THE HUNDRED: Brave v Invincibles – Kemp Recovers Her Mojo To Knock Out Invincibles

Southern Brave knocked Oval Invincibles out of The Hundred with a 4-ball win at the Ageas Bowl.

The result means that only Trent Rockets retain a theoretical hope of pipping Welsh Fire to the final knockout qualification spot – Rockets need to win their final match well, and hope that Fire lose both their remaining games badly, to snatch 3rd place in the ladder.

At a packed-out Ageas Bowl (official attendance, measured at the innings break in the women’s game, was over 10,000) Brave got off to the perfect start, with Lauren Bell and Anya Shrubsole removing openers Lauren Winfield-Hill and Alice Capsey within the first 10 balls.

It was left to Suzie Bates and Marizanne Kapp to try to rebuild, and they leveraged all the experience of their collective 512 international caps to take Invincibles to 51 without further loss at the half-way stage.

51-2 at the half-way mark is still some way short of a good score, but it was a platform that allowed Invincibles to subsequently accelerate, with Paige Scholfield hitting a rapid 30 off 17 balls, driving a big late-middle phase which begat 43 runs.

Brave’s bowlers pulled things back a little bit at the death, but Invincibles 130-6 was nonetheless a decent total, slightly in excess of a typical score in this competition, and especially impressive in the light of where they had been.

Brave’s formidable top-order all struggled today – Maia Bouchier laboured to 22 off 25 balls, as if shackled down by the weight of expectations after both Danni Wyatt and Smriti Mandhana had been dismissed cheaply. Brave reached the 50-ball mark neck-and-neck with where Invincibles had been, on 52-2 where Invincibles had been 51-2; and they proceeded to slip further behind, going at little more than a run a ball through to the 70th ball.

It needed something special to get Brave over the line, and it was provided by Freya Kemp, who had made just 7 runs in the tournament before today, and had been dismissed for consecutive ducks in her last two visits to the middle. Kemp defied that form, smashing a commanding 41 off just 21 balls, finishing it off with a 6 off the 96th delivery. With Georgia Adams also hitting her best score of the comp – an unbeaten 50 – at the other end, Brave were home and dry.

With the announcement by England this week that they are planning to play Kemp as a pure batter against Sri Lanka next month, there could hardly have been a better time for her to recover her mojo with the blade, leading her side to a win which puts them in the driving seat now to qualify directly for their third Hundred final, and perhaps this time actually win the thing!

THE HUNDRED: Invincibles v Spirit – Won’t Somebody Give Dane van Niekerk A Break?

Imagine for a second how it feels to be Dane van Niekerk right now.

After a difficult few months in which you were prevented from playing in a home World Cup due to an arbitrary fitness target, you’re finally ready to burst back onto the scene by leading Oval Invincibles’ title defence.

Then, in your team’s match against Manchester Originals, you suffer a nasty blow to your thumb. On Sunday, you are ruled out of the rest of The Hundred after scans reveal that the thumb injury will require surgery to fix.

On Monday, you discover (via ESPNCricinfo) that Cricket South Africa have decided to abolish the fitness standard which brought about your premature retirement from international cricket.

There is one silver lining: you can stay with Invincibles for the duration of the tournament. Tuesday comes around, and it’s time for their match v London Spirit – a local derby which Invincibles have never lost. You participate in the team talk pre-match, imparting some of that famous tactical wisdom which you are known for.

Something you AREN’T known for is being a good watcher of cricket. But that’s OK, because your replacement skipper Suzie Bates has decided that your wife, Marizanne Kapp, should bowl all her deliveries in the opening 35 balls of the match.

You watch her take two wickets for 13 runs in her allotted 20 balls, including bowling poor Niamh Holland in her opening set, with a beauty which the 18-year-old had no idea what to do with.

You are left pondering about Heather Knight’s bizarre decision to promote Holland to face your wife at the top of the order, while omitting Grace Scrivens from the XI – despite the fact that Scrivens regularly opens for her region (you are well aware of this, being her captain at Sunrisers), and Holland does not.

