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By SEAN REUTHE – Squash Mad Correspondent

United States No.1 Amanda Sobhy has moved up two spots to reach No.5 after the PSA Women’s World Rankings for August were released today (August 1).

Sobhy made history last month in Chicago when she became the first US-born player ever to reach the semi-finals of the PSA World Championships presented by the Walter Family, where she lost to eventual winner Nour El Sherbini.

El Sherbini won her fifth World Championship crown and the 25-year-old remains at World No.1 ahead of the woman she beat in the final, Nouran Gohar. Gohar would have taken the World No.1 spot had she beaten El Sherbini in the title decider.

El Sherbini has now recorded 41 months in total at World No.1, meaning she surpasses Australia’s Sarah Fitz-Gerald to become the fourth longest-reigning women’s World No.1, behind Nicol David, Susan Devoy and Michelle Martin.

Nour El Tayeb remains at No.3, with France’s Camille Serme taking the final spot inside the top five.

England’s Sarah-Jane Perry stays at No.6, with Egypt’s Hania El Hammamy falling two spots to No.7 as she swaps places with Sobhy. Joelle King and Salma Hany take the No.8 and No.9 spots, respectively, while India’s Joshna Chinappa replaces Wales’ Tesni Evans in the top 10, marking the first time she has featured inside the top 10 since September, 2020.

Evans falls to No.11 ahead of Rowan Elaraby (No.12), Olivia Clyne (No.13), Nele Gilis (No.14) and Yathreb Adel, who moves up a place to No.15.

Nadine Shahin secures a career-high ranking of No.16 for August, while Alison Waters has dropped two places to No.17. Canada’s Hollie Naughton also celebrates a career-high ranking – moving up a spot to No.18 – while Tinne Gilis and Olivia Fiechter complete the top 20.

Nigeria’s Yemisi Olatunji is the biggest mover this month on the women’s tour as she rises 210 places to No.153 in the world. Meanwhile, England’s Lucy Beecroft is the second biggest mover, moving up 175 places to No.124 after reaching the last 16 of the Squash on Fire Open and the last 64 of the PSA World Championships.

PSA Women’s World Rankings Top 20 – August 2021

Pictures courtesy of PSA

Mohamed ElShorbagy is back at world number one

Published in Squash
Sunday, 01 August 2021 10:02

By SEAN REUTHE – Squash Mad Correspondent

Egypt’s Mohamed ElShorbagy has returned to the top of the men’s PSA World Rankings for the fifth time in his career after he overtook compatriot Ali Farag to reach the No.1 spot.

ElShorbagy has now recorded 50 months of his career at the summit of the PSA men’s World Rankings following his semi-final victory over New Zealand’s Paul Coll at the PSA World Championships last month which saw him take back the No.1 spot that he lost to Farag in October 2020.

ElShorbagy is the fifth longest-serving male World No.1 of all time, with his 50 months atop the rankings only bettered by Jansher Khan, Jahangir Khan, Peter Nicol and Geoff Hunt.

Farag moves down to No.2, while Egypt’s Tarek Momen (No.3), New Zealand’s Paul Coll (No.4) and Egypt’s Marwan ElShorbagy (No.5) all complete the top five.

Karim Abdel Gawad (No.6), Fares Dessouky (No.7), Diego Elias (No.8), Mostafa Asal (No.9) and Joel Makin (No.10) also round off an otherwise unchanged top 10 for the men in August.

France’s Gregoire Marche has moved up a place to a career-high World Ranking of No.12 as Egypt’s Mohamed Abouelghar drops to No.16. Mazen Hesham rises two places to a joint career-high of No.13 in the world, which he last reached in December 2015.

Marche’s compatriot and former World No.1 Gregory Gaultier rises three places to join him in the men’s top 20 for the first time since April 2019 following a serious knee injury which saw him ruled out of action for 15 months. Meanwhile, Egypt’s Youssef Ibrahim breaks into the top 20 for the first time in his career as he rises six places to No.18.

