To be fair to England, they gave it a shot – Sophia Dunkley came back into the side and played like I’ve never seen her play before, blowing doors open with 59 off just 30 balls – but it wasn’t enough as Australia retained the Ashes at the first opportunity, taking an effectively-unassailable 8-0 lead in the series, which they only need to draw to keep the trophy.
A night which ended with Australia reaching for the moon, began with their captain Alyssa Healy reaching for the moon-boot after a flare-up of the foot injury that kept her out of the T20 World Cup semi-final defeat back in October. The Australian camp will deny it, but there is an argument that they are a stronger side without Healy – there isn’t much to choose between Healy and Beth Mooney keeping wicket, and Georgia Voll opening the batting looks like the player Healy used to be in her prime.
Voll gave Australia an explosive start in the powerplay, whacking a fearless 21 off 11 balls. Given a life as Lauren Bell made a total Horlicks of a straightforward catching opportunity, she simply smacked the next ball for another 4. One facet of this Australian team under Shelley Nitschke is that everyone is very clear about their role, and Voll’s is to go as hard as possible; so although she didn’t last long, she did her job on the night, putting England on the back foot right from the get-go.
Beth Mooney’s role on the other hand is to go deep. Taking her innings all the way into the 18th over today, she faced 50 deliveries and made them count for 75 runs; but the key was letting others play around her. Phoebe Litchfield wasn’t quite hitting her marks, despite one remarkable switch-hit 6, but she still kept the field busy with her disruptive strokeplay – which Beth Mooney admitted post-match had been a deliberate strategy to unsettle England’s fielding. England made error after error, including a mix-up between Nat Sciver-Brunt and Charlie Dean which could have got rid of Mooney when she was on a run-a-ball 23; and there was also a caught behind/ stumped opportunity around the same time which Amy Jones couldn’t snaffle.
Heather Knight said post-match: “If we’d conceded less we’d have been in with a real chance.” Given that Australia finished 7 down with not a lot of batting to come, getting rid of Mooney for 50 fewer runs would have made a real difference.
As it was, Mooney pushed on, as Australia upped the run rate in the middle overs, scoring at over 10 runs per over through both middle phases. Tahlia McGrath produced a brilliant cameo, just when Australia looked like they might be starting to dry-up – scoring off every single one of the 8 balls she faced before she was bowled by Sophie Ecclestone, including four 4s and a 6.
In a sense, it could have been even worse for England if Georgia Wareham had been able to recreate the innings she played in Hobart, where she made 38 off 12 balls – instead “only” grabbing 11 off 10, to leave England requiring 199.
Within two overs of their reply, England were in deep trouble, losing both their openers to ducks – Maia Bouchier slog-sweeping to a quite deliberately placed Georgia Wareham at deep square, and Danni Wyatt apparently trying to run Kim Garth down through the vacant slip area which… turned out not to be vacant at all, but occupied by Phoebe Litchfield. (I know Litchfield is small… but she’s not that small!)
The game looked to be over at that point, but Dunkley’s daring innings gave England a slither of hope – at 10 overs they were ahead of where Australia had been, and with only 3 wickets down it felt like something extraordinary might be about to happen; but within another two overs both Dunkley and Knight had departed and the game was up – the Ashes were gone.
England were predictably insisting to the media in their post-match interviews that they could still save some pride by drawing the series, and it is the one thing that might yet save Jon Lewis’s job. But it feels like an Australian whitewash is now the most likely outcome, and even if England can salvage some or all of the remaining points it shouldn’t change the fact that they have gone backwards in the last two years under the current leadership. They are bullies who can whop the small teams, but as soon as they come up against the big guns they collapse in a heap. They are a squad set up to win these big run chases, but when push comes to shove they can’t even actually do that – even when Jon-Ball works, it doesn’t work. It’s time for the management to pay the price for that.
The ground formerly known as the Bellerive Oval is now officially named the Ninja Stadium – so-called sadly not after the legendary Japanese assassins, but a brand of air-fryer – making it the only cricket ground in the world to be named after a kitchen appliance. And it was England who got air-fried today by an Australian performance that was just too good.