Minutes later, two Spirit players are β€œhaving words” with each other mid-pitch after a dopey run-out, while your wife does the nearest thing she ever does on the pitch to smiling. Eventually, London Spirit sink to 87 for 9 after 78 balls. You nod to yourself, satisfied. Invincibles have this in the bag.

Except, two hours later – after a 10th-wicket partnership of 31 in 22 balls between Lauren Filer and Tara Norris; and a powerplay in which Invincibles manage to put just 23 runs on the board – it turns out they didn’t.

It’s Tuesday evening, and you could, should, have been celebrating. Instead, your side’s title defence is slipping through your fingers (Invincibles sit fourth in the table but have only a 3% chance of qualifying for the knockouts) – and there is nothing you can do to stop it.

After Oval Invincibles lost to London Spirit on a balmy Tuesday afternoon at The Oval by 22 runs, I asked Sophia Smale what van Niekerk would be saying to her teammates in the post-match dressing-room review. β€œHow did we lose it, probably!” came the reply.

Dane van Niekerk has undoubtedly had better weeks.

THE HUNDRED: Brave v Fire – Hail To The Hayley

65 runs from the bat of Hayley Matthews saw Fire get their Hundred campaign-proper off to a winning start, after their opening match was rained off without a ball bowled on Wednesday.

After her heroics with the bat, Matthews then took the ball for the final death over set, with Brave needing 9 from 5 balls, holding her nerve to restrict Brave to 4 for the loss of 2 wickets, with Chloe Tryon stumped off a wide from the first delivery and Freya Kemp meaninglessly run out off the last.

Matthews has been a feature of English franchise cricket since the first Kia Super League season in 2016, when she appeared for Loughborough Lightning, and has remained a consistent if unspectacular performer ever since; and her outing today was very much that. Her 65 wasn’t one that will live long in the memory – the fans in the stands will probably take home Laura Harris’ 7-ball 20 and Danni Wyatt’s typically swashbuckling 67 – but it did the job, ensuring that Welsh Fire already have more points on the board than they achieved in the entire 2022 Hundred season.

Fire made a decent enough start, with Tammy Beaumont contributing 26 off 17, continuing to show that she remains a very useful batter in domestic short-form cricket, but it was the early middle phase that did the damage as Matthews got into her running, and Harris did what she was brought in to do – play the odds and smash some boundaries.

This put Fire in such a strong position that even a 15 ball slump between balls 55 and 70, where they could barely get the ball off the square, proved survivable; and with Georgia Elwiss getting the better of Vipers teammate Anya Shrubsole in the final set which went for 13, Fire posted a total well above par for this competition – just 1 short of Brave’s own record highest first innings score.

Danni Wyatt might be getting on in years – she is 32 now – but she isn’t showing any sign of slowing down, and she looked the business out in the middle, hitting 67 at a strike rate of 181. At the other end, Smriti Mandhana didn’t look to be quite middling it early on – at the fall of Wyatt’s wicket she was on 27 off 21, at a strike rate of 129; but she then took the initiative, hitting the next 21 balls she faced for 43, at a strike rate of over 200.

Could Smriti have managed the strike better? Possibly – she faced exactly half the deliveries which remained after Wyatt was dismissed, so given her strike rate another 3 balls faced could have won the game for the Brave; but it seems harsh to blame her for the loss when (for example) Chloe Tryon managed to chew-up 10 balls without finding the boundary once.

Sometimes it feels like The Hundred is more about the cricket and the individual performances than it is about the teams, who still feel a little bit “plastic” even in this third season, partly because the draft meant so many big-name moves. In that sense, the fans got their money’s worth this afternoon… even the ones that had come out in green hoping for a different outcome.

WOMEN’S ASHES REVIEW: Finding A Way

By Richard Clark

England are 119 for 6, and there are five overs to go.  Danni Wyatt has a dilemma…

The opening salvos of this Ashes series saw business – kind of – as usual.  England had their moments, but when push came to shove Australia found a way.