The rest of the top 20 includes Colombia’s Miguel Rodriguez (No.11), India’s Saurav Ghosal (No.14), Egypt’s Zahed Salem (No.15), Omar Mosaad (No.16) and England’s James Willstrop (No.19).

The biggest movers on the men’s tour are Roee Avraham of Israel and Charlie Lee of England. Avraham moves up 405 spots to No.255 in the world, while Lee enjoys a rise of 248 places to No.412 after his semi-final finish at The Eriswell Challenge at St George’s Hill marked his first PSA Tour appearance since 2018.

PSA Men’s World Rankings Top 20 – August 2021.

Pictures courtesy of  PSA

Duane Vermeulen has joined up with the South Africa squad after a quicker-than-expected recovery from injury as they prepare for the deciding Test against the British and Irish Lions.

Vermeulen had ankle surgery in June and was expected to miss the entire series.

"It will be great to have him with us," said Springboks coach Jacques Nienaber.

His recovery is similar to that of Lions captain Alun Wyn Jones, who joined up with the squad just 18 days after dislocating his shoulder.

Nienaber added that the 2019 World Cup winner "will be medically assessed as soon as possible" as South Africa prepare for Saturday's series decider in Cape Town.

"We will never risk a player who is not 100% fit, but he brings experience to the squad," he said.

South Africa will also find out on Monday the extent of the shoulder injury suffered by Pieter-Steph du Toit in Saturday's second Test.

Flanker Du Toit was hurt after a late tackle by Lions winger Duhan van der Merwe and was clearly in pain before leaving the field during the first half.

South Africa beat the Lions 27-9 in a fiery encounter to level the three-Test series and set up a decider next weekend.

Havertz, Abraham score as Chelsea beat Arsenal

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 01 August 2021 10:15

Kai Havertz and Tammy Abraham fired Chelsea's men's side to a 2-1 preseason friendly win over Arsenal on Sunday in the Emirates.

In what was a double header with both the men's and women's teams competing to raise money for the charity Mind, Arsenal's women's side beat their London rivals 2-1 in the earlier game.

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Havertz opened the scoring in the first half before Granit Xhaka pulled one back for Arsenal after the break. However, the lead only lasted four minutes before Abraham got Chelsea's second.

Chelsea dominated possession for much of the match and were rewarded on 26 minutes when Timo Werner started a fast break and found Havertz whose right-footed shot went past Bernd Leno.

There was an injury worry for Arsenal on 40 minutes when Thomas Partey was forced off. Arsenal coach Mikel Arteta said after the game that Partey would have a scan on Monday but "at the moment it is not looking good."

While the Partey situation is concerning for Arsenal, the match also saw the introduction of new £50 million signing Ben White.

Xhaka scored Arsenal's equaliser on 69 minutes when he headed home from a Nicolas Pepe cross.

The Switzerland international had been linked with a move to Roma but Arteta said after the match that he would be staying with Arsenal this season.

"Granit is going to stay with us," Arteta said. "He is a key member of our squad."

Chelsea weren't down for long, though, and Abraham scored a powerful right-footed shot into the bottom corner to give them the lead on 73 minutes.

In the early kick-off between the women's sides, Arsenal beat Chelsea 2-1 with goals from Katie McCabe and Freya Jupp.

Reanna Blade had levelled things for Chelsea on 80 minutes but 17-year-old Jupp -- who was making her senior debut -- was the star as she scored the winner for Arsenal on 83 minutes.

McCabe had given Arsenal the lead on 27 minutes but it was the younger players who impressed.

There were injury worries for both sides with Jordan Nobbs and Pernille Harder going off with knocks.

Trying out for a spot on a travel soccer team can be intimidating for a young girl. But for 12-year-old Catarina Macario, "intimidating" didn't cover it.

Her father had made the decision to move with his son and daughter some 5,000 miles from their native Brazil to the United States, in large part so Catarina could realize the family's shared dream of her becoming a soccer star. Girls who played soccer weren't taken seriously in Brazil, and the U.S. was the land of opportunity.