England were in the game with Australia at 59-4 in their knock; and question marks of one kind or another over all their remaining batters – Beth Mooney, Tahlia McGrath and Ash Gardner. The ruthless Australian press have been calling for one of Mooney or McGrath to make way for the young, exciting Georgia Voll, and whilst her bowling definitely keeps her in the XI, Gardner’s batting numbers have been less than stellar of late – though she did post a career-best 74 in the recent series versus New Zealand.
But all three came good, before an incredible cameo from Georgia Wareham put the game beyond England. Mooney and McGrath made half-centuries whilst Gardner completed her first ever international hundred. 59-4 became 257-6, and eventually 308-8, as Wareham plundered 38 off just 12 balls – a Strike Rate of 316 – the kind of number only usually seen when someone only faces a couple of deliveries.
All-told, Australia added 104 runs in their last 10 overs; and suddenly… having been on course for 250… they were over 300. England didn’t bowl badly in that death phase – Lauren Bell and Sophie Ecclestone did very little wrong – but the Australians were seeing the ball like a beach-ball by that stage. They took risks, and not every one came off – Gardner and McGrath were both dismissed going for big shots – but enough did to get them to that 300.
It is the magic number in women’s ODIs – 300 has been successfully chased in women’s ODIs just once, by Sri Lanka, who overhauled 302 against South Africa last year. So it was always going to be a near-impossible proposition for England here, with big boundaries and a slow outfield making it tough to get over the rope either aerially or along the floor.
There is no text-book or manual to tell you how to chase 300; but Sri Lanka’s approach (or rather, Chamari Athapaththu’s approach, as it was she that scored the vast majority of the runs) was probably the only way – to keep up with the rate from the start. But against the discipline of Australia’s bowling, that was never going to be easy. England kept ahead of the worm, so that at 25 overs they were 122-3 where Australia had been 115-4; but at no point was England’s overall run rate ahead of the required rate, meaning that the only route to victory lay in emulating Australia’s massive finish, but with all the added pressure of chasing.
It didn’t happen, but it was never going to. Tammy Beaumont and Nat Sciver-Brunt accumulated well, both passing 50; but it would have taken one of the greatest innings of all time to turn the tide of this game, and that wasn’t to be. By the time Danni Wyatt-Hodge and Amy Jones reached the crease, the required rate was starting to go vertical – they needed to force the pace, but inevitably that meant wickets started to fall, and some special catching from Australia put the boot in. Phoebe Litchfield took the catch of the summer, pedaling backwards; then Kim Garth said ‘Hold my beer’ and took an even better one diving forwards; before Ash Gardner finally said ‘Hold both beers’ with a relay-catch to herself on the rope.
Could England have done anything differently? Not today, no – unlike the 2nd ODI, this was not a match they could have won. As Journey didn’t quite say: “Some you win; some you lose because you played badly… and some you lose because you’ve been run over by a freight train.”
So now we move on to the T20s, with England 6-0 down. Assuming we don’t get rained-on, England need to win every remaining game – all 3 T20s plus the Test – to win back the Ashes. Heather Knight made the point in her press conference that England were 6-0 down last time, and came back; though of course they didn’t actually win in 2023 either – just tied the points series, meaning Australia retained the trophy.
There are a couple of fresh faces we could see in the T20s – the batting will obviously be re-jigged with Danni Wyatt-Hodge moved up to the top of the order, opening up a slot for Dani Gibson (or possibly Freya Kemp?) to come in at 7, and we could see Sarah Glenn brought in to give Lauren Filer a rest. (England would doubtless ideally like to rest Bell too, but Heather Knight strongly implied in the post-match press conference that she will play – she has been too good to leave on the bench.) Gibson and Glenn do obviously both bring something different, but is it enough to arrest the momentum of the rampant Australians?
As tall-orders go, it feels like a hundred storeys. But if they do it, it will be the stuff of stories.
The Greek philosopher Aristotle once said that “Hope is a waking dream” and so it proved for England, as their Ashes hopes were raised by a brilliant bowling performance, before being dashed once again with the realisation that when it comes to batting, England Gonna England.
The Junction Oval, in Melbourne’s beautiful bohemian beach-side suburb of St Kilda, has been a bit of a first innings graveyard of late. Since New Zealand struck 231-8 here in March 2019, no side has made it to 50 overs in the 4 subsequent completed ODIs; yet Australia looked well set to tally-up a decent total at 131-2 nearing the half-way mark.
