THE HUNDRED: Spirit v Brave – Spirit Fail To Keep The Wolv From The Door

Laura Wolvaardt was made for days like these. With Southern Brave chasing a low-ish total, she scored one of the coolest, calmest 50s of her career to get her side home. The scorecard says Brave won with just 6 balls to spare, but it was possibly the longest 6 balls in history – as WinHer reflects, the result was absolutely never in doubt.

Spirit 125-8 v Brave 126-2 #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-23T16:03:59.364Z

Having been put into bat, London Spirit didn’t get off to a great start – Kira Chathli, who veers from the sublime to the sordid like a character in one of the 19th Century Russian novels she likes to read, holed out in the first set to one of the worst shots I’ve ever seen. Spirit then limped to 24-1 at the end of the powerplay, with neither Cordelia Griffith nor Georgia Redmayne playing with much… well… “spirit”.

Spirit v Brave at Lord’s #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-23T14:36:09.438Z

When Redmayne – such a critical cog in the Spirit machine that won this competition 12 months ago – was dismissed to a stunning low catch from Mady Villiers off her own bowling, things quickly went from bad to worse as Grace Harris delivered a classic “Six and Out” – slogging just (just!) over Maia Bouchier at long on for a maximum, and then sending the very next ball in exactly the same direction but a foot or two shorter, allowing Bouchier to make the catch at the second time of asking.

Griffith continued to stutter, with her Strike Rate falling back into the low 70s at one stage; but crucially she hung in there long enough to remind Mady Villiers that fielding might be easy but sometimes bowling isn’t – Griffith taking her for 19 runs in a set, including two sixes. This one set threatened to turn the tide in favour of the Spirit, giving them a platform to push on towards 150; but they blew it big-time. Dani Gibson first ran out Charli Knott; then after (just) failing to run out Issy Wong, ran herself out for 9.

Spirit 125-8 v Brave #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-23T14:40:55.458Z

This exposed the lack of power in Spirit’s tail, as they scored just 22 runs in the final 25-ball phase, with the only boundary coming by sheer luck, after a fortunate deflection off non-striker Sarah Glenn wrong-footed Maia Bouchier on the long on boundary.

Needing 126, Brave lost Danni Wyatt-Hodge early after Issy Wong somehow persuaded Charlie Dean to review an LBW that everybody in the stadium except Wong (including, crucially, the umpire) thought was going down leg, but proved to be just straightening enough to get the decision – a millimeter of difference would have been umpire’s call, and Wyatt would have survived.

Spirit 125-8 v Brave 126-2 #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-23T15:59:27.641Z

Wyatt-Hodge was Brave’s top run-scorer in the tournament coming into this match; but today they didn’t need her. Wolvaardt and Bouchier took control of the game, pushing just hard enough to stay ahead of the rate whilst keeping their wickets in hand. Bouchier did eventually lose her concentration, possibly demonstrating why Emma Lamb is going to the World Cup and she isn’t, as she was caught on the ring.

But Wolvaardt stayed cool, even as Brave’s run-rate dropped unnervingly towards the end, with 4 consecutive sets between balls 70 and 90 going for 3 or less. Others would have been panicked into going for the big hit, but Wolvaardt just rotated the strike in the knowledge that was all she needed to do; before Sophie Devine finished things off to maintain Brave’s unbeaten season and catapult them straight into the final back here at Lord’s next weekend.

The Hundred – Qualification Analysis 🏏* Brave through to the final!

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-23T17:01:55.792Z

Who they will meet there remains of course to be decided. London Spirit could yet defend their title – they finished third in the group stages last year and went on to win it – but they will need to be much more convincing in their final match against Invincibles, as well as hoping other results go their way, if they are to repeat the trick.

EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: Sophie Devine – “I know my time is coming to an end soon”

Sophie Devine

The fact that I waited half an hour after play ended in the Brave v Invincibles match on Monday to speak to Sophie Devine is typical of the player and the person. How did she spend those 30 minutes? Signing autographs and taking selfies with kids on the boundary at the Utilita Bowl. In the end, she had to be physically ushered away by security as they geared up for the men’s match.

