Kia Super League – James Piechowski’s Deep Cover Points – Southern Vipers & Loughborough Lightning

In a multi-part special, James Piechowski takes an in-depth look at the Kia Super League squads, continuing with Southern Vipers and Loughborough Lightning.

Southern Vipers

Batsmen: 7
Bowlers: 5
All-rounders: 3
Pace bowling options: 7
Spin options: 3 (2 OB, 1LB)
Wicket Keeping options: 2
Left-Handed Batsmen: 2

Possible Team

  • Edwards*, Bates, McGlashan, Adams, Greenway, Brindle, Rudd+, Schutt, Morris, Farrant, Gardner

Strengths

  • Experience. The top six batsmen are all very experienced players, capable of constructing an innings, and know just how to pace a reply
  • One of the better pace attacks in the KSL,which should take early wickets
  • Plenty of knowledge and experience in game management, in an on-field brains trust that includes Edwards, Bates, McGlashan, Greenway and Brindle

Weaknesses

  • Lack of spin options in their International and Academy players means that Vipers will have to pick one or two more development players than other sides to get any spin options at all.
  • Academy players do not necessarily fit the team structure as well as some of their “county” players. Georgia Adams, who had a good recent Academy tour of Sri Lanka, is the only one of three such players looking certain to play
  • Batting order, although experienced, is perhaps not the most explosive in the KSL
  • Vipers may be at a risk of limiting themselves as they do not have much batting below the top six and so cannot give too many quick wickets away.
  • Inexperienced spin attack may lead to over-reliance on pace, and Vipers conceding more runs in the field.

Uncertainties

  • We don’t know if, or how much, Arran Brindle will bowl

Prediction

  • I think the Vipers’ experience will see them to the top four, and finals day, but they may struggle to progress past this point, against sides with more flexible spin bowling attacks and more aggressive batting.

Loughborough Lightning

Batsmen: 5
Bowlers: 2
All-rounders: 8
Pace bowling options: 7
Spin options: 3 (SLA, LB, OB)
Wicket Keeping options: 2
Left-Handed Batsmen: 2

Possible Team

  • A. Jones +, Van Niekerk, Perry, Devine, Elwiss*, E. Jones, Odedra, Scholfield, MacDonald, Langston, Grundy

Strengths

  • Exciting and dynamic batting line-up who won’t hold back on their shots, but also have some solidity to back it up
  • Some of the best all-rounders in world cricket
  • Plenty of wicket-taking bowling options, both in spin and particularly the pace attack
  • Most bowlers can also bat, which frees up a slot for any development player, appropriate to the situation
  • “Challenger” team with many players looking to impress the England selectors

Weaknesses

  • Relatively young and inexperienced team overall in T20
  • A glut of all-rounders, which may make it difficult to know the best XI and establish a good, stable batting order
  • Too few specialist bowlers increases the likelihood of a bad day in the field.
  • Their two main spin bowlers, Grundy and Van Niekerk both turn the ball the same way
  • Inexperienced captain in Elwiss, who may have to draw heavily on the field from a brains trust including the experience of Perry and Devine

Uncertainties

  • Lightning are in a similar position to Surrey Stars in that they probably have too many all rounders. Again, this makes it difficult to predict an accurate batting order.

Prediction

  • Lightning have a shot at a top four place. They should be able to beat anyone on their day. They could be a bit of a hit-or-miss side, and may lack the experience to go all the way in the tournament though. Getting through to finals day may be tight, but if they can do it, it will show their potential.

Kia Super League – James Piechowski’s Deep Cover Points – Surrey Stars & Western Storm

In a multi-part special, James Piechowski takes an in-depth look at the Kia Super League squads, starting with Surrey Stars and Western Storm.

Now the squads are fully announced, the key thing that strikes me is how balanced they are – the efforts to ensure a fair distribution of England Performance and Academy squad players looks to have reasonably effective. It is difficult to see, when facing conflicting interests to balance player and club interests, all the while trying to evaluate how much influence each player may provide, how the ECB could have done much better. Maybe Loughborough were left looking a bit raw in terms of experience, but they were given an extra Academy player to compensate. After being handed four strong looking England players, Yorkshire Diamonds may have looked to bolster their batting more from their imports, knowing that the other players coming in from the Academy or County could struggle to offer much with the bat. And Southern Vipers could have at least chosen an International spin bowling all-rounder knowing that they were struggling for spin options elsewhere.