By general consensus the Test Match was close, a game England could have won, perhaps even should have won.  For what it’s worth, I’m not sure I necessarily agree.

There were points in proceedings where things were on the brink of turning England’s way, for sure.  The visitors were 238 for 6 in their first innings and had they been dismissed for below 300, with England having the best of the conditions to bat…

In reply England were closing in on 400 with only four wickets down.Β Β Had they gone on to gain a lead of 50 or more…

Second time around Australia were teetering at 198 for 7, a lead barely the right side of 200.  Had England picked up those last three wickets cheaply…

But we know what Australia do.  They β€˜find a way’, it’s what it says on their tin.  And they found ways in all three of those moments. 

Buoyed by the advantage those four points gave them, Alyssa Healy’s team produced arguably their only really convincing performance of the series in the first T20 at Edgbaston.  Sophia Dunkley and Amy Jones gave them a bit to think about with the bat, and there was something of a wobble as the chase came down to the pointy end, but ultimately it was as emphatic as a win with one ball to spare could be.

Six-nil, job almost done, thanks for coming.  See you at the Oval.

So here we are.  England are 119 for 6, and there are five overs to go.  Danni Wyatt has a dilemma…

Convention, with the tail for company, is that you eke out a respectable score.Β Β Something in the region of 155 to 160 would be grand.Β Β It’s something for the bowlers to defend.Β Β Going for broke is too risky, it brings into play the possibility of being bowled out for 140 or less, and Australia will chase that down in their sleep.Β Β The flaw with that thinking is that this is Australia.Β Β They’ll chase down 155 to 160 in their sleep just as easily.Β Β Finders of ways, remember?

Wyatt instinctively knows this.

Forgive a little detour here.  During the closing stages of the 1981 Headingley Men’s Test – the Botham’s Ashes series – Dennis Lillee flipped a bouncer from Bob Willis over the slips for four.  On commentary, Christopher Martin-Jenkins described Lillee as β€œa most canny cricketer.”  It’s funny the phrases that stay with you – I often think of Martin-Jenkins’ words when I’m watching Wyatt bat. 

Healy turns to Miss Reliable, Megan Schutt, and the next six, no seven, no eight balls will define the series.

The first is a long hop, an awful ball, and Wyatt climbs into it.  Frankly it would have been rude not to.  Better still, umpire Russell Warren has his arm outstretched.  The shot that follows, from the free hit, is one only Wyatt among this England squad could play.  Schutt spears it in at leg stump, but Wyatt has anticipated that and taken two steps back towards square leg already.  The stroke looks effortless, languid, and yet the ball arrows almost for six over backward point.  It’s an outrageous piece of batting, and it’s the shot that changes the Ashes.

The next two balls go for boundaries as well, and Schutt chucks in a wide that evades Healy for good measure.  25 runs from the over in total, 62 from that plus the three that follow.  Wyatt doesn’t last much longer, but she has set a tone that Sophie Ecclestone in particular gleefully emulates.  England rattle along, Australia are just rattled.  Only a quiet final over yielding just five tempers the giddiness of it all. 

And yet, Australia almost chase it down, falling a mere three runs short.  No matter.  The important thing is that England, from the most unpromising of positions, have found a way.

Up until that one over, Australia had won all the key moments, found all the ways.  From that point on the vast, vast majority of ways were found by England, most notably at Bristol and at Taunton when the Aussies looked like wrestling victories from see-saw contests.

Healy’s post-match comment yesterday that β€œI have actually never been a believer in the gap. The gap’s not necessarily been [there],” was… interesting.  The facts don’t bear that out in any way.  England’s only points across the last two series had come from washouts, drawn and rain-spoiled Tests, and a dead rubber T20.  A lot was made of the near-victory in the Canberra Test 18 months ago but in reality that opportunity was handed to them by Meg Lanning’s β€˜sporting’ declaration.  Wise heads insisted this summer would be no different.