Earlier this year Devine took a mental health break, missing out on the WPL and the second part of the New Zealand domestic season, presumably partly out of sheer exhaustion caused by simultaneously captaining her country and being her side’s best player. Now, she is back out there and – as she says – “enjoying herself” again.

“It’s pretty obvious that I’m nearing the end of my career, and for me, it’s being as happy as possible out on the cricket field,” she says.

What’s keeping her motivated these days? Unsurprisingly, she isn’t focused on personal milestones. “Giving to others has been a massive focus for me,” she says. “I want to help and encourage anyone and everyone, wherever they’re from. It’s about improving the standard of the game, because there’s so many talented kids out there now.”

She cites England and Southern Brave’s 20-year-old all-rounder Freya Kemp as an example: “She is going to be a freak. To be able to rub shoulders with her is what’s motivating me at the moment.”

After a few years spent with Birmingham Phoenix, Devine was picked up by Brave in this year’s Hundred draft and is thus far proving something of a lucky charm – largely with the ball, having taken 9 wickets so far opening up alongside Lauren Bell.

In Monday’s game, she bowled a magic ball which curled away from Meg Lanning and hit the very top of her off-stump, beginning the rout which saw Brave beat Invincibles by 89 runs. Brave’s bowling coach Jenny Gunn was apparently so delighted with the Lanning dismissal that she played the delivery on loop in the dressing room when the players came off the pitch.

“Playing around the world in different competitions you have to fill different roles, and here when we’ve opted to only have a couple of seamers, responsibility falls on me and Belly. I’m enjoying that,” Devine says.

“And I’ve certainly enjoyed my time here at the Brave,” she adds. “Everyone knows how well Lottie [Charlotte Edwards] has set this club up – it’s evident in the way that it’s run.” The 2023 winners are already in pole position to qualify for this year’s final, with five wins in five matches and (according to our Alligator analysis) a 99% chance of reaching at least the Eliminator stage.

The Hundred – Qualification Analysis 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-18T16:37:50.972Z

After that, Devine heads to the UAE to warm-up for the 50-over World Cup in India – a tournament which she has already said will be her last in the ODI format. “It’s a big weight off the shoulders,” she admits. “That was the whole point behind announcing my retirement, was to get it out there nice and early, so I don’t distract from the group and the team being at the World Cup.”

“I’ve always been strong on my feelings of, the team comes first, personal milestones are secondary. I’m enjoying every moment because I know my time’s coming to an end soon.”

And the rest of us will continue to enjoy every moment of watching her, for as long as we can.

THE HUNDRED: Brave v Invincibles – Invincibles Take One From The Team

Southern Brave crushed Oval Invincibles by 89 runs – the biggest margin in the history of The Hundred – via the ultimate team performance: no 50s or 100s; no 4fers or 5fers; just contributions up and down the XI, as the Brave made it 5-from-5 to leave themselves one win away from qualification for the knockout stages. Regardless of what else happens, a win in their next match versus Welsh Fire will guarantee Brave at least 3rd place in the table.

The Hundred – Qualification Analysis 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-18T16:37:50.972Z

Maia Bouchier and Danni Wyatt-Hodge got Brave’s innings off to a solid enough start, reaching 33-0 after 25 balls, with Bouchier having had the bulk of the strike through that period, facing 17 of those 25 balls and making 21 runs. But it was definitely a platform rather than a big start, little hinting at what was to come.

Brave v Invincibles at The Bowl

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-18T14:01:43.051Z

Brave began to accelerate immediately following the powerplay, with Bouchier hitting a 6 and a 4 off Amanda-Jade Wellington’s first set which went for 13. But her dismissal – holing-out on the midwicket boundary – saw a dip in the trend of their innings which could easily have become a fatal slump, especially after Wyatt-Hodge, who has been Brave’s leading run-scorer this season, decided to charge Phoebe Franklin, presumably guessing that Franklin wouldn’t bowl two slower balls in a row. (She did; Wyatt-Hodge was way too early on her charge down the pitch, and was comprehensively bowled!)