Long before Macario won two NCAA titles for Stanford on a scholarship, a spot on ESPN's best female players age 21 or under, or made the Tokyo Olympics roster for the U.S. women's national team, she was a young girl in San Diego -- a new place where she was unable to communicate in English -- feeling unsure of herself.

After years of playing with boys in Brazil, she didn't know how she would do when trying out for an American girls' team.

"I was very nervous, especially because it was like, 'We've moved here, this is the real deal, and I'm the reason why we're here,' sort of thing," Macario told ESPN from Japan, where she's part of the U.S. Olympic team. "So there was definitely pressure I put on myself because I knew how much my family had invested in me and how much sacrifices they had made."

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As a coach at San Diego Surf, Chris Lemay was used to families with the intention of relocating to Southern California contacting him about tryouts at the Elite Clubs National League-affiliated squad. Most of the time, it didn't work out: the players were not good enough, said Lemay, who is now the women's head coach at Utah Valley University. When Macario and her family showed up -- her brother Estevao spoke English and acted as interpreter -- Lemay didn't think much of it. But then the young girl took her first touch on the ball ...

"It took me 15 seconds to realize this player was like a whole different world," Lemay told ESPN by phone. "A ball was played into her, she took it out of the air with her thigh, and she volleyed it into the top corner. And she struck the ball with such force, I was like, 'Whoa. Please, let's get her on this team as quickly as we can.'"

As Macario remembers it, she came away from the tryout knowing she had to improve. Macario calls it the "American style" that she needed to mix into her existing skill set, which really just means she had to be more physical -- especially so because her father, Jose, insisted she play a year-up with older girls, which was Lemay's team. Still, the Surf coaches got to see who Macario was as a player that day -- they got to see her soccer IQ and her technical skill -- and that's what mattered.

"At the end of the day, soccer is soccer," said Macario, now 21 years old. "People may play it differently, but it's still the same game, no matter what."

Coming to America

If you look up Catarina Macario on YouTube, you'll find a lot of goal highlights.

There's that time, while at Stanford, when she danced her way through three defenders, almost toying with them as if the ball was glued to her foot, before she laid off a perfect assist. There's also the goal where she trapped a ball off her thigh, popped it off her foot and then smashed a volley from 20 yards out without letting the ball touch the ground. But there are also clips from Brazilian news programs interviewing a 10-year-old Macario and showing B-roll of her playing soccer with boys.

For Macario, there was no other option: If she wanted to play soccer, and she wanted to play for a real club, it had to be with the boys. But in soccer-obsessed Brazil, she was something of a curiosity. A girl was playing soccer with boys? On a team that won a trophy? And she was a top scorer? For some people, it was exciting, but for others, it was a problem.

"It was just a new concept to have a girl playing on an all-boys team because, at least when I was there, there weren't many girls playing," Macario said. "I was usually the only girl. It was something new, something different that people had not seen, and the fact that I was having success amplified that even more. I wasn't just playing with them: I was doing well, you know?

"It was truly something that was unheard of, and some people reacted well, of course. Some people were supportive and they saw the talent that I had, so they cheered for that. Other people, of course, they felt a little hostile towards it. They said girls shouldn't play."

Entering adolescence and figuring out your place in the world is difficult enough. But for Macario, doing what she loved became a referendum on her gender and whether girls should even play soccer. Even the mothers of the other kids would tell her that girls should focus on other things. Macario, who's Black, said she'd face taunts from other kids about her race and gender. Sometimes it felt like too much, and she wanted to quit.

"There were definitely some times when I'd have a bad game, and it was just further reinforcing the idea that I shouldn't be playing," she said. "I would start to doubt my own abilities. Sometimes I would feel like, 'Ugh, I can't deal with it anymore, I want to be a normal kid.'

"There were a good number of times I remember bawling my eyes out."

