Delhi loses the third consecutive final while Mumbai won eight points.
The Mumbai Indians won their second Premier League female title (WPL) with an eight -point victory against Delhi’s capital, who saw their third consecutive defeat in the final.
Delhi, still present in the three emerging competitions, would have felt a lot in the match after having reduced Mumbai to 149-7 at Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai during the first rounds on Saturday.
Captain and International India Harmanpreet Kaur 66 kept Mumbai’s hope together to keep the side they overcome in the inaugural final of 2023.
It was a work of Delhi’s stingy bowling, led by the South African of Marizanne Kapp 2-11.
Despite a series of cameos in the pursuit, including a powerful late explosion from Kapp, it is the masterful control of Mumbai – led by 3-30 of England Nat Sciver -Brunt – who smothered the hopes of Delhi.
Having won the draw, Delhi was instantly justified in their decision to move first when the opening of the Hayley Matthews Antilles was upset for three by Kapp.
The corridor with a right -hand man opened up and directly upset her four overs when she also removed the other opener from Mumbai, Yastika Bhatia, in her third.
Sciver-Brunt and Kaur began the fight for champions of 2023 with a partnership of 89, raised in 10 Overs, for the third window.
The first would have thought that she was in more races when she sweeps Shree Charari powerfully while over 30 years. However, the gently timed stroke chose Minnu Man in Square perfectly.
Kaur’s 66, the best score in the final, maintained the sleeves together later, but it was desperate that someone stayed with her. The next largest sleeve partnership was the 17 -eighth unexpected ticket for 17.
Delhi’s response could not have taken a worse starting point with Captain Meg Lanning and the opening partner Shafali Verma, both removed in the first three Overs.
Jess Jonassen followed the first after the power game before Annabel Sutherland followed the eighth.
Another final of the WPL and another defeat have settled.
The captain may have left, but his assistant, Jemimah Rodrigues, has seized the moment.
Delhi’s vice-captain praised his captain’s leadership in the construction of the final, but it was his dynamic sleeves with the highest strike rate in the anyone who confronted more than seven deliveries that gave his team a chance.
The consecutive limits to start the 11th propelled the right-hander to 30, but Amelia Kerr struck before the end was out with a socket and a armant to remove the number four of Delhi, which was prematurely by closing his bat face in search of one.

Kapp, a leading light with the ball, seemed to offer a last overview of Hope for Delhi while she and Sarah Bryce began another partnership before confusion and a momentary hesitation by the latter saw her exhausted comfortably.
It was the third highest partnership in the rounds at 18, but with the best being 22, it was a superficial return in search of a foundation on which to build a prosecution.
KAPP continued it near the prosecution of a woman to try to end the Delhi defeat sequence in the final, and when Kerr took a border in the 16th, it appeared that the tide could turn.
When the powerful versatile took place in Long On and Matthews – the first window she asked in the match – for 40, the game and the final were indeed up.
Sciver-Brunt, who claimed the Kapp window, played Shikha Pandey the next ball, and the pursuit quickly ended.
Host celebrations in Mumbai will continue for a long time. However, the same goes for the pain of the third time unlucky in the final for Delhi.