Brave 161-6 v Invincibles 72 #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-18T17:36:48.583Z

Although neither Laura Wolvaardt (36 – Brave’s top score) nor Sophie Devine (19) really got into 5th gear, they kept pressing as they put on a partnership of 42; before they were dismissed in quick succession – Wolvaardt caught on the ring; and Devine run out after a bit of the “Yes; No; Yes; Nos” with Freya Kemp. Kemp, however, more than made up for it with a rapid 24 off 11 balls as Brave timed their innings perfectly – losing 4 wickets in the final phase, but getting 46 more runs on the board, moving from 115-2 to 161-6 in the final 25 balls.

Interestingly, if this had been a “normal” T20 game, Brave might well have struggled to score many runs off the extra 20 balls – certainly not at the rate they had been going. But for a 100-ball match, it was perfectly timed; and left Invincibles needing a record chase for the win.

To be fair, it was a record chase.. just not the record they’d have had in mind!

We’ve seen a few times already in The Hundred this season that you have to get ahead of the rate if you’re to have any chance in these big chases; but after Sophie Devine removed both Invincibles openers in the space of 4 balls, they could only cough and splutter their way to 17 off the powerplay.

Brave 161-6 v Invincibles 72 #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-18T16:34:33.362Z

If Invincibles chances were slim after 25 balls, by 50 they were non-existent, after Lauren Bell and Rhianna Southby (who continues to show the value of a specialist wicket-keeper in this competition) combined to have Alice Capsey and Paige Scholfield caught behind off consecutive deliveries; and Invincibles eventually succumbed to the inevitable as their longish tail collapsed to 72 all out.

Brave 161-6 v Invincibles 72 #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-18T16:34:01.653Z

The result puts Brave back on top of the table, with an enormous Net Run Rate advantage over their rivals; but on the evidence of tonight they won’t need it to qualify directly for the final – they might not have had a stand-out star today, but as a team they look unstoppable.

THE HUNDRED: Spirit v Invincibles – Harris And Cords At Lord’s

A century partnership between Grace Harris and Cordelia Griffith secured a win for London Spirit in the opening match of the 2025 Women’s Hundred at Lord’s.

This was the 10th partnership of 100+ in five years of the women’s competition (full list here) – and the first ever for London Spirit.

Despite a slightly quieter final 10 balls (2 wickets lost for 12 runs), the pair took Spirit to 175, which is well above a typical score in the Women’s Hundred, as shown by Syd’s “ghost”. To put it in context, last year’s highest total across the whole comp was 158.

Spirit 176-5 v Invincibles #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-05T15:03:00.176Z

Spirit’s total today was particularly impressive given that Georgia Redmayne – their Player of the Match in the 2024 final – departed for a duck, trapped leg-before after missing a straight one from Marizanne Kapp.

Grace Harris was her usual self, rollicking along to an unbeaten 89 from 42 balls. A week ago, she hit 63 not out as Surrey romped home in the final of the inaugural T20 Blast: this was if anything an even more imposing knock, which included back-to-back sixes against Sophia Smale.

Harris missed last year’s Hundred for Spirit as she was rehabbing from a calf injury, but had a particular reason for wanting to head back to England this time around. Her recent dominance on English pitches this season, across both the Blast and The Hundred, may prove to be strategically important as Australia ponder their squad selection for the 2026 World Cup (including a final on this very ground).

“I did think that I might not make the 2025 ODI World Cup team for Australia,” Harris told me recently. “So I thought in planning ahead it would be great to be able to play in England a little bit more and maybe better. To come over here and play in English conditions against a fair few England players and with England players is very much a good challenge and I’ll get better insights.

“I’m taking my international career one game at a time, but I’m looking to the future and thinking how I can get the best out of myself.”

Meanwhile Griffith, whose 50 from 29 balls is her highest ever score in The Hundred, matched Harris ball-for-ball until she was caught at long-off with 20 balls to go of the Spirit innings. “I felt in a groove there,” Cords said afterwards, describing batting with Grace Harris as “a nice laugh”. That’s an unusual compliment, but maybe having someone out in the middle who can bring a bit of light-heartedness to proceedings during a pressure game at Lord’s is no bad thing.

Someone who doesn’t do much laughing is Marizanne Kapp, whose 77-run partnership with Meg Lanning from 48 balls gave Invincibles hope in a mammoth run-chase. As Syd’s graph shows, the highest-grossing phase of the match for either side was actually Invincibles’ late-middle phase:

Spirit 176-5 v Invincibles 159-4 #The100 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-08-05T16:28:22.476Z

This was the point at which Lanning and Kapp were really taking off, as they strategically targeted the shorter boundaries on the Grand Stand side of the ground. “We didn’t talk numbers at all. It was literally about where our boundaries were, and what pockets we were going to target. It was pretty difficult with the slope and the wind and the bigger boundaries, you had to only hit to one side of the ground,” Lanning said afterwards.

But Invincibles had been too slow to get going – Lanning started with 12* off 17 – and it was that slow start which cost them this opening match of the 2025 Women’s Hundred. A lesson, perhaps, as they look to their next match on Saturday at The Oval.

OPINION: Vitality Blast Finals Day Weekend – The Haves vs The Have-Nots

In the end, the first ever Vitality Blast Finals Day weekend was the story of the haves and the have-nots of women’s cricket.

Let’s start with Saturday. The disaster of Tier 2 Finals Day at Northampton has been well documented by Polly Starkie: a chaotic affair where there was no indoor seating for written press, one coffee truck which closed as the final was just getting underway, players apparently being randomly ejected from dressing rooms, and a lack of effort made to properly cover the square when rain fell during the first semi-final.

This was Finals Day done on the cheap, with no thought given to the player or the spectator experience. Here’s Polly and I talking about in on this week’s CRICKETher Weekly:

Contrast that with Sunday at The Oval, where the Tier 1 event was a roaring success. 5,761 fans showed up (a record for a women’s domestic T20 game), many sporting pink Vitality bucket hats, on a day of fireworks, face-painting and a twist on the traditional Mascots Race: a Mascots Hungry Hippo competition.

History MADE. Lanky the Giraffe wins the first EVER Women’s Finals Day mascot event 🏆 🥇

Raf Nicholson (@rafnicholson.bsky.social) 2025-07-27T15:41:30.095Z

Kirstie Gordon, whose Blaze side lost the semi-final against Bears after winning the last Lottie Cup at Derby a year ago, was well-placed to contrast 2025 with 2024:

“[Derby] was a bit of a shambles wasn’t it? There was no food van. Fair play to everyone at The Oval and the ECB for today’s event. We’ve had a really good crowd in, it looks like there’s loads of activations going on round the venue for the kids and all sorts. That’s awesome. You look at the success that The Hundred’s had and it does all these things – that’s how we can start pushing that into days like this.”

In typical Kirstie fashion, she also found the time to express support for her Tier 2 counterparts, who hadn’t been quite so lucky:

“It’s a bit sad to hear that the Tier 2 final yesterday had a bit of a non-event with similar things [to Derby] – we need to start filtering that [The Oval event] down and make it a showcase event.”

Issy Wong was Player of the Match in that first semi-final, but hot on her heels was Sterre Kalis, who struck 45 from 33 balls after becoming perhaps the first player ever to feature in back-to-back Finals Days for two different sides.

Kalis explained after the semi-final that she had hot-footed it down from Northampton to London in an Uber on Saturday night: “I’m still Yorkshire’s player, but at the same time I want to try and win this with the Bears as well.”

There has been much debate about whether Kalis’s back-and-forth this season between Bears (where she is on loan) and Yorkshire (where she is a contracted player) is exploiting an unfortunate loophole in the loans system, which was actually designed to allow fringe Tier 1 players the chance to get some cricket instead of sitting on the sidelines.

But one thing you can’t dispute is Kalis’s commitment – to Yorkshire, to Warwickshire, and to women’s cricket. The Dutch-born Kalis doesn’t have the chance to make big bucks by representing her home nation in World Cups, so she takes her chances where she can get them, even when that means paying an exorbitant amount to take a taxi 70 miles down the road in order to play four matches in two days.

It’s difficult not to contrast that with the notable absence of England players Nat Sciver-Brunt and Amy Jones from what was designed to be a showpiece event in the new women’s calendar.

I’ll quote Kirstie Gordon again here: “That was their choice not to play today.” And when pressed on exactly whose choice (the ECB’s or Amy and Nat’s), she clarified: “The players’ choice.”

