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England's Hundred will have strong Australian accent
England's Hundred will have strong Australian accent

The Advertiser

time15-07-2025

  • Business
  • The Advertiser

England's Hundred will have strong Australian accent

Hilton Cartwright's late call-up by Southern Brave has taken to 24 the number of Australians who will figure in this year's Hundred, the controversial white-ball franchise competition that has divided English cricket. The 31-year-old Western Australia and Melbourne Stars allrounder, capped at Test and ODI level in 2017, is an injury replacement for South African Faf du Plessis. When the competition begins on 5 August most matches will feature an Aussie accent with 13 of the 16 teams signing an Australian. Only one women's team, Brave, are without one, with 15 Australian women selected. Birmingham Phoenix, Northern Superchargers and Trent Rockets all used their full complement of three overseas players to sign Australian women. The in-demand nature of Australia's all-conquering women's team is reflected in the salaries they will receive. Six will each receive the top-tier Stg 65,000 ($A135,000) fee - Ellyse Perry, Georgia Voll, Annabel Sutherland, Phoebe Litchfield, Ash Gardner and Grace Harris, with a further five collecting the second-level Stg 50,000 ($A102,500). Fewer of the current leading Australian men have signed up with David Warner, Marcus Stoinis and Steve Smith the big-name recruits. The former will pick up Stg 100,000 ($A205,000), the latter two Stg 120,000 ($A246,000). There are also seven Australian coaches, four with men's teams, including Justin Langer at London Spirit. Also signed in Tuesday's final selection were two Englishmen at opposite ends of their careers: James Anderson, who will be 43 when the tournament starts, and Rocky Flintoff, 17, who has joined the Northern Superchargers team his father, former England allrounder Andrew, coaches. This is the last season before the impact is felt of the sale of large chunks of most teams to private owners. Several have sold stakes to Indian Premier League clubs with Sunrisers Hyderabad buying all of Northern Superchargers from hosts Yorkshire. Created by the England and Wales Cricket Board to attract new fans the competition has been fiercely opposed by traditional supporters who feel it has drawn resources away from the traditional 18-club county structure and imperils the four-day game. However, the ECB feel the sale process, which is set to bring in Stg 520m ($A1.1 billion), valuing the teams collectively at Stg 975m ($A2.0 bn), will save the sport from bankruptcy. However, those 11 counties who do not host a franchise - and most of the Hundred venues also stage Test matches - fear they will be left behind. AUSTRALIANS IN THE HUNDRED Women Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Georgia Voll (Birmingham Phoenix), Grace Harris, Georgia Redmayne (London Spirit), Beth Mooney (Manchester Originals), Phoebe Litchfield, Annabel Sutherland, Georgia Wareham (Northern Superchargers), Amanda-Jade Wellington, Meg Lanning (Oval Invincibles), Ash Gardner, Alana King, Heather Graham (Trent Rockets), Jess Jonassen (Welsh Fire). Men David Warner, Ashton Turner (London Spirit), Ben Dwarshuis (Northern Superchargers), Jason Behrendorff (Oval Invincibles), Hilton Cartwright (Southern Brