CE CUP: Batting Rankings – Life Of Bryony

When Bryony Smith made her ODI debut in June 2019, having played a few T20s the previous summer, I wrote a piece suggesting that then-coach Mark Robinson might have solved a big problem for England by finding a role for her which really fitted – as a bowling allrounder who could seriously hit a ball.

But Robinson himself clearly wasn’t convinced – it remains the only ODI she has played, and she didn’t win another T20 cap either until last summer. She won 5 more caps in 2022 under Lisa Keightley, but Keightley didn’t seem entirely sure what her role was either – initially selecting her to bat at 3, then bumping her down the order after Alice Capsey came onto the scene. She was then dropped completely for a winter which included the T20 World Cup, and didn’t even make the cut as Capsey’s understudy, with Dani Gibson named as the reserve for South Africa.

At Stars, however, her role has been very clear for a while: come in opening-up and use the powerplay to hit over the top – get the first punch in, leaving the opposition dazed and confused in the dust. It doesn’t always work – she is out caught a lot – but this season she seems to have added a bit more oomph to a game that was already power-heavy. The numbers speak for themselves – leading run-scorer, and the 2nd highest strike rate in the comp*.

(* Minimum 25 balls faced – the “real” highest strike rate is Freya Davies – 200, consisting of 8 off 4 deliveries faced.)

Might another England call-up – which would feel almost like a third debut – now be on the cards for Smith? It would have to be in that powerplay role – that’s her game – and Sophia Dunkley and Danni Wyatt both look quite established in those opening slots, but if one of them should fall by the wayside (and Wyatt is obviously closer to the end of her career than the beginning of it) Smith is now the obvious choice.

Getting back to the rankings, Nat Sciver-Brunt comes in 2nd, despite having only played 4 games. It feels like a long time since we’ve been able to say an Englishwoman is the Best Player in the World™ and an English player has never won Wisden‘s Leading Woman Cricketer in the World, but no one has been better-placed to change that than Sciver-Brunt is right now – all she needs to do is win The Ashes single-handedly and it’s hers! (Easy-as… right?)

In terms of up-and-coming players, the aforementioned Dani Gibson, cracking the top 10 at No. 9, is obviously the next player on England’s radar. Some players are “batting allrounders” and some are “bowling allrounders”, but Gibson is more that old-school “genuine allrounder”, who you’d pick as either. Moreover, she has really pushed-on over the winter, adding more power to her batting game, and a lovely slower ball to her seam-bowling armoury, and there is a good chance she’ll win a T20 cap this summer – if not against Australia then versus Sri Lanka in September.

Player Played Runs Strike Rate
1. Bryony Smith (Stars) 7 256 155
2. Nat Sciver-Brunt (Blaze) 4 194 175
3. Georgia Adams (Vipers) 7 228 126
4. Holly Armitage (Diamonds) 7 216 129
5. Emma Lamb (Thunder) 5 196 141
6. Tammy Beaumont (Blaze) 5 187 143
7. Erin Burns (Sparks) 7 185 141
8. Phoebe Franklin (Stars) 7 196 121
9. Dani Gibson (Storm) 6 166 142
10. Georgie Boyce (Blaze) 7 179 127

Ranking = Runs * Strike Rate

3 thoughts on “CE CUP: Batting Rankings – Life Of Bryony

    • I don’t think I have. Cords’s Strike Rate is a lot lower than everyone else on this list, so 205 runs * 107 strike rate = 21,935; which ranks below 179 * 127 = 22,733.

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  1. Wyatt might have gone into finals day(s!) with only 147 runs but finished the comp leading with 273, and with a strike rate I suspect good enough to put her in this list!

    Also just to say that Smith and Gibson have impressed me in all that they do, that being batting, bowling, fielding, captaincy. They both simply must be in the reckoning, for T20 in particular.

    Boyce and Franklin have also had very good runs of form.

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