The ECB’s hastily-issued statement 10 minutes later explaining that both players had been “rested… to manage schedules and workload” was too little, too late: Kirstie’s responses, in a tone which conveyed her disdain about the decision, told the real story.

Surrey, of course, were the real winners this weekend, romping home in the final against Bears by 5 wickets with 20 balls to spare, in front of a raucous home crowd. If you want to talk about haves and have-nots, it’s worth a look at a recent report into the financial health of domestic cricket in England & Wales, which puts Surrey right at the top of a new Financial Performance Index. This season, they funded three bonus contracts for their women’s team, in addition to the funding provided by the ECB.

So where are we with women’s cricket, after the first big test of the ECB’s decision to rejig the domestic system in order to align with the men’s counties? Yet again, it seems that taking a big leap forward for one group of players hasn’t yet permeated downwards throughout the rest of the game.

It’s up to all of us, even as we celebrate the big, glorious steps forward, to continue to hold power to account on behalf of the ones who are still being left behind.

T20 BLAST FINAL: Surrey v Bears – Football 1, Cricket 0

In the end, it was too much to ask the Bears to do it twice – after winning their semi-final, they were well beaten by Surrey in the final of the T20 Blast, in front of a very partisan crowd of home fans at the Oval. The scoreboard repeatedly flashed-up demands to “Cheer for Surrey” and an official crowd of over 5,000 did. Entreaties for Bears fans to do the same fell somewhat flatter.

Bears v Surrey #T20Blast 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-07-27T16:37:47.504Z

Despite the return of umpteen England stars, this was a poorer match than the “Zombie Rubber” between these two sides 10 days ago, when Surrey hit 204 and Bears 179 in reply. That day, Kira Chathli was the star, smashing 65 off 31 balls. Relegated to No. 7 below the big England names, she did at least have the satisfaction of striking the winning runs.

But the real star was Grace Harris, who showed why she is the Harris with 50-odd international caps for Australia to sister Laura’s none. Her 63 off 33 balls may have been at a lower Strike Rate (190) than Laura’s 25 off 11 (SR 227) but by going deep Grace ensured that she earned every pretty penny that Surrey paid for her services in this campaign.

Batting first, Bears made the best possible start off the first delivery of the match from Alexa Stonehouse, with Meg Austin showcasing the finest Austin drive to come out of Birmingham since the Austin Allegro. (Don’t @ me – my dad bought one in ’79 – I know it was possibly the worst car of all time!) It was a gorgeous stroke – probably the shot of the day. But Austin was bowled by Stonehouse the very next ball, and from that point you felt the writing was on the wall.

Issy Wong top-scored for Bears for the second time on the day. The difference between her scores versus Blaze (59) and Surrey (31) was basically the difference between the teams, but that isn’t to hold her in any way responsible for the defeat – she did her job across both games, and had arguably the best day of her career.

Bears 153-9 v Surrey 154-5 #T20Blast 🏏

CRICKETher (@crickether.com) 2025-07-27T18:22:31.000Z

Laura Harris did plunder Stonehouse for the most expensive over of the day – the 18-run 13th – but although it helped get Bears past the 150 mark which is the… bear minimum these days, it wasn’t enough to trouble Surrey, who have been the team to beat throughout this competition – losing just once in the group stages – and proved the same today.

Every time Bears grabbed a wicket, it must have felt like battling the hydra – cut off a Wyatt-Hodge and a Capsey comes in her stead; cut off a Capsey and a Harris comes in her place. With Surrey batting right down to Alexa Stonehouse at 10, Bears’ only hope was to bowl them out; but on this pitch, that was too much of an ask.

As the final 4 crossed the rope, there was applause from the crowd, and a scramble to get around to the one small part of the ground from which you could see the presentation – the fans who had paid money to come through the gate seemingly ignored in terms of witnessing the raising of the trophy.

But it perhaps tells us something more that by far the biggest cheer of the day came almost an hour later, from the fans that had stayed behind to watch the conclusion of the football on the big screens below the stands, as Chloe Kelly kicked home the winning penalty in the Women’s Euros. The final score: football 1, cricket 0.