An Unexpectedly Close Finish

A look back at this morning’s Hundred match between the Trent Rockets and Southern Brave women/s teams and a photo gallery.

The early match in The Hundred today featured Trent Rockets women playing host to Southern Brave women. This post looks back at the match.

The reason that this match becoming a close one was so unexpected was that Brave totally dominated the early exchanges. Tilly Corteen-Coleman, helped by some brilliant wicket keeping from Rhianna Southby (two stumpings, both beyond the capacities of a batter/keeper as opposed to a true keeper) took 4-13 from her 20 balls, all bowled in the first half of the innings. As well as bowling superbly the left arm-spinner also held two catches. At low water mark Rockets were 55-8. At this point another left arm spinner entered the picture, Kirstie Gordon. She and Alana King put on 51 together for the ninth wicket. That meant that Brave were 106 all out, the tenth wicket going to the 100th ball of their innings. Gordon top scored with 32 off 24 balls, Rockets skipper Ash Gardner had contributed 25 earlier in the innings, and King managed 24, with no else in double figures.

It says much for the Trent Rockets bowlers that there were significant periods of the chase during which it felt like they might possibly defend this small score. It was the 95th ball of the innings, hit for four by Sophie Devine to reduce the ask to three off five balls that finally killed off the last hopes of a turnaround by the Rockets. Cassidy McCarthy accepted responsibility for bowling the last five balls of the match. Devine took a single off the first, the second was a dot, and Chloe Tryon hit the third for four to finally get Brave over the line. Maia Bouchier with 42 was top scorer, while Devine ended up on 41 not out. The margin was six wickets. Brave have now won four matches out of four, and the secret of their success is not hard to locate: their England seamer Lauren Bell is the leading wicket taker of the tournament so far, with Corteen-Coleman second on the list, and it is generally bowling resources that separate winners from also-rans. I could cite many examples from cricket’s long history to back this up, but will settle for reminding people of the history of RCB men in the IPL – for years they had devastating batting but comparatively second string bowling, and for all those years they never won the tournament, but in the most recent IPL they had for the first time assembled a properly balanced squad, and what you know, they won the thing. Scorecard here.

Young Talent Comes to the Fore

A look at two outstanding performances by youngsters today in The Hundred (women’s) and a photo gallery.

Today, like yesterday has been a ‘double double header’ day in The Hundred – one morning/ afternoon double header and one afternoon/ evening double header – the evening match between the Trent Rockets and Northern Superchargers men’s teams gets underway at 6PM. I have followed my usual policy on such days where there is an overlap of listening to the morning match, then listening to both matches of the second double header, which means I listen to two women’s and one men’s match. This post looks at the two women’s games that happened today.

Southern Brave had tallied a respectable but not outstanding 139-8 from their 100 balls. Danni Wyatt-Hodge led the way with 59, while there were also useful contributions from Kiwi veteran Sophie Devine and silky South African Laura Wolvaardt. Young left arm wrist spinner Millie Taylor continued what is becoming a very memorable season for her by taking 1-25 from her 20 balls.

Birmingham Phoenix had got to 19 without loss from the first ten balls of the reply when Southern Brave turned to 17 year old left arm orthodox spinner Tilly Corteen-Coleman. In the space of three balls she changed the complexion of the match, bowling Emma Lamb for 9 with her first ball, and then two balls later dismissing Marie Kelly the same way, for a duck. When Lauren Bell got rid of the surviving opener, Georgia Voll, with the 18th ball of the innings the Phoenix was well and truly in the ashes, and unlike in the legend this one was not going to revive. Ellyse Perry, Amy Jones and especially Sterre Kalis kept things alive for them, but they were never other than behind the rate, and when Kalis finally fell, to the third last ball of the match, caught by Corteen-Coleman off Bell for 44 (34) it was 124-9, 16 needed off three balls. None of those runs were scored, Hannah Baker surviving one ball before being castled by the next, the penultimate scheduled ball of the match. Sophie Devine was named player of the match for her 27 and 2-28, though personally I would have given it to Corteen-Coleman whose two early wickets put the skids under the Phoenix chase, and whose catch to dismiss Kalis effectively sealed things for Southern Brave. Scorecard here.

The focus for me now switched to Nottingham, where Trent Rockets were playing host to Northern Superchargers. Rockets began appallingly, losing three wickets almost before they were started. Their skipper, Ashleigh Gardner, led a fightback, scoring 61 off 32 balls, but they could do no better than 128-8.