Then Sophie Ecclestone removed Beth Mooney in the 23rd over; and that seemed to prompt Heather Knight to make a game-changing decision – bringing Alice Capsey on to bowl for the first time in the series, in the 24th over.
Capsey has been in pretty woeful nick with the bat, but she had a decent WBBL with the ball, taking 13 wickets in the 8 games she played before jetting off to South Africa with England – could she bring something here? The answer soon looked clear, as she dropped new batter Sutherland off her first delivery. Sutherland then added insult to injury by smashing Capsey back over her head for six off the final ball of the over.
It must have been touch and go whether Capsey would get another over, but Knight tossed her the ball once more, and this time Capsey got her revenge. Sutherland came down the pitch; Capsey adjusted and pushed it wide, looking for the stumping. Knowing she was gone if the ball went past her, Sutherland stretched for the shot and mistimed it straight to Knight at cover.
Another Capsey over followed, and another wicket – that of Ellyse Perry, given out LBW on review after the umpire initially shook her head. Perry had been looking in dangerous form – she was on 60, with a hundred beckoning – but Capsey had a ball with her name on it, and she was back in the pavillion with Australia starting to wobble on 149-5; which became 150-6 as… who else… Alice Capsey bowled Ash Gardner for just 2.
England were up and running in this Ashes as Sophie Ecclestone took another couple to bowl Australia out for just 180 – their lowest 1st innings total in a 50-over game in the professional era. If England couldn’t win this one, you had to ask, when could they win?
It’s not unknown for England to shoot themselves in the foot, but this time they shot themselves full in the face – batting so slowly that they wouldn’t have won the match even if they’d had another 10 wickets in hand.
Australia tried their best to make it an even contest at the end. Annabel Sutherland, bowling the 48th over, dropped Amy Jones, then gifted her two head-height no-balls, meaning she had to be removed from the attack leaving Tahlia McGrath to bowl the final ball of the over. Having declined the opportunity of a run off the first free hit to protect No. 11 Lauren Bell, Jones scooped the second free hit to deep square and yet again declined the run, apparently having forgotten it was the final ball of the over. This left Bell to face Megan Schutt from the other end, who promptly bowled her to finish the game with England 22 runs short of victory.
The blame shouldn’t lie entirely with Amy Jones, but it does feel like she got it into her head that all England needed to do was bat it out, and they’d win the game, and was then totally unable to shift that mindset when it stopped being true. It is all very well declining single after single to protect your two No. 11s (yes… this England side goes up to 11 twice, with Laurens Bell and Filer in the lineup!) but once you get to the point where you need 6 an over, you can’t really afford to do that any more because it is going to leave you short even if you make it to 50 overs.
Some credit must go to Alana King who bowled with brilliant aggression; but even with King, England were the architects of their own downfall. Danni Wyatt presumably thought she’d picked a wrong-un from King, and had to watch in horror as a conventional leg-break spun back onto her off stump; whilst Charlie Dean decided this was the time to try an audacious ramp – brilliantly anticipated by Beth Mooney, who left her position at slip to get herself behind the keeper (as she is entitled to do in response to the stroke that the batter’s movements suggest she intends to play) to make the catch.
And so all that good work done by England’s bowlers was undone by yet another half-cut performance with the bat. An Ashes series which could have been levelled 2-2 is now 4-0 to Australia, with just a couple of days before we go again for the 3rd ODI in Hobart. England could make changes – Sophia Dunkley and Dani Gibson both travelled to Melbourne, so will presumably be available in Tasmania, and Kate Cross apparently isn’t totally ruled out of the last ODI; but it feels like we are very-much in “moving deckchairs on the Titanic” territory here.
Aristotle once also said: “Excellence is never an accident.” It isn’t. And nor is mediocrity.
If there’s a better place in the world to watch live cricket than North Sydney Oval, I’ve not been there. With its compact nature and delightful “Olde Worlde” feel, provided by its green-painted tin-roofed stands which were partly imported from the SCG when that was rebuilt in the 80s, it somehow draws you into the action in a way that the bigger first-class grounds never do. If a cricket ground can have “soul”, then North Sydney Oval has it like Otis Redding, sittin’ on the dock of the Sydney bay.