It will be interesting to learn whether it turns out to be more advantageous for a team to have a strong squad all the way through, or whether the standard of the best players (the first XI) will be more important. As it is such a short competition, taking place over the course of only 3 weeks, the latter is perhaps more likely to be the case, as there is not long enough for players to acquire many injuries and squad players to come into effect. Also, the conditions are not likely to be hot enough to tire players out to the extent that resting players or fitness will be an issue.

One notable feature of the squad selections which I’ve not heard brought up yet is the lack if international spin imports. Among the players we perhaps could have expected to see, but are absent are the likes of Erin Osborne, Kristen Beams, Grace Harris, Morna Nielsen, Leigh Kasperek, Yolani Fourie and Sune Luus to name but a few. Indeed Harris would have been an ideal addition for Southern Vipers. It seems that most of the teams have decided to forgo additional quality spin options and rely chiefly on their medium pace attack. There is an exception to this, in the Western Storm, whose innovation in this regard could prove vital. Perhaps there will be higher batting scores in the league than we expect, as there will be more pace on the ball.

Surrey Stars

Batsmen: 5
Bowlers: 2
All-rounders: 8
Pace bowling options: 4
Spin options: 4 (3 OB, 1 LB)
Wicket Keeping options: 2
Left-Handed Batsmen: 1

Possible Team

  • Beaumont, White+, Lanning, Kapp, Sciver*, Morgan, Smith, Dunkley, Farrell, Marsh, Hartley

Strengths

  • Good balance of International players
  • Meg Lanning
  • Economical opening bowlers: Kapp and Farrell
  • Flexible line-up with plenty of bowling options, both medium pace and spin
  • One of the better spin attacks in KSL

Weaknesses

  • The young captain, Nat Sciver will have to draw on an on-field brains trust including Lanning, Morgan, Marsh, Kapp and more. There is plenty of experience available but any competing opinions may be difficult to manage.
  • A glut of all-rounders, which may make it difficult to know the best XI and establish a good, stable batting order
  • Too few specialist bowlers increases the likelihood of a bad day in the field.
  • Batting order may be prone to loss of quick wickets, leaving one established player to manage the last few all-rounders in scraping together a score

Uncertainties

  • We don’t know if Beaumont will take up the wicket keeping gloves or if Kirstie White will. If Beaumont does keep, it would allow the Stars to either strengthen the batting or provide more bowling options.

Prediction

  • They are not the strongest side on paper, despite the inclusion of Lanning. Their success or otherwise will largely depend on how she does and if the others can provide adequate support. The Stars may struggle to reach the top four and get into finals day, but it’s certainly possible for them. The squad will need to gel quickly, play well, and cause an upset or two to progress though.

Western Storm

Batsmen: 6
Bowlers: 2
All-rounders: 7
Pace bowling options: 5
Spin options: 4 (3 OB, 1 SLA)
Wicket Keeping options: 2
Left-Handed Batsmen: 0

Possible Team

  • Priest+, Taylor, Knight*, Wilson, Luff, Lee, Fairbairn, Dibble, Shrubsole, Westbury, Davies

Strengths

  • Batting order is both strong and long, with a good mix of aggression and stability
  • Effective, experienced spin attack looks the strongest in the KSL, with the off-breaks of Knight, Taylor and Westbury supported by left arm spin from Dibble
  • Two good pace bowlers to back them up, in Shrubsole and Davies
  • “Challenger” team with some players looking to impress the England selectors
  • Knight’s captaincy has been effective in the WBBL and she can use the experience from that, plus draw from an on-field brains trust including world-cup winning captain Taylor

Weaknesses

  • No Left handed batsmen – this will make it easier for opposition bowlers to maintain the line they are aiming for
  • Too few specialist bowlers increases the likelihood of a bad day in the field.
  • Possibly over-reliant on spin. Any injuries to their 2 main medium pace bowlers, Shrubsole and Davies, will leave the bowling reserve bench looking a little empty.
  • Davies was not one of the more successful bowlers in the recent England Academy tour.

Uncertainties

  • A difficult batting order to predict. Lee could play anywhere from three down to six, or even open; likewise Knight.

Prediction

  • Storm look a good bet to make the top four and finals day. They are one of the stronger sides on paper, with relatively few weaknesses, bar medium pace bowling backup. They have a  good chance at winning the tournament overall, and should be disappointed if they don’t make the final.

