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WNCL: Western Australia bowled out for 81 and defeated by eight wickets in Queensland thumping

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Jackson BarrettThe West Australian
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Western Australia has been smashed by Queensland in their WNCL clash on Thursday.
Camera IconWestern Australia has been smashed by Queensland in their WNCL clash on Thursday. Credit: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Western Australia has been wiped off the park by Queensland, bowled out for 81 and defeated by eight wickets in their WNCL clash on Thursday.

Decimated by injury and unavailability, WA handed a debut to teenager Chloe Bartholomew and slipped to 0-3 to start their campaign with the heavy defeat at Allan Border Field.

WA’s top score was 15, made by No.8 Lilly Mills. Only two other players scrapped to double figures.

Taneale Peschel returned for her first game of the campaign after a pre-season plagued by back and quad issues, but WA had already left home Amy Edgar and Chloe Ainsworth with injury.

BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA - OCTOBER 03: Cap presentation fr Chloe Bartholomew of Western Australia during the WNCL match between Queensland and Western Australia at Allan Border Field, on October 03, 2024, in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)
Camera IconChloe Bartholomew made her debut for Western Australia. Credit: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Allrounder Georgia Voll continued her case for national selection with a rapid-fire half-century at the top of the order in a chase that ended in just 16 overs.

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“You’re always struggling to be competitive with that (score), so we are pretty disappointed with how we went with the bat,” WA captain Chloe Piparo said.

Mills and left-arm spinner Charis Bekker were WA’s only two wicket-takers. Mills had Georgia Redmayne caught at slip for one and Charli Knott found a fielder at deep-square off an ugly ball trending down the leg side.

Piparo, who reached 11 opening the batting with Maddy Darke, was beaten for pace by Nicola Hancock and bowled. Darke grafted her way to five off 24 balls through a treacherous opening spell, then went chasing a wide ball and sliced a catch to cover-point.

Bhavi Devchand, former Queenslander Mikayla Hinkley, Lisa Griffith and Mathilda Carmichael all fell in a flurry of 6-21.

BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA - OCTOBER 03: Jess Jonassen of Queensland during the WNCL match between Queensland and Western Australia at Allan Border Field, on October 03, 2024, in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)
Camera IconJess Jonassen bowls for Queensland. Credit: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Piparo said she “probably would have bowled first” had WA won the toss, but refused to put their score down to how the wicket behaved.

“The wicket wasn’t easy and they bowled pretty well, but we had some soft dismissals in there and run-outs obviously don’t help,” she said.

Bartholomew, a Wanneroo teenager, faced 16 balls before turning a meek delivery around the corner to Voll at short-leg for a duck. She was one of four middle-order victims of a strangling spell by veteran spinner Jess Jonassen and fellow tweaker Knott.

Jonassen, a surprise snub from Australia’s Twenty20 World Cup squad, had taken 2-0 from her first 22 balls before Mills launched a six over mid-wicket.

The two sides meet again on Saturday.

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