Over 6,200 Sydneysiders turned out to enjoy it on a beautiful summer Sunday, and were rewarded with a home win in the first match of the 2025 Women’s Ashes, with Alyssa Healy making her first “score” of the Aussie season – 70 off 78 balls – to put the hosts 2-0 up in the series.
It hasn’t been the easiest few months for the Australian skipper, and had she not been captain her place in the XI would almost certainly have been at real risk with the recent form of Georgia Voll, who in just 3 appearances this antipodean summer has scored more international 100s than Alice Capsey has in almost 3 years since her debut.
Prior to today, Healy’s 9 matches this summer in the green and gold had seen her pass 30 several times, but no further. With two different injuries nagging at her knee and foot, we wondered who she needed more – her coach or her doctor?ย But all those worries evaporated today into the hazy blue New South Wales sky, as Healy turned on the class when it really mattered. Having kept wicket energetically, she then batted with an authority that made a mockery of any suggestion that her 34 years were starting to take their toll.
Coming into this match, England insisted they were in brilliant form after their success in South Africa – that tour wasn’t officially a multi-format points series, but if it had been, England would have won it 14-2. Those of us who raised question marks at the beginning of that tour were beginning to feel like killjoys by the end, but the result here suggests that we may actually have had a point.
Australia were not at their brilliant best; but against them England nonetheless looked very, very mediocre at times – those times being mainly between 10:30am and 4:30pm. Outside of those times, there were some positives – England joined arms to belt out the national anthem prior to play; whilst later on Heather Knight and Lauren Bell performed their post-match media duties with customary aplomb.
But in terms of the actual cricket, it didn’t go quite so well. Lauren Bell sending down 9 overs for 25 runs – an Economy Rate of 2.8, by far her best in ODIs – was probably the best of it; but she couldn’t make it count in the wickets column, which is what England really needed having been bowled out for only just north of 200.
A typical first innings score in meetings between the top 5 sides since 2020 is 264; and on a pitch which looked decent (if slightly sweaty, after a night under the covers) 280 felt more like par going in. Australia’s run rate would have put them at around 260/270, even though they took their foot off the gas at times, which obviously they had the luxury of doing, chasing the target they were chasing.
The bottom line: 204 was not nearly enough. England sold their wickets far too cheaply, with Heather Knight and Nat Sciver-Brunt particularly standing out in the “What Were They Thinking” stakes. My advice? If you want to be out on the pull in Sydney, try Kings Cross on a Saturday night, not North Sydney Oval on a Sunday morning.
Both captains made a lot in the press conferences yesterday of getting those first points on the board; of getting momentum in what is a punishingly quick series – tomorrow, we take the first of 6 internal flights to play 7 games (including a 4-day Test) in 22 days. And it is Australia who now have those first points and that momentum. All is not lost for England by any means – there are still 14 points to play for. But they are going to have to bat a lot, lot better if the final scoreline isn’t going to look much more like that South Africa series than the last, tied Women’s Ashes in England in 2023.
How often have you gone back to a restaurant where you had a bad meal? Or watched the second episode of a TV series if you didnโt enjoy the first one? The brutal fact is that you only get one chance to make a first impression and the key to attracting (and thereafter retaining) new customers is to prioritise quality control over everything else.
Hence the biggest threat to the growth of womenโs cricket is if the initial experiences of potential fans are underwhelming.
This is not to ignore nor belittle the huge positives of the past 5 years: significant investment; greatly improved media coverage; and rapidly-rising standards. All helped by a tailwind of goodwill and a collective desire to address historic and systemic inequities.
But at some point, all products must be able to stand on their own two feet. No sport has an innate right to exist, or to be supported, or for its participants to be remunerated. Reward ultimately must be linked to popularity and the willingness of followers and advertisers to pay for access.
However, shielded from the commercial realities of having to ensure earned revenue exceeds costs, this simple truth is ignored by those running English womenโs cricket whose preference is for catchy headlines and good optics. In the short term, itโs easy to proclaim every new initiative as Success or Progress. But thatโs not the same as developing a sustainable, high-quality product.
1. Letโs start at the top โ the national team. Theyโre a good team โ but not nearly as good as they should be for all the money and resource spent in the last few years.
