Australia's all-conquering women cricketers were hailed on Monday as among the greatest sporting teams the country has ever produced after winning yet another T20 World Cup.
Meg Lanning's side beat hosts South Africa by 19 runs at Newlands in Cape Town on Sunday to lift the trophy for a sixth time in the last seven tournaments.
"Don Bradman had the Invincibles. Meg Lanning has the Immortals," said The Australian newspaper.
"Where Bradman's legendary team was labelled as such just for one tour of England after the war, the Australian women's team is now an era of unprecedented world domination."
Australia were already reigning 50-over World Cup champions and they won the inaugural Commonwealth Games gold medal last year.
"It's a spectacular achievement and one that has been criminally underappreciated in recent weeks," the broadsheet added.
"For this Australian team not to be nominated for the Laureus World Sports Awards is a disgrace and makes a mockery of the once-prestigious awards."
The England women's football side has been nominated for this year's Laureus team award, along with five others, including the French men's rugby team and Formula One's Red Bull. But Lanning's world-beaters were overlooked.
The Sydney Morning Herald lauded them as one of the all-time greats.
"They've played in a way that has changed the status and perception of women's cricket forever and made some of them household names," it said.
"It's almost impossible to deny that when everything that matters is taken into account — achievement, grace, inspiration to a generation and social impact — they've put more stakes in the ground than any other."
Lanning has now led the team to five titles at ICC tournaments, with Sunday's triumph adding to her previous wins as skipper in 2014, 2018 and 2020, and the 2022 one-day World Cup victory in New Zealand.
Overall, she has been part of seven World Cup-winning teams.