Her parents urged her not to let her talent go to waste, and her dad pushed her in particular. Macario's experience was the subject of a Players' Tribune essay she wrote earlier this year. "For him to see his daughter, competing with the boys -- there were no girls' teams where we lived -- was the most amazing thing in the world, but the more he saw how good I was, the more he would push me," she wrote. "The better I got, the greater the pressure and the tougher his feedback would get."

"Catarina's dad was very influential: he wanted his daughter to be a superstar," said Lemay.

But with the pushing came support, and Macario credits Jose, and her mother Ana Maria, with not letting her give up.

It was her father who typed "best women's soccer player ever" into YouTube and found highlights of U.S. great Mia Hamm. By then, Hamm had already retired, but Macario was able to see stadiums full of people cheering to see this amazing soccer player, who happened to be a woman. It was a powerful motivator and an image she would hold onto.

Before she turned 12, she hit a crossroads. The rules in Brazil no longer allowed her to play on boys' teams. She could either quit, or find a new place to play. It was obvious where that was: While her mother stayed in Brazil to practice medicine and serve as the family's breadwinner, Jose, Catarina and Estevao moved to America. It might seem like a difficult choice to leave your home country and everything you've ever known, but Macario wanted to make the move.

"It was an easy decision: I either stay and let my talent go to waste or we try to pursue this dream," she said.

"I realized I want a country that actually values what I want to do and has that support. Even when it comes to education, it was just better. So my family decided to move, and I just fell in love with the U.S., and it's where I became the person and the player that I am today."

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How USWNT's Lynn Williams took advantage of a surprise start

Ali Krieger reacts to Vlatko Andonovski's decision to start Lynn Williams as the USWNT advances to the semifinals at the Olympics.

Becoming an Olympian

Catarina Macario knew that Vlatko Andonovski, the U.S. women's national team coach, was going to call. Having recently signed to play club soccer with Lyon, she was in Stanford visiting college friends when Andonovski, who was in the process of narrowing down his roster for the Tokyo Olympics, texted her to expect a call.

Macario had been involved in some national team camps and figured she'd hear from the coach either way. The call came and, after the two engaged in some small talk, he said the words: "Congratulations, you are coming to the Olympics."

"It was pretty surreal because I feel like this year has brought so many wonderful things -- getting my citizenship, and then getting my first cap," Macario said. "It was truly a blessing to be called up to the team for the Olympics, and I know there were probably so many players who were probably more deserving than I was. I was just in a little bit of shock in a way."

The call-up completed a meteoric rise. In January, three months after becoming a U.S. citizen and being called into a USWNT camp on the same day, Macario made her debut against Colombia. A few days later, she started for the first time, scoring her first goal against the same opponent.

"Physically, she is already ready to be at this level, which is a huge jump to go from college to this level," U.S. teammate Megan Rapinoe said after that game. "You saw she can hold it up, she's quick, she's fast, she thinks fast. She is just going to be one of those fun players that you love to see, someone that is going to excite the fans, someone that is going to come out with something creative."

Macario's firsts have kept coming, and last week she proved herself again when coming on to make her Olympic debut as a late substitute in the Americans' 6-1 win over New Zealand. Having originally made the team as an alternate before a rule change put her on the full roster, she looked ready for the stage, despite being the youngest player on the squad.

Lemay hasn't coached Macario in years but still talks to her regularly and watches all her games -- he compares her to Neo from "The Matrix" movies, slowing down time when she has the ball at her feet.

He thought her performance against New Zealand showed promise, although there was one critique:

"The minutes she got against New Zealand were a good representation of who she is -- she completed every pass and she was good on the ball," Lemay said. "I think, in that environment, she needs to be more selfish, and that's probably difficult. There are a lot of veterans and big personalities."

Indeed, when asked by ESPN whether there is anything people don't know about Macario that they should, he did not hesitate.

"Everybody wants to talk about the transition to the United States and wants to talk about her playing ability, but one of the most fascinating things to me is just how humble she is," Lemay said. "There's no sense of arrogance or entitlement."