In that context, it’s really difficult to think of a key moment when it has mattered in recent series where England have come out on top.  The Canberra T20 in 2017 (another Danni Wyatt masterclass) which drew that series is probably the last time it happened, and also the last time Australia lost any white ball series.

And it’s important to remember this is not just β€˜an England thing.’  Australia had won 41 out of 42 ODIs ahead of this summer.  That’s an awfully large percentage of moments won and ways found.

Is this the end of an era?  Has the aura been destroyed?  Probably not, but at the same time it really ought to be the case now that England should never be cowed by this opposition again.  Fire has been fought with fire, toes have gone to toes.

Ways have been found.

WOMEN’S ASHES 3rd ODI – Nat-ional Treasure

It was 4th time lucky for Nat Sciver-Brunt – having scored a record third hundred in a losing cause against Australia in the 2nd ODI, our National Treasure finally hit one to set up an England win at Taunton.

The result means of course that England win the ODIs, having also won the T20s, to tie the multi-format series… but still had to watch Australia presented with the Women’s Ashes trophy.

As I am writing this, the players are milling around on the boundary ahead of the ceremonies, and to be fair neither side look too chuffed – Australia have lost 4 out of 6 white ball games; England have “lost” the Ashes – the faces on both sides say it all.

England’s mission this summer was to “inspire and entertain” and they certainly did that today, delighting a sellout crowd in deepest, darkest Somerset.

England got off to a shaky start, losing two quick wickets, but a huge partnership of 147 between Heather Knight and Sciver-Brunt took them from 12-2 to 159. The Australians must have been ruing allowing Knight to bat herself back into form at Bristol – she played the most assured innings she has in a while for England; whilst Sciver-Brunt just did what she does, giving the Australian bowlers nothing through the middle overs.

The job wasn’t quite done though. At 40 overs England were 198-4 and heading for around 250, which didn’t feel like it would quite be enough. It needed a brilliant 43 off 25 balls from Danni Wyatt to push England’s total to a much more imposing 285.

Wyatt did that damage in the 40-45 over phase, achieving a run-rate of over 10 in that 5-over period; and although the rate slowed again after she got out, crucially England’s tail still managed to bat at over 6/ over in the final 5 overs, despite losing wickets.

In the chase, Australia also lost early wickets – Lauren Bell will be particularly pleased with finding the edge of the left-handed Phoebe Litchfield’s bat, with Sophie Ecclestone taking a good catch at slip; whilst Cross got one to wobble through Alyssa Healy, who has had, it is fair to say, a mixed few weeks – she has averaged just 15 on this tour, but on the other hand she has captained Australia to an Ashes “win”, which can’t be too bad as consolations go.

Australia’s 3 and 4 – Ellyse Perry and Tahlia McGrath – threatened to do what Knight and Sciver-Brunt had done, but a moment of wicket-keeping magic from Amy Jones did for McGrath and gave England a glimmer of hope. Jones with the bat this series has fared little better than her Australian counterpart, averaging 17; but with the gloves she has once again shown there is no doubt who is the best in the world; and whilst she maintains that level, you can see why England aren’t even thinking about any other options.

After a break for rain, and a slightly adjusted DLS total, Australia came out fighting again, with Ash Gardner looking dangerous, but her run out for 41 was the start of a collapse which saw Australia subside to 199 all out, with the crowd really getting behind the team as they finished the job.

In the press conference after the game, Heather Knight admitted that it was a “disappointment” not to have regained the Ashes; but they have massively outperformed expectations – mine more than any. I feared Australia taking home a 16-0 whitewash; so 8-8 and two series wins for England is a huge achievement.

Whether this is just a blip for Australia, or we’re looking at a team past their peak, will emerge in the coming months and years. But when England next face them… perhaps in the T20 World Cup in Bangladesh next autumn… they will at last know that this is a team they can beat. And if they do, this will have been where it started.