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Match 14 | ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 | Rose Bowl, Southampton | 20 June 2026
Georgia Voll against Caroline de Lange is the duel worth watching in Southampton. Voll slotted into Australia’s opening spot against Bangladesh with 45 not out off 32 balls and made it look easy, while de Lange is the only Netherlands bowler to have genuinely troubled elite batting at this tournament, taking four wickets in two matches, including Smriti Mandhana on 74. If de Lange can find the wicket in the powerplay, she gives the Netherlands their only realistic chance of a result.
This is the Netherlands’ first appearance in a Women’s T20 World Cup, and their first two matches have illustrated exactly why debuts at this level tend to be difficult. They lost to Bangladesh by six wickets at Edgbaston on June 14, then to India by 95 runs at Headingley three days later.
India posted 209 for 5 against them in the second match, a total that exposed the gap in bowling depth between the Netherlands and the teams they’re facing in Group 2. They sit on zero points with an NRR already heavily in the negative after two matches.
Australia arrived on the back of a nine-wicket win over Bangladesh at Headingley, a result that flattered a side already missing Phoebe Litchfield to a quad injury she picked up in the tournament opener against South Africa. ICC confirmed the 23-year-old will miss Australia’s next three matches, including this one.
Ashleigh Gardner’s availability for Southampton is also unconfirmed after the ankle sprain that kept her out of the Bangladesh match. Grace Harris covered for her then, and Sophie Molineux led a bowling attack that shared six wickets between Kim Garth, Ellyse Perry, and herself as Bangladesh were bowled out for 77.
Georgia Voll moved into the opener’s slot and produced the kind of innings that turns a one-match opportunity into something more. Her 45 not out off 32 balls came with six fours and a six at a strike rate of 140.63, earning her Player of the Match in a nine-wicket chase completed inside ten overs.
She opened alongside Beth Mooney, with Perry coming in to close out the match at three, a setup that worked precisely because Voll gave Australia a fast start without taking unnecessary risks. Whether she keeps that position for the Netherlands game depends on whether any of the injured players return.
Caroline de Lange is the only reason to think the Netherlands can keep any match competitive. The leg-spinner took two wickets in two consecutive balls against Bangladesh and then removed Mandhana for 74 and Rodrigues on the very next delivery against India, four wickets in two matches against the two best batting sides in the group.
| Metric | Georgia Voll (AUS, Bat) | Caroline de Lange (NED, Bowl) |
| Role | Opener, No. 2 | Leg-spinner |
| Career T20I record | Tournament debut form | 84 wickets, avg 18.64, eco 5.26 |
| vs Bangladesh | 45* off 32 (SR 140.63, 6 fours, 1 six) | 4-0-27-2 (2 wkts in 2 balls) |
| vs India | Not batted | 2/32, dismissed Mandhana and Rodrigues back-to-back |
| Tournament highlight | Player of the Match | Leading NED wicket taker with 4 wkts |
De Lange’s 100th international cap came against Bangladesh in this very tournament. Her career economy of 5.26 puts her among the better leg-spinners in the women’s game, and she’s already shown she can take wickets at the top of batting orders.
Australia needs a clean win and a strong net run rate performance to stay on course for a semifinal spot. The Netherlands need to win all three remaining matches and improve their NRR drastically to even threaten qualification, which makes this fixture, on paper at least, a significant mismatch.
The only scenario that makes this genuinely competitive is de Lange finding the wicket early, disrupting any combination of Voll, Mooney, and Perry before they get set on a pitch that the Rose Bowl has already hosted several matches on this tournament. AUS vs NED Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 begins at 10:30 BST on June 20 in Southampton, and it is Australia’s chance to put distance between themselves and the rest of the group.
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Is Phoebe Litchfield playing against the Netherlands?
No, Litchfield is confirmed out with an acute quad injury suffered in Match 1 against South Africa. The ICC confirmed she will miss Australia’s next three matches, including the Netherlands game.
How did Georgia Voll perform against Bangladesh?
Voll scored 45 not out off 32 balls as Australia’s opener, earning Player of the Match. She hit six fours and a six at a strike rate of 140.63 as Australia won by nine wickets in 9.3 overs.
Has the Netherlands won a match at the 2026 Women’s T20 World Cup?
No, the Netherlands has lost both their matches and sits on zero points. This is their debut at the tournament, and they’ve been beaten by Bangladesh and India so far.
Who is the Netherlands’ best bowler at this World Cup?
Caroline de Lange leads the Netherlands attack with four wickets in two matches. Her leg-spin dismissal of Smriti Mandhana for 74 against India is the highest-profile wicket any Dutch bowler has taken in this tournament.
What time does Australia vs Netherlands start?
The match starts at 10:30 BST on June 20 at the Rose Bowl in Southampton. That’s 14:30 IST and 7:30 pm AEST for Australian fans.
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