NEWS: Full Kia Super League Squads

Lancashire Thunder

  1. Kate Cross (EW)
  2. Sarah Taylor (EW) (Capt)
  3. Danielle Wyatt (EW)
  4. Sarah Coyte (O)
  5. Deandra Dottin (O)
  6. Hayley Matthews (O)
  7. Sophie Ecclestone (EWA)
  8. Emma Lamb (EWA)
  9. Ellie Threlkeld (EWA)
  10. Natalie Brown
  11. Georgia Holmes
  12. Laura Marshall
  13. Natasha Miles
  14. Laura Newton
  15. Nalisha Patel

Loughborough Lightning

  1. Georgia Elwiss (EW) (Capt)
  2. Rebecca Grundy (EW)
  3. Amy Jones (EW)
  4. Beth Langston (EW)
  5. Sophie Devine (O)
  6. Ellyse Perry (O)
  7. Dane van Nierkerk (O)
  8. Evelyn Jones (EWA)
  9. Alex MacDonald (EWA)
  10. Georgie Boyce
  11. Thea Brookes
  12. Amy Gauvrit
  13. Lauren Griffiths
  14. Sonia Odedra
  15. Paige Scholfield

Southern Vipers

  1. Charlotte Edwards (EW) (Capt)
  2. Natasha Farrant (EW)
  3. Lydia Greenway (EW)
  4. Suzie Bates (O)
  5. Sara McGlashan (O)
  6. Megan Schutt (O)
  7. Georgia Adams (EWA)
  8. Ellen Burt (EWA)
  9. Katie George (EWA)
  10. Arran Brindle
  11. Isabelle Collis
  12. Daisy Gardner
  13. Alice Macleod
  14. Fi Morris
  15. Carla Rudd

Surrey Stars

  1. Tammy Beaumont (EW)
  2. Laura Marsh (EW)
  3. Natalie Sciver (EW) (Capt)
  4. Rene Farrell (O)
  5. Marizanne Kapp (O)
  6. Meg Lanning (O)
  7. Sophia Dunkley (EWA)
  8. Alex Hartley (EWA)
  9. Bryony Smith (EWA)
  10. Aylish Cranstone
  11. Grace Gibbs
  12. Cordelia Griffith
  13. Raveena Lakhtaria
  14. Beth Morgan
  15. Kirstie White

Western Storm

  1. Heather Knight (EW) (Capt)
  2. Anya Shrubsole (EW)
  3. Fran Wilson (EW)
  4. Lizelle Lee (O)
  5. Rachel Priest (O)
  6. Stafanie Taylor (O)
  7. Freya Davies (EWA)
  8. Sophie Luff (EWA)
  9. Amara Carr
  10. Jodie Dibble
  11. Rosalie Fairbairn
  12. Georgia Hennessy
  13. Sophie Mackenzie
  14. Cait O’Keefe
  15. Izzy Westbury

Yorkshire Diamonds

  1. Katherine Brunt (EW)
  2. Jenny Gunn (EW)
  3. Danielle Hazell (EW)
  4. Lauren Winfield (EW) (Capt)
  5. Alex Blackwell (O)
  6. Beth Mooney (O)
  7. Shabnim Ismail (O)
  8. Hollie Armitage (EWA)
  9. Steph Butler (EWA)
  10. Alice Davidson Richards
  11. Teresa Graves
  12. Katie Levick
  13. Anna Nicholls
  14. Laura Spragg
  15. Katie Thompson

NEWS: Warwickshire Sign England’s Gunn

England’s Jenny Gunn has followed Danni Wyatt out of the door at Nottinghamshire, making the move across the Midlands to Warwickshire.

Notts were relegated from Division 1 of the Women’s County Championship at the end of last season; and an exeat was therefore expected as their England players seek to maintain a high standard of domestic cricket.

In 10 seasons at Notts, Gunn scored nearly 3,000 runs at an impressive average of 46 (helped by a fair few of Not Outs) and took 83 wickets, including her domestic career-best 5-3 against Kent last season.

The signing is a massive boost for Warwickshire, who have been to the brink of relegation themselves a number of times recently, but have acquired the useful  knack of somehow clinging on.

NEWS: ECB – We DID Invite Indian Players

The ECB have confirmed to CRICKETher that the BCCI were contacted in advance of the selection of overseas players for the Kia Super League, but that no Indians expressed an interest in playing in the tournament.