In some ways, that might seem incongruous with her rise to stardom or playing style. Players like Macario, who have the dribbling skills to embarrass defenders and the finishing instincts to leave goalkeepers in the dust, are often the attention-seekers or the braggarts.

But she has kept herself in check, often discussing things to improve instead of what she has already achieved. Beyond the minutes she got late in the win over New Zealand, Macario has been left off the matchday roster for the U.S.'s other games in Japan. If she is involved in Monday's semifinal against Canada, though, it could be a pivotal moment in her young career.

When she isn't playing or training, Macario talks to her parents on the phone every day -- her dad is in France, where he moved to be closer while she plays for Lyon, and her mom is still in Brazil -- and they ask how she's doing and what the Olympic Village is like.

Nothing, though, will top the phone call she made to let them know she would be part of the American team going for gold.

"I should have FaceTimed to them to see if they would actually cry," Macario said. "They were both so happy. It was the icing on the cake of what we've been wanting to achieve. As a family, that's what they sacrificed everything for, so I could be able to represent the U.S. at a world stage."

BCCI urges ICC to not recognise Kashmir Premier League

Published in Cricket
Sunday, 01 August 2021 08:33
The BCCI has written to the ICC urging it to not recognise the Kashmir Premier League (KPL), the Pakistan domestic T20 tournament which is due to begin on August 6.
On Saturday, the PCB expressed its unhappiness over what it considered the BCCI's attempts to interfere in the PCB's internal affairs. That was based on reports that the BCCI had been in touch with a number of other Full Members to try and prevent players from those countries from appearing in the league. Herschelle Gibbs, the former South Africa opener, who is expected to play in the league, said on Twitter that he had been threatened that he wouldn't be allowed entry "into India for any cricket related work. Ludicrous."
But it has emerged now that the BCCI had also reached out to the ICC. The basis of the BCCI's complaint seems to centre around the status of Kashmir as disputed territory - and whether matches can be played in such territories - and its central place in the long-running dispute between the two countries. The status of Kashmir has been the cause of several wars between India and Pakistan from the moment India gained independence and Pakistan was created in 1947. Both countries control parts of the region but govern it separately. Political and diplomatic ties between the two countries have fluctuated over the years, and are currently going through a prolonged low.
Relations between the two boards generally follow on from the political atmosphere of the day, and this latest spat will merely exacerbate an already strained relationship. The two sides have not played each other in a bilateral series since 2012-13 or a Test match since 2007-08, though they do face off regularly in ICC events.
But there would appear to be little the ICC can do about this. Approval for such domestic leagues is given by the Full Member country in which the tournament is being played, and not the ICC, and the KPL has the PCB's approval. There is also nothing in any ICC regulations about matches in disputed territories.
The KPL is a six-team franchise-model league, PCB-approved, and to be played at the Muzaffarabad cricket stadium in Pakistan-administered Kashmir from August 6. Squads were selected in a draft last month and, according to the organisers, would be captained by Shahid Afridi, Shoaib Malik, Imad Wasim, Mohammad Hafeez, Kamran Akmal and Shadab Khan.
The BCCI's concern centres, however, on the foreign players signed up with the league, on the basis that international players turn the tournament into something more than just a domestic event and give it international legitimacy of sorts. Foreign players on the roster are retired and include Monty Panesar, Matt Prior, Phil Mustard, Tino Best, Tillakaratne Dilshan and Gibbs. Through conversations with several boards, the BCCI has made it clear that these players would be considered rebels and would be treated by them as would the participants of any unrecognised league.
Nottinghamshire 145 for 3 (Trego 39) beat Leicestershire 144 (Fletcher 4-30, Paterson 3-25) by seven wickets
Nottinghamshire advanced their Royal London Cup ambitions in ruthless style, cruising past Leicestershire by seven wickets with almost 30 overs to balls to spare in front of an appreciative audience at Welbeck Cricket Club.