Looking first at the batting, the only new talent to have emerged in the past 5 years who has consistently delivered is Bouchier. Dunkley is reminiscent of Hick in the menโs game โ too good for county cricket but possessed of a flawed technique and whose fielding and (abandoned) bowling arenโt good enough at international level. Capsey appears to have been similarly exposed. In the keeping department, next-off-the-rank Heath has been given virtually no chances to demonstrate that she could step up to the role and hence we remain one broken finger away from having to deploy a โstopperโ who can bat or a keeper who canโt bat. With respect to bowling talent England have good first-choice reserves but thereโs still something wrong with the set-up when the selectors deem four 18-year-olds (Kemp, Gaur, Baker and MacDonald-Gay) to be better than anyone produced by the regional system in the past 6 years. ย ย
There is however a much bigger problem than how good the England team is โ and thatโs how bad most of the international opposition is. With the exception of Australia and India, the rest are no better than a typical regional/Tier 1 team and consequently many international games are terrible mismatches. That England additionally so often choose to bowl first against weak opponents (thereby denying fans the chance of at least seeing a good batting display before our bowling attack invariably works its way through the opposition) shows a complete disregard for the spectator experience. Which brings us back to โquality controlโ.
If we want better opposition (and hence a better showpiece product), itโs clear that England (and Australia) need to think far more holistically. The ECB should run (and pay for) a scheme under which 10-15 players from each of the West Indies, South Africa, New Zealand, Pakistan and Sri Lanka play a full season of cricket in England. The top talent should be assigned to Tier 1 counties with the rest spread across Tier 2 and 3 counties and also matched with a local club which is suitably incentivised to provide them with regular mid-week and weekend matches in (โmenโsโ) leagues and ideally womenโs premier league games too.
The cost? With vision and creativity, this shouldnโt cost more than ยฃ20,000 per player โ or ยฃ1.5m (or, put another way, roughly the ECBโs payment for one Tier 1 team). Ideally, the benefitting countries would be required to provide a reciprocal scheme for the best English players (providing a far better skills and life experience than a cosy few months in New Zealand which seems to be the preferred route for so many).
2. England squad size. (N.B. Iโd be the first to agree that thereโs an excess of England men central contracts โ but (i) that doesnโt make it right, and (ii) they might argue that they generate the funds thus wasted.)ย
Central contracts are partly designed to ensure that players donโt play too much cricket. And in the menโs game, they are also essential to bind top players to England which is integral to maintaining the value of tv broadcasting rights and high ticket prices.
But female contracted players play far fewer days of international cricket* and also far fewer non-international matches. Nor is an alternative career playing in various T20 and T10 leagues around the world viable.
[*Between Nov 1 2023 and Oct 31 2024 (the period covering the last womenโs central contracts), the England menโs and womenโs team played roughly the same number of T20s (17 men, 20 women) and ODIs (10, 9), but the men played 14 Tests compared to 1 for the women.]
Consider the total number of games played by 3 representative non-Test players from each squad during this period:
ODI
T20i
FC/List A
T20/100
Bouchier
9
17
3
22
Capsey
7
16
0
29
Glenn
3
16
2
14
Salt
9
17
0
35
Livingstone
10
17
0
31
Ali
3
14
0
50
(As another comparator, James Vince played 13 county matches and 52 T20 matches in this period.)
So, neither the argument that you need to protect (most) female players from playing too much cricket nor that itโs essential that they are contractually bound to England holds for the womenโs game.
This is not โ before anyone gets too agitated โ an argument for a smaller total pay pot for the women. My proposal is that there should be very few central contracts and that the money saved should be re-allocated to pay higher match fees.
3. Women cricketers need to play far more games.
This may sound curmudgeonly, but we shouldnโt be celebrating when an 18-year-old gets an international cap. The fact that someone whoโs probably played less than 100 games in her life can seamlessly segue onto the international stage is ridiculous (genuine teenage sensations excepted). Not only does it reiterate the argument at point (1), but itโs a terrible indictment on the domestic set-up that after 5 years of professionalism thereโs such a dearth of competition from players in their mid-20s.ย
There seems to be a belief that natural talent + youthful exuberance is enough. But even a brief study of the stats tables (particularly the batting tables) shows the domination of older players. Why? Because skill and training can only take you so far. To dominate you also need match experience i.e. exposure to, and dealing with, numerous game situations.