This contradicts the BCCI’s claims in an article by Snehal Pradhan on Firstpost that “they had not received any…communication from the ECB and that they could only consider allowing Indian players [to participate] after they did.”

An ECB spokesperson states that they “made contact with the overseas boards for all seven of the [other] teams involved with the ICC Women’s Championship, asking them to invite their players to express an interest in playing in the Kia Super League…None of the 65 players who expressed an interest in playing in the Kia Super League were from India.”

While Indian fans have been disappointed at the lack of inclusion of the likes of Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami in KSL, this suggests that it was the BCCI’s own reluctance (or that of their players?) which has prevented any Indians from being involved.

NEWS: BCCI Claim ECB Did Not Invite Indians To Super League

UPDATE: See here for the ECB’s response.

This week’s announcement of the overseas stars for the Kia Super League has become overshadowed in the eyes of some Indian fans by an apparent row between the ECB and the BCCI over why no Indian players are involved.

The overseas contingent includes 7 Australians, 4 New Zealanders, 4 South Africans and 2 West Indians… but no Indians – much to the dissapointment of Indian fans:

The ECB had previously claimed to have contacted all the other boards offering their players the chance to participate.

But a spokesperson for the BCCI has appeared to contradict this, as Snehal Pradhan writes in India’s Firstpost:

“A senior BCCI official told Firstpost that they had not received any such communication from the ECB and that they could only consider allowing Indian players after they did.”

[Full Article]

Clearly, somebody is being disingenuous, but the question is… who?

UPDATE: See here for the ECB’s response.

UPDATE 2: This piece on Cricinfo makes it abundantly clear what the answer is to the above question!

LIVE: Kia Super League – Overseas Player Announcements

Follow this page for updates on today’s announcements!

6:15 – The England Academy player allocations will be announced next week. See you back here then!

17:30 – Interesting to consider whether these are the best 18 players in the world – or has it been more a case of trying to create well-balanced teams? No Alyssa Healy for example – did she lose out because of lack of space for another keeper?

17:20 – Richard Pyrah, Yorkshire Diamonds coach, suggests that his main criteria for picking overseas players was success in WBBL: “I wanted somebody who’s been there, done it and knows how to win.” He’ll no doubt be pretty chuffed to have landed Alex Blackwell.

10:20 – Were we expecting any Indian players to be part of KSL? Not really, if we’re honest!

10:15 – The ECB have certainly kept their promise that this will be “The Best v. The Best” – all of these teams now have their very own Ace of Spades – e.g. Loughborough (the one team without a “marquee” England player) now have Ellyse Perry!!

10:10 – In theory, South Africa are touring Ireland during the KSL window, and despite rumours to the contrary, the last we heard is this is still “on”, so we’ve no idea what this means for the South African players named today???

9:45 – Any massive surprises here? Not really! Perhaps we might have been expecting to see South African captain Mignon du Preez in there… but there is still one player yet to be announced!

Lancashire Thunder

  • Deandra Dottin (WI)
  • Sarah Coyte (AUS)
  • TBD
  • Kate Cross
  • Danni Wyatt
  • Sarah Taylor

Loughborough Lightning

  • Sophie Devine (NZ)
  • Ellyse Perry (AUS)
  • Dane van Niekerk (SA)
  • Becky Grundy
  • Georgia Elwiss
  • Amy Jones
  • Beth Langston

Southern Vipers

  • Suzie Bates (NZ)
  • Sara McGlashan (NZ)
  • Megan Schutt (AUS)
  • Charlotte Edwards
  • Tash Farrant
  • Lydia Greenway

Surrey Stars

  • Meg Lanning (AUS)
  • Marizanne Kapp (SA)
  • Rene Farrell (AUS)
  • Nat Sciver
  • Laura Marsh
  • Tammy Beaumont

Western Storm

  • Stafanie Taylor (WI)
  • Rachel Priest (NZ)
  • Lizelle Lee (SA)
  • Heather Knight
  • Anya Shrubsole
  • Fran Wilson

Yorkshire Diamonds

  • Shabnim Ismail (SA)
  • Beth Mooney (AUS)
  • Alex Blackwell (AUS)
  • Lauren Winfield
  • Katherine Brunt
  • Dani Hazell
  • Jenny Gunn

9:15 – Welcome to our Live Blog of the KSL overseas player announcements – we are expecting the news to start coming in at around 9:30am. We’ll start things off with some FAQs…

What’s being announced today? Which “overseas” players are playing for which teams – each of the six teams are expected to announce 3 overseas players. Note that “overseas” means non-EU players – the vast majority are expected to be from Australia, New Zealand, West Indies and South Africa.