Skipper Peter Trego hit two sixes off pace bowler Chris Wright in his 31-ball 39, Ben Slater picked up six boundaries in his 38 and the young South African batter Matthew Montgomery made 27 not out, reaching a target of 145 in 20.2 overs.
Earlier, Luke Fletcher had taken 4 for 30 and Dane Paterson 3 for 25 as Leicestershire were bowled out in 43.1 overs, 16-year-old legspinning all-rounder Rehan Ahmed top-scoring with 35 not out, the highest score of a fledgling senior career, as he and Ben Mike shared a 70-run stand for the eighth wicket.
In overcast conditions after Nottinghamshire had won the toss, Fletcher had Rishi Patel edging to second slip and nipped one back to bowl Harry Swindells in his first three overs, as well as having Lewis Hill dropped at second slip before he had scored.
Fletcher removed Marcus Harris, the Australian left-hander nicking behind for 16, and Hill had another escape a couple of balls later as a miscued pull fell just out of the reach of midwicket.
Paterson dismissed George Rhodes via a low catch to second slip before Fletcher, who ultimately bowled through for his full 10 overs, picked up his fourth wicket as an Arron Lilley prod outside off lodged in the gloves of the wicketkeeper. When Louis Kimber edged Paterson to first slip, Leicestershire were 53 for 6 in the 18th, which became 68 for 7 as Hill departed for 25, a third victim for 'keeper Dane Schadendorf a day after his 19th birthday.
Ahmed and Mike fought back, adding 70 for the eighth wicket with the teenager looking entirely unfazed in only his third senior game, but once Mike had been caught on the midwicket boundary, Slater parrying the ball into the air before ensuring his feet were the right side of the rope as he took the catch, the innings ended quickly, Ed Barnes playing across one from Trego before Chris Wright was caught behind.
Sol Budinger set the tone for the Outlaws chase by smashing three of his first 11 balls for four before edging behind as he went for another expansive drive, with Slater and Trego soon rattling along at a similar pace as the Powerplay overs yielded 62 for 1 compared with the Foxes' 21 for 2.
Trego pulled Wright for six and picked up another maximum from a steepling top edge and though both fell to quick succession, the double breakthrough won merely a stay of execution for Leicestershire before Montgomery and Lyndon James added 48 runs in 39 balls to finish the job.
After Trego feathered a catch behind shaping to cut Ahmed's legspin, Slater perished in similar fashion to Mike, having timed the ball superbly until then. Remarkably, it was the first time in seven completed innings in List A matches for Nottinghamshire that he had failed to pass fifty.
Essex 159 for 1 (Cook 7*, Westley 69*) beat Kent 158 (ten Doeschate 2-7, Harmer 2-21) by nine wickets
Tom Westley eased to his third half-century of the Royal London Cup and Alastair Cook scored a classy 77 not out as Essex Eagles thrashed Kent Spitfires by eight wickets.
Eagles captain Westley struck 69 off 77 balls, having previously clocked 69 and 87 not out, during a 127 run stand with Cook. Essex were only chasing 158, after an all-around bowling performance, and knocked them off with 19 overs to spare.
It got the Eagles back to winning ways, after losing their 100% record against Worcestershire, while Kent remain winless.
The Spitfires, who had won the toss and batted, were without 11 first-choice players due to the Hundred, injuries and - in the case of Essex seamer Matt Quinn - loan agreements. None of their batters past 40 on a slow wicket, with only Tawanda Muyeye's strike rate getting into three figures.
After Ollie Robinson had clipped to square leg, Muyeye showed strong wrists to reach 25 from 23 balls, which included four boundaries and a wonderfully picked up six over midwicket - although succumbed when he carved to backward point.
Simon Harmer entered the attack and within two balls had Harry Finch lbw for a 17-ball duck, before Darren Stevens flicked Ben Allisson to Ryan ten Doeschate on the deep square boundary. Scotland international George Munsey lived by the reverse sweep and eventually died by it when he picked out fine leg for 39.
Like Harmer, ten Doeschate struck with his second delivery, as Grant Stewart loosely edged behind and then Marcus O'Riordan was bowled. Matt Milnes was caught behind, James Logan chipped a caught and bowled back at Aron Nijjar and Nathan Gilchrist holed out to long-on to conclude the innings.
Cook, on the back of tallies of an unbeaten 92 and a 42, continued his brilliant form with a cover drive in the first over and an extravagant square drive. Opening partner Will Buttleman fell for 11 when Milnes pinned back his leg stump but Westley arrived to take control of the chase.
