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Meg Lanning and Harmanpreet Kaur
Mumbai: Powered by the all-round brilliance of Nat Sciver-Brunt and Hayley Matthews, Mumbai Indians head into the Women’s Premier League final as favorites to claim their second title, while Delhi Capitals hope to break their title jinx in what promises to be a thrilling showdown here on Saturday.
Sciver-Brunt (493 runs, 9 wickets) and Matthews (17 wickets and 304 runs) currently top the batting and bowling charts respectively, making them crucial to MI’s title charge against Meg Lanning’s formidable Delhi outfit.
Lanning, who has retired from International level is one of the greatest captains in women's cricket, would be determined to add a WPL trophy to her decorated career and end DC’s trophy drought -- both in the women’s and men’s IPL since 2008.
While DC secured a direct entry into the final due to a superior net run rate, MI’s firepower with the bat gives them an edge on a batting belter that the Brabourne Stadium provides.
For DC, their chances would depend more on a very potent bowling attack with Southern Stars spinner Jess Jonassen and seasoned India seamer Shikha Pandey, both of whom had 11 wickets each in the league stages at a decent economy rate.
In their last round robin encounter, DC restricted MI to 123 for nine, largely because of efforts from Shikha and Jonassen who shared four wickets between them as DC won that game in Bengaluru by nine wickets.
That was also a game where MI's performer of the season Sciver-Brunt had endured a rare failure.
Else, Sciver-Brunt has been in destructive form with 493 runs and five half-centuries in nine games.
To add to it, her medium pace bowling has also got her nine wickets along with Matthews' off-breaks which has proved to be very effective.
But on a good batting deck, it would be White Ferns' star Amelia Kerr's leg-breaks (16 wickets) which could be decisive.
Kerr might go for a few more but she has the knack of getting wickets with her fast leg breaks.
Complementing her is the season’s surprise package, off-spinner Sanskriti Gupta, who has taken only four wickets but has an economy rate of less than seven.
For DC, Shafali Verma's (300 runs) Powerplay batting will be very important as the out-of-favour India star has given good start to his team in most of the games.
She is also the best placed Indians in the top run-getters' list at number four.
Lanning (263 runs) is the other consistent performer in their ranks, while India U-19 World Cup winning captain Nikki Prasad showed early promise but has not had many opportunities to bat higher up.
Two big disappointments for DC have been Jemimah Rodrigues and Marizane Kapp.
Power-hitting is also an aspect where MI is ahead of DC in terms of the number of players who can easily clear the fence.
The teams are nearly even in sixes -- MI with 30 and DC with 28 -- but Shafali leads all players with 16 maximums, far ahead of DC’s next-best Jonassen (3 sixes).
For MI though, Matthews and skipper Harmanpreet Kaur have nine sixes each and another four sixes were hit by Sciver-Brunt.
But it is the boundary count where MI are far ahead with 80 hits to the fence from Sciver-Brunt and another 42 by Matthews.
Skipper Harmanpreet, who has been instrumental in playing crucial knocks also has 29 hits to her credit.
Teams
Mumbai Indians: Harmanpreet Kaur (c), Akshita Maheshwari, Amandeep Kaur, Amanjot Kaur, Amelia Kerr, Chloe Tryon, Hayley Matthews, Jintimani Kalita, Keerthana Balakrishnan, Nadine de Klerk, Natalie Sciver-Brunt, Parunika Sisodia, Sajeevan Sajana, Sanskriti Gupta, G Kamalini (wk), Yastika Bhatia (wk), Saika Ishaque and Shabnim Ismail.
Delhi Capitals: Meg Lanning (c), Jemimah Rodrigues, Shafali Verma, Sneh Deepthi, Alice Capsey, Annabel Sutherland, Arundhati Reddy, Jess Jonassen, Marizanne Kapp, Minnu Mani, N Charani, Niki Prasad, Radha Yadav, Shikha Pandey, Nandini Kashyap (wk), Taniya Bhatia (wk), Sarah Bryce (wk) and Titas Sadhu.
Match starts at 7:30 pm.