia so well out there.”

She is of course referring to world champion Eleanor Pattersonwho will be jumping in the final from 7:17pm AEST.

By Simon Smale

Squash: The Battle of the Lobbans

Remember the story of the husband and wife who are going up against each other in the mixed doubles quarter finals?

Well, they’re in action right now and first blood has gone to the husband Greg (of Team Scotland).

He and his partner Lisa Aitkin took the first game 11 – 9 against his life partner Donna and her cousin, Cameron Pillley.

This might read like a script from Bold and the Beautiful, but it’s not (although let’s not put it past them to get something in on it soon).

By Jon Healey

Key Event

🥉 Diving: Third medal in the pool this morning

Domonic Bedggood and Cassiel Rousseau finish third behind England’s Matty Lee and Noah Williams, and Canadian pair Rylan Wiens and Nathan Zsombor-Murray.

Lee won Olympic gold with Tom Daley last year, but this is his first Commonwealth Games medal.

Bedggood, meanwhile, has claimed his fifth Commonwealth medal and third bronze. He has gold in this event from Glasgow 2014, and won 10m platform gold in 2018, when he also won bronze in 3m and 10m synchro.

By Jon Healey

Key Event

🥉 Athletics: Sam Carter third in men’s T53/54 1,500m

Can Sam Carter and Jake Lappin emulate the efforts of Madison de Rozario and Angie Ballard from yesterday?

Not remove.

Sam Carter wins bronze in a superb race, led out hard by Canada’s Josh Cassidy, then Danny Sidbury of England made his move around the halfway mark, blowing Cassidy away.

Carter closed the gap, but brought him Englishman Nathan Maguire, who powered past Carter’s outside shoulder, then passed teammate Sidbury on the final straight to win gold.

Jake Lapin was fourth, five seconds behind Carter

By Jon Healey

Key Event

Diving: Aussies in the hunt in men’s 10m synchro

Domonic Bedggood and Cassiel Rousseau are in the bronze medal spot with two dives left.

England’s Matthew Lee and Noah Williams, and Canadian pair Rylan Wiens and Nathan Zsombor-Murray just look streets ahead.

They’ll duke it out for gold, while the Aussies try to hold off the other English pair of Ben Cutmore and Kyle Kothari.

By Simon Smale

Athletics: 400m semi-finals

England’s Victoria Ohuruogu has qualified fastest for the women’s 400m final after running a 51-flat in the first semi final.

She’ll be joined by compatriot Ama Pipi and Jodie Williams, but they’ll be hard up to beat World Championship bronze medalist Sada Williams, who looked very comfortable in cruising to victory in the second semi in a time of 51.59.

By Simon Smale

Hockey: England awaits in the final

A scene from a hockey match as England attacks the New Zealand goal
Getty Images

England have just beaten New Zealand 2-0 in a penalty shoot out after a tight and tense 0-0 draw at the University Hockey Centre.

New Zealand players peer out from inside the goal
Getty Images

That means the hosts are in the final, where they await the winner of the second semi final between the Hockeyros and India.

That match is due to start at 5:15am AEST, so about half an hour or so.

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