England legend Cook reached his fifty in 51 balls, with the 100 partnership with Westley taking 124 balls - as the runs were ticked off in officious style. Westley joined the half-century club for the 30th time in his career in 64 balls, with six boundaries eventually coming in his 69.
It was Cook who tipped and ran the winning single though, as the rain came down at the Cloudfm County Ground, Chelmsford, to boost the Eagles' chances of progressing to the knockout stage.
Southern Brave 97 for 3 (Taylor 29*) beat London Spirit 93 (Beaumont 34, Wellington 4-14) by seven wickets
Amanda-Jade Wellington took 4 for 14 with her legbreaks to extend Southern Brave's 100 percent record as London Spirit became the first team to be bowled out in the women's Hundred in front of 15,189 fans at Lord's.
Wellington struck twice in as many balls in her second set of five, removing two of the Spirit's key batters in Heather Knight and Deepti Sharma. This forced them to rebuild through the middle phase of the innings. Tammy Beaumont struggled in trying to bat through and accelerate towards the end, but fell before she had the chance as Wellington returned to break her resistance. Spirit were eventually bundled out for 93.
The Brave were unconvincing in the run chase, with Sharma returning 2 for 10 from her 20 balls, including the key wickets of Smriti Mandhana and Sophia Dunkley. But Stafanie Taylor, who has scored 109 runs in the competition without being dismissed, saw her side home with a clinical 29 not out off 32 balls, with Maia Bouchier providing useful support from No. 5.
The attendance at Lord's was reported to be a record for a professional domestic women's match in the UK, beating the 13,537 at the ground for the Spirit's game against Oval Invincibles last weekend.
Wide, wide, wide Delilah
The Spirit's Powerplay was bizarre. They reached 30 for 1 after 25 balls either side of a brief rain delay, but managed only 10 runs off the bat - six of them when Beaumont picked Lauren Bell up over the leg side. Instead, two-thirds of their runs came through wides, with Anya Shrubsole, Tara Norris and Bell all struggling to control the swinging ball as they looked to cramp batters for room with straight lines.
There were 27 extras in all, 25 of them in wides, and Wellington admitted at the interval that it was "something we really need to work on as a bowling unit" - though with only one Spirit batter reaching double figures, it did not prove costly.
Wellington's wizardry
Wellington had a brief taste of international cricket in 2017-18 but has been on the outside of the Australia set-up in the last three years and has used the Hundred to pitch her case for a recall. Her 80 balls so far in the competition have cost only 59 runs, her flat legbreaks proving difficult to get away.
Her first act was to complete her second direct-hit run out of the week, a mirror image of her effort to remove Bryony Smith against Welsh Fire at Cardiff on Tuesday. Fielding at mid-on, her pick-up-and-throw left Naomi Dattani stranded short of her ground at the non-striker's end, giving the Brave their first wicket off the sixth ball of the innings.
With ball in hand, she struck twice in as many balls during her second set of five, with Knight chipping a legbreak to cover and Sharma stumped after over-balancing. She returned to bowl her final five balls at the death, and had Beaumont - her former Adelaide Strikers team-mate, whose 34 off 45 balls was uncharacteristically scratchy as she dropped anchor - caught at cover via a leading edge. Then she deceived Amara Carr by tossing one up above the eyeline and beating her with a sharp legbreak to leave Carla Rudd with a straightforward stumping.
"We came back really well to restrict them to under 100," she said. "I saw in the pitch there was a little bit of turn so I thought I'd vary my pace here and there and mix up my length. Hopefully I can continue this good form - I'm just really focusing on performing consistently for the team. We haven't really played the perfect match yet so hopefully we can make it to the end."
Taylor seals it
The Brave were never likely to be troubled by such a low target, but struggled to find a significant partnership to take them home. Sharma's flat offbreaks were particularly effective, while Charlotte Dean and Danielle Gibson were also miserly with their spin, but wickets were the order of the day and the Spirit managed only three of them.
The slow pitch did nothing to help the spectacle, with the Brave's batters regularly chipping the ball into gaps but finding boundaries hard to come by, with the Spirit sloppy in the field. Taylor cruised to 29 not out, rotating the strike at ease as Knight struggled to keep the squeeze on, and Bouchier's straight six - one of only two in the game - relieved any remaining scoring pressure.