How were the decisions made? We understand that 80 or so overseas players applied to be part of KSL and a big list was drawn-up which was sent to all the teams. The teams said which players they wanted, with the players also given the opportunity to express a preference, before ECB then made the final decisions.

Salliann Briggs speaks to CRICKETher: On Loughborough Lightning, Hopes for Super League – and Ellyse Perry!

When I meet Loughborough Lightning coach Salliann Briggs on her home turf at Loughborough University, it is the day after Kia Super League England player allocations have been announced, and her excitement about the competition is palpable – and infectious. While Briggs has already worked at Loughborough for nearly 7 years, as MCCU Cricket Performance Manager and coach of the England Women U15 and U19 squads, Super League presents a new challenge:

“[Previously my role] has been a lot about developing individual cricketers…this is going to be a fairly new experience because results matter. It puts me under completely different pressures, but having access to probably the best domestic [women’s] competition in the world now is a great job for me. I’m really looking forward to it!”

Part of Briggs’s excitement comes from the recent England player allocations. She will have Becky Grundy, Georgia Elwiss, Amy Jones and Beth Langston at her disposal during the competition, and while there have been some suggestions that Loughborough have drawn the short straw in having no “marquee” England player on their team, Briggs says that all four were at the top of her list when making player requests to the ECB. She stresses the importance of having 4 players who are graduates of or current students at the university:

“The university are a standalone organisation, [unlike] some of the other hosts. So it’s a big investment for Loughborough University, and we wanted to make sure that we had players that are linked to Loughborough that have actually enabled us to achieve this host status.”

“It was also important that [they] were living in Loughborough. Because part of this process for me is not just a 3-week competition, or a trophy, it’s about making sure we provide the right support for these girls on a year-round basis. So assigning an England player that has to travel 2 hours for a training session, just wouldn’t make sense.”

She also points out that her 4 allocated players provide the core of a well-balanced side:

“With Beth [Langston] I’ve got an opening bowler. With Grundy I’ve got a left-arm spinner, and [there are] stats about how important left-arm spinners are at the highest level. A keeper and top-order bat, Amy Jones. And then Georgia Elwiss, who’s a genuine batting all-rounder. It’s made my life a lot easier trying to piece everyone else around them.”

Each KSL team will also have 3 overseas players allocated to them – to be announced in due course – and Briggs says she is “looking forward to the challenges [as coach] of working with someone from a different country”. She refuses to be drawn on the persistent rumours linking Aussie superstar Ellyse Perry – whose husband Matt Toomua will be nearby, playing for Leicester Tigers – to the Loughborough franchise, though she does acknowledge that it would be a coup for her side were the rumours to be proved true:  “I only wish that we have someone like her!”

She also quashes the suggestion that Loughborough have not yet announced their captain because Perry is to be given the job, saying that it is almost certain that one of the 4 allocated England players – Langston, Jones, Elwiss or Grundy – will be handed the captaincy reins, but that she wanted to wait until the squad returned from the World Twenty20 in order to “have a good discussion with no distractions” with each of the players, and then “make an informed decision” based on those conversations.

Why was Loughborough’s bid successful where others based at first-class counties – notably Edgbaston – failed? Briggs emphasises their history of a strong commitment to the women’s game:

“A legacy of the Graham Dilley era is that we made a commitment that we were going to treat female cricketers exactly the same as male cricketers, and we have always done that…I’d like to say that any female cricketer who’s gone through [Loughborough University] would say, ‘I had everything I needed to fulfil my potential’.”

“The location on campus of the National Cricket Performance Centre and the access the girls will get to that, and the additional conditioning facilities and expertise there, was central to our bid.”

While there’s suddenly a lot more interest in women’s cricket around the country now the ECB have invested £3.5 million in the KSL, the awarding of the franchise to Loughborough is, according to Briggs, an acknowledgement by the ECB of the investment that Loughborough have long made in the women’s game – with at times half of the England team having graduated from the University and her MCCU programme.

Briggs is clearly driven partly by the desire to win the inaugural Super League, which would surely be a feather in her coaching cap. However, she stresses that to her, the competition is about more than just results on the pitch:

“It’s about making sure we provide the right support for these girls on a year-round basis. I want to feel that all 15 players have got access to everything they need…Also, we want to make sure that we’re doing our bit in this local area, in the Midlands, in getting a new wave of spectators and young players that really enjoy women’s cricket.”