Adam Gilchrist, the Australian menโs keeper, came to England as a teenager and played 90 games in a season, returning home having vastly accelerated his development. Instead of every appearance being controlled by coaches and their game time limited (caps on overs for fast bowlers excepted), all female players, especially young players, need to play far more cricket.
And if you really want to get better you need to play against tough opponents. Most of the greats (Bates, Devine, Edwards, Greenway, Lanning) learnt their cricket playing โmenโsโ cricket. Fast bowlers bowl quicker, batters hit the ball harder, fielders stop more balls and throw faster. Modern Pathway players have far too little exposure to โmenโsโ cricket compared to their predecessors. This trend needs to be urgently reversed and participation encouraged.
4. Number of Tier 1 counties. As posited in a previous article most regional teams comprised too many โjourneymenโ (the pool of pre-professional-era cricketers who were ‘known entities’) and academy graduates whose principal role was to make up the numbers. (Addressing one comment on that article โ this is not to say those young players lack talent but TFCs are the inevitable consequence of playing in a team where paid professionals will expect to get the best opportunities.)ย
And if there wasnโt enough talent to justify 80 professional contracts, then expanding the number of contracted players to 120 (or 130+ given Yorkshireโs advance recruitment) was obviously going to exasperate the gap between the teams with the best recruiting strategies and those with the worst. The trickle-feed squad announcements from the Tier 1 counties has confirmed this fear – from what we know (and, equally importantly, from the lack of announcements from some counties) itโs fairly clear that at least 3 of the Tier 1 teams are going to struggle to win many games. Quality control, anyone?
An honest assessment of the talent pool should have seen the ECB launch this new era with just 6 Tier 1 counties to ensure a more even spread of available talent which could still have been sold as a โpositiveโ (90 full-time professionals).
But itโs obviously too late to reverse this decision, so the main lesson should be to not expand until itโs proven thereโs enough talent to sustain more Tier 1 teams. โYou canโt do that!โ Why not? The ECB has repeatedly demonstrated that it doesnโt consider itself bound by the original Darwin tender document and hence should therefore be bold enough to reverse the pre-determined accession of Yorkshire and Glamorgan.
The ECB should then specify the conditions which would need to exist to warrant expanding the number of Tier 1 teams (in terms of spectator and tv numbers, sponsorship, advertising revenue, etc.) without predetermining the timescale. The number of Tier 1 teams should be dictated by demand, not by diktat.
Will real-life match the enthusiastic projections about the growth of womenโs sport? Will the womenโs game nurture its own fans? Will most of the audience (as now) comprise fans of the menโs game (and, if so, what will happen when there are far more womenโs games which thus compete for the limited time of these fans?) Can fans be converted to switch their primary allegiance to the womanโs game by different marketing, scheduling or pricing strategies?
It is surely far more sensible to expand in line with growing demand than grow too fast and risk having to cut the number of teams in the future if the predicted support doesnโt materialise?
And, regarding any future expansion of Tier 1, access must be on the basis of performance on the field, not a desire for geographic spread. If e.g. the south-east produces the next 2 teams to be elevated, the issue should be to understand how this success was achieved and seek to replicate it elsewhere, not to penalise best practice.
All Tier 1 teams should also run A teams comprising any professionals not playing Tier 1 cricket plus the best academy players. These teams should play against each other during the week but โ see point 3 โ also play in a โmenโsโ league at weekends. If they did, Iโd predict most of the A team players would usurp the 1st XI incumbents within 2 years.
5. Sub-Tier 1. Credit where itโs due. Here the ECB has basically got it right. There obviously has to be a pathway providing a smooth journey (both โupโ and โdownโ) from teenage county talent to professional. And the structure, together with the money going into โ and the commensurate expectations of โ the Tier 2 and Tier 3 counties appears well thought out.
Having only 6 Tier 1 counties would have permitted more money to go into this level where every pound spent benefits more players (Which is more likely to grow the talent pool and unearth the next England star? Betting on one full time professional or several semi-professionals?). Tier 1 expansion should not involve any decrease in Tier 2 or Tier 3 funding.
6. Finally, itโs not enough to create a pathway to professionalism. As more talent fights for a finite number of contracts there will be a commensurate increase in the number of players who either seek, but donโt reach, Tier 1 or whose tenure is short. Currently most of that talent, enthusiasm and investment is squandered (Challenge: Could any of the former Regional teams say what happened to all the players who passed through their academy but who didnโt win a regional contract in the past 5 years?)