Matt Roller is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98

Lancashire 115 for 2 (Wells 66*) beat Hampshire 162 (Bailey 3-23, Balderson 3-25) by 51 runs (DLS)
Luke Wells scored an impressive List A-best 66 not out as unbeaten Lancashire completed a comfortable 51-run Royal London Cup victory, on Duckworth Lewis Stern regulations, against Hampshire at the Ageas Bowl.
Heavy rain arrived at 4.35pm, preventing any further play after Lancashire had reached 115 for 2 from 25.3 overs in reply to Hampshire's 162 all out, with Wells hitting 12 fours in a superb 62-ball knock to put his side well ahead on DLS.
But the win was really set up by Lancashire's brilliant effort in the field earlier in the day, with Tom Bailey (3 for 23) and George Balderson (3 for 25) the stand-out performers.
Bailey, Lancashire's captain, led by example with a six-over new ball spell of 2 for 18 and later the wicket of Hampshire's top-scorer Lewis McManus, who batted with skill and spirit with six fours in a 51-ball 45.
McManus was ninth out, fighting a lone battle after Bailey and Balderson had undermined the innings after Lancashire won the toss and, with poor weather forecast, opted to bowl.
Bailey's fast-medium accounted for Tom Alsop, well-held at point for 7 in the third over, and 18-year-old Tom Prest, caught at second slip for 9 pushing indeterminately forward.
Nick Gubbins looked in good order, quickly reaching 31 with six stroked fours, but then became the first of Balderson's scalps when he carved to point.
Medium-pacer Balderson, settling into a probing line around off stump and finding a little seam movement, then had both Ian Holland and Joe Weatherley leg-before, for 1 and 17 respectively.
From 81 for 5, Hampshire were briefly rallied by McManus - who lofted Keaton Jennings over mid off for four and then cut him hard to the ropes - and James Fuller, who added 40.
But Fuller, on 17, became another Hampshire batsman to depart playing across the line, lobbing a straightforward return catch to the pacy Liam Hurt off a leading edge as he tried to work to mid wicket.
Danny Lamb had Felix Organ lbw for 7, with a full ball angled into his pads, and Scott Currie was smartly stumped by George Lavelle for 2 when slow left arm spinner Jack Morley beat the outside edge as Currie advanced down the pitch.
Morley conceded just 10 runs from seven controlled overs, his excellent action catching the eye, but it was Lancashire's seam attack that continued to do most of the damage - Bailey returning to snare McManus, caught at extra cover from another leading edge, and Lamb having Kyle Abbott caught behind for 9 to finish with 2 for 33.
Lancashire's chase began edgily, in front of a good-sized crowd, with Josh Bohannon skying a pull at John Turner to mid wicket to go for 5, and Fuller reduced them to 44 for 2 when Jennings edged a fine ball behind in the fast bowler's first over.
But former Sussex left-hander Wells soon eased any Lancashire fears. Having driven Holland's medium pace for three fours in four balls in the 12th over, he then took two more boundaries from Fuller's second over before hitting the same bowler exquisitely through extra cover and steering him to the third man ropes.
Rob Jones also batted with quiet assurance, moving to an unbeaten 24 from 41 balls while supporting Wells in an unbroken third wicket partnership of 71 in 13 overs that confirmed Lancashire's superiority.

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