Loughborough’s aim, according to Briggs, is to attract between 300 and 700 people at each of their 3 home matches, and they are beginning their games at 4.30pm in order to encourage as many people as possible to come along. While Briggs recognises the criticism Loughborough – as the only host without a first-class county ground – have received, she is quick to point out that their smaller venue size will actually be more conducive to a good atmosphere than some of the other host stadiums. She also emphasises that they are working hard behind the scenes to make the spectator experience as friendly as possible:

“Not playing in a stadium offers us (and ECB) some unique opportunities to try some development initiatives with girl cricketers, and we’ve already talked to the local County Boards about this. We have another large playing area adjacent to the match ground where we can host some small games and coaching clinics/ ‘have a go sessions’ etc for girls, and then they can come across to the matches. It can be a great experience – which is what we’re looking at for the girls.”

“One of our games is on the same day as the Opening Ceremony of the Olympics so we’re doing a Brazilian theme – there’s going to be a carnival outside, and inflatables – as well as the cricket experiences.. I’ve been involved in some of the planning meetings and what I’m hearing is very exciting.”

“I guess the biggest message is, that [compared with] what people have experienced before when coming to watch cricket games at Loughborough, it will be completely different.”

Loughborough Lightning’s aim, in the words of Briggs, is “to be the leading Kia super League host”. If her own sense of purpose and vision can translate into results on and off the pitch, it’s hard to see them failing.

NEWS: Southern Stars Updated Pregnancy Policy

The pay rises for Australian women cricketers, announced yesterday, have been quite rightly much-lauded: top players will now be able to earn in excess of $100,000, with CA overall increasing its female player payment pool from $2.36 million to $4.23 million, with maximum retainers for the Southern Stars rising from $49,000 to $65,000.

However, many of the articles on this subject also mentioned that an updated “pregnancy policy” was now in place, but failed to elaborate on this. So what are the details?

CRICKETher talked with a Cricket Australia spokesperson, who confirmed that the new policy is as follows:

“If a pregnant player advises her team (WBBL, WNCL or Commonwealth Bank Southern Stars) that she does not wish to continue playing cricket in accordance with her Player Contract due to her pregnancy, the player may elect to:

1. Terminate her Player Contract by mutual agreement, or

2. Amend her Player Contract by mutual agreement to suspend the Player’s obligations to render skilled services as a cricket player during the Term until the earlier of:

a) Expiry of the term, or

b) Date from which the player notifies her WBBL team she wishes to continue playing cricket.”

CA also confirmed that it is entirely down to the player herself whether she continues to play while pregnant. As CA puts it, “The overriding objective is to make sure no player feels disadvantaged due to pregnancy.”

While the pay rises in themselves are clearly important, it’s great to know that CA are also working with players to be as accommodating as possible in other areas, too.

NEWS: Surrey Defend Social Media Strategy

Surrey CCC have defended their social media strategy, following criticism yesterday that they appeared to have ignored the Kia Super League player announcements.

Surrey came under fire for their decision not to host a dedicated Twitter feed for Surrey Stars, and then for not Tweeting about the announcements during the morning, when there was a significant social media push from all the other teams.

However, Surrey’s Communications Manager Jon Surtees spoke to CRICKETher last night, assuring us:

“None of your concerns will be borne out over time. Indeed I hope we will be seen to be leading the way with promotion of the competition and our team.”

On the issue of the “joint” Twitter account, Surtees points to the other side of the coin: that it means they are able to leverage an existing social media presence with over a quarter of million subscribers across the various platforms – Twitter, Facebook, email, etc.. Indeed, a quick check on Twitter bears this out: the @SurreyCricket account has 46,000 followers… the other five “dedicated” KSL accounts have just over 3,000 between them!

And on the decision to hold off on social media promotion during the day, Surtees told us:

“Our Twitter and Facebook accounts have been ‘taken over’ with Stars branding and advertisements this evening – the time when our stats tell us our social media is most effective.”

Finally, Surtees promised that the women’s county team (which of course, is not the same thing as the KSL team, featuring mostly an entirely different set of players) would also benefit from an improved marketing presence this year.

With both the Stars and the “county” team scheduled to play games at The Kia Oval this season it will be interesting to see how this translates into “bums on seats”, and we certainly wouldn’t bet against them being among the best-attended matches of the summer.