Davina Perrin, an 18 year old opening batter, proceeded to make an inadequate total look positively risible, as she climbed into the Rockets bowlers. Alice Davidson-Richards provided early support, and then when she was out Phoebe Litchfield, the 22 year old Australian, produced a splendid cameo, scoring 22 off just 10 balls. Annabel Sutherland, generally regarded as the best current all rounder in the women’s game, and player of the tournament in2024, now came to the crease, and it fell to her in the end to make the winning hit, a four that took her to 18 not out off 11. Perrin had scored 72 not out from 40 balls, with 12 fours. This supercharged performance gave Superchargers the win by eight wickets, with 21 balls to spare. Scorecard here.

My usual sign off…

The Hundred 2024

A look at goings on in the Hundred 2024 so far and a large photo gallery.

The most controversial competition in cricket, The Hundred, is under way for 2024. This post looks at some of what has happened already.

The Hundred got underway on Tuesday, and there was also action on Wednesday and Thursday, and will be more today.

Tuesday saw the Oval Invincibles successful in both the women’s and men’s games.

On Wednesday Southern Brave and London Spirit were the contending teams. London Spirit won the women’s match, largely thanks to a superb 65* from Heather Knight. Tilly Corteen-Coleman, making her Hundred debut at the age of just 16 had a dream start when she dismissed Meg Lanning with her second ball, holding a fine return catch to do so.

Yesterday was the turn of Manchester Originals and Welsh Fire. In the women’s match it looked at one point like the Originals could defend a total of 113, but Sophia Dunkley stepped on the accelerator at the crucial moment, turning a questionable looking 37* (34) into an indubitably match winning 69* (47).

The Men’s game embarrassingly one-sided, as an appalling batting performance from the Originals saw them tumble to 37-7. They recovered from there to post 86-8 from their 100 balls, but Welsh Fire made that total look absolutely as derisory as it was, never looking in any trouble at any stage of the chase.

My usual sign off…

Sister Act

A look back at yesterday’s finale to the Charlotte Edwards Cup, in which a pair of Scottish sisters played starring roles. Also a photo gallery.

Yesterday was Charlotte Edwards Cup Finals Day – both semi-finals and then the final all in a day. My focus for this post will be the final itself, which I will lead up to with brief mentions of the semi-finals.

In the first semi-final Blaze held Central Sparks to 140-9 in 20 overs and chased this target down with five wickets and two overs in hand, a comfortable victory. The second match, between South East Stars and Southern Vipers was a tighter affair – Stars scored 162-5 from their 20 overs, and Vipers fought hard but ended up five runs short, in a match that went to the last ball – a six off that delivery and Vipers would have been in the final.

Blaze won the toss and decided to bowl. Going into this match Blaze had won all six of the matches in which they had chased this season, so Stars knew they had to put up a big total to have a chance. When the first over yielded 18 things were looking good for them. However although there were promising moments from most of the Stars batter they could not build on this excellent start – the tale of the innings was of batters getting going and then getting out before making a serious contribution. In the end they finished with 141-9, with Georgia Redmayne’s 25 the biggest single contribution. Heather Graham and Josie Groves took the principal bowling honours with three wickets each. Kathryn Bryce had 1-11 from three overs and took a catch, while Sarah Bryce had two stumpings, both off Groves.

Stars benefitted from a huge slice of luck early in the reply – a drive from Marie Kelly deflected off the bowler Farrant into the non-strikers end stumps with Tammy Beaumont out of her ground for a freak run out. Kelly herself was second out at 37, with Kathryn Bryce already going very well. Sarah Bryce joined her sister at the crease and the pair took the game right away from Stars. Kathryn Bryce, the leading run scorer of this season’s tournament, completed her fifth 50 of the competition off 35 balls, with Sarah Bryce playing a fine support role. The partnership was worth 79 when a fine delivery from Danielle Gregory beat Kathryn Bryce’s attempted reverse sweep and bowled her for 62 (45). Heather Graham joined Sarah Bryce, who now assumed control of proceedings. By the time the 19th over started the ask was down to 10. That proved not even enough to take it to the final over, as Stars skipper Bryony Smith decided to trust this over to Ryana McDonald-Gay who had gone for 19 in her only previous over. Sarah Bryce emulated her sister’s feat of reaching 50, but ironically the winning hit was made by Graham, with a four. Sarah Bryce ended with 52 not out off 46 balls. Kathryn Bryce’s all round performance saw her named Player of the Match. The Bryce sisters incidentally are Scottish, and are separated by two years, Kathryn being 26 and Sarah 24. Tilly Corteen-Coleman, a 16 year old left arm orthodox spinner, had the excellent figures of 4-0-24-0. Full scorecard here.

My usual sign off…