Alongside a professional contract, all players should be encouraged to gain coaching or umpiring qualifications or offered further education opportunities which could take them into management, administration or data analysis. Better representation in these roles means that decisions about womenโs cricket would increasingly be made by people who best understand it.
England wrapped up the Test in Bloemfontein with a day to spare as South Africa disintegrated – Lauren Bell finishing with 8-76 across the match as South Africa were bowled out for just 64 – their lowest ever total in a completed innings in a Women’s Test. (Though South Africa still have some way to go to match the 35 that England were bowled out for inย Melbourne in 1958, on a day when Australia were also bowled out for 38 – remarkably, the game still ended in a draw, partly because one of the three allocated days was lost to rain, so it was effectively a two-day match.)
England (395-9 & 236) bt. South Africa (281 & 64-9) #ENGvSA ๐
From what felt like (at worst) a half-decent position on Day 2 at 237-3, South Africa lost 16-108 across their two innings to go down to their heaviest ever defeat by 286 runs.
Heather Knight will be cracking-out the champagne to celebrate her first ever Test win in 8 years as captain; but if we are honestly weighing up the scales of England Good <-> South Africa Bad then they mostly fall down on the latter side, which has been the story of the entire tour. Lauren Bell did bowl well today, and England did take 20 wickets. (Well… 19 actually – Ayanda Hlubi apparently could have batted if she’d really had to, but the coaches correctly surmised that the chances of her batting out 4 sessions for the draw were not high.)
But in-between, England were themselves effectively bowled out twice. (Though technically they declared their first innings at 9-down.) Their performance with the bat in the 2nd innings certainly won’t be giving the Australians any sleepless nights ahead of the Ashes Test at the MCG next month.
Maia Bouchier added a 19-ball duck to her century from the first day; Nat Sciver-Brunt was forced to remind people that she can’t do itย every time; whilst Danni Wyatt-Hodge and Amy Jones showed again that they aren’t really able to adjust to the different pace required for Test cricket. Only an obstinate 90 from Heather Knight made the difference between a respectable 2nd innings score and something that could have put a very different complexion on the game. That, plus the lead from the first innings, meant that South Africa were always batting to save the game.
Subsequently, the bowlers did their job – putting the ball in the right place and letting momentum do its work as the South African Jenga-tower began to topple one last time in a series where we’ve seen a few castles crumble. We weren’t supposed to be counting overall series points, but if we were it was 14-2.
It’s a big win, but perhaps the biggest winners today were not England but Sony – yes, that Sony – the company that made your PlayStation, who also own Hawk-Eye – better known to cricket fans these days as DRS.
DRS is a fantastic technology and the game of cricket is the better for it, but it is also very expensive, so Cricket South Africa opted to leave it on the bench for this Test, which was clearly being run on a shoestring. South Africa were soon ruing its absence however, after Laura Wolvaardt was given out LBW yesterday having clearly inside-edged the ball onto her pad. Wolvaardt’s reaction earned her a reprimand (somewhat unfairly, I think – she was obviously fuming, but she didn’t actually argue with the umpire) but worse was to come.
Annerie Dercksen also got an edge onto her pad, but this one ballooned-up into the air and was caught by Tammy Beaumont at short leg. England appealed vociferously, and the umpire behind the stumps appeared initially to say no, before conferring with her colleague at square leg, and then sending it upstairs to the 3rd umpire. To everyone watching, the question appeared to be whether or not Dercksen had edged it – there was no doubt that Tammy had caught it cleanly – so when the verdict came back “Out”, it left everyone wondering on what basis it had been referred.
This is important, because the 3rd umpire can check if the batter hit it; but first the decision has to be referred, and that can only happen if there is doubt over whether or not the catch was fair, which there didn’t appear to be any doubt about; suggesting the umpires had got it wrong.
However, there was one more twist in the tale to come. Heather Knight revealed in the post-match press conference that the referral had been not for a clean catch, but for a bump ball. Once that has been referred (as with the catch) the 3rd Umpire can check whether or not the ball was actually hit.
So ultimately the correct decision appears to have been made, although there is still perhaps an argument that without a “Snickometer” the 3rd umpire didn’t have enough evidence to relitigate the on-field decision. Regardless, the decision came at the expense of huge confusion over whether or not the right procedure had been followed and whether Dercksen should have been given out, which leaves a bitter taste on the tongue.
It certainly left the new South African coach, Mandla Mashimbyi, with questions. In his post-match press conference, he was diplomatic – explicitly saying that he was concerned that the assembled journalists were trying to get him to say something which would get him into trouble – but he made it pretty clear he wasn’t happy, and that the board might wish to reconsider their decision not to use DRS in future.
The bottom line is that it now feels like a Rubicon has been crossed – we’ve already been here in other formats and series, and every time we’ve ended-up saying “Enough!” We can’t play matches of this profile, without DRS in future – it always ends in controversy and the boards backing down anyway. The concern is, as Raf expressed on the CRICKETher Weekly last Sunday, that the cost of hosting a Test will then become prohibitive for the less prosperous boards; but perhaps imaginative solutions can be found? For example, could this game have been played back-to-back with a men’s Test, using the same cameras and saving on setup and tear-down costs? Could Sony be leaned-on to offer the system pro-bono as a gesture of equality? Whatever the answer, it needs finding – the SOS has gone up – someone needs to answer it.
A half-century from Sune Luus kept South Africa just-about in the game, though England lead by 145 runs at the end of Day 2 in the Test at Bloemfontein.
England (395-9 & 31-1) v South Africa (281) #ENGvSA ๐
Luus’ innings was one of marvellous mental fortitude – it is enlightening to compare her innings with Maia Bouchier’s yesterday: Bouchier faced 154 balls and scored 126 runs; Luus 148 balls for 56 runs. In other words, Bouchier scored more than twice as many runs in (roughly) the same number of balls. For players brought up on white-ball cricket, scoring runs is the easy bit – occupying the crease, as Luus did, is a much tougher ask. Hitting the balls that are there to be hit is what the modern white ball player does by instinct; leaving the balls that are there to be left goes against every grain.
Over the past few years, since Luus stopped bowling her leg-spin, I’ve sometimes wondered why South Africa continued to pick her; but she showed today what a crucial cog in the South African machine she can be, and โชI thought Global Cricketโฌ on Bluesky made a really interesting observation about her:
She scored an epic century against India when SA almost saved the game. It's intriguing to think how modern women's players would be viewed if they played more long format and less short format stuff, because some of them who aren't elite T20 players might be seen much more positively.
But despite 3 half-centuries (Wolvaardt, Luss and Kapp) and a 40 from Annerie Dercksen, South Africa really didn’t get what they wanted out of the day; and once Luus was dismissed, they subsided from 259-5 to 281 all out – losing their last 5 wickets for 22 runs. Lauren Bell was the key beneficiary, taking 3 of those 5 wickets to finish with 4-49; but arguably Lauren Filer (2-53) and Ryana MacDonald-Gay (2-50) both bowled better.
Filer’s role today was her most effective one – basically “The Heavy” in a Mafia movie: go in; break stuff; leave before the police get there! It is noticeable that she really is only capable of bowling very short spells – she looks knackered after 3 overs; and although England justify this as an explicit tactic of “short, sharp bursts”, I suspect this is post-rationalisation and they’d really like her to be able to go on for slightly longer. If she can lift her fitness over the next couple of years, that really would take her to another level.
Ryana MacDonald-Gay is in some senses the anti-Filer – she hasn’t got much pace at all, so she has to be totally on-the-money, which means trying to bowl consistently hitting the top off off stump and waiting for the reward – a tactic which bought her both her wickets today – Marizanne Kapp bowled and Nadine de Klerk caught behind. Kate Cross, who she replaced in the XI, needs to be her role model; but my feeling is that she isn’t quite ready to fill Cross’s shoes yet, and the Australians will probably find her easy pickings if she plays at the MCG in the Ashes.
Marizanne Kapp admitted in the post-match that England were “a little bit” ahead in the match. I think it is more like “a lot bit”, but there is still a path to South Africa overturning the odds and winning this match, if they can bowl England out in the first session tomorrow. If they don’t, then they are going to find themselves batting to save the game on the last day, on a pitch that is visibly starting to misbehave. Incredibly, Heather Knight has never won a Test in 8 years as England captain – she may never get a better chance to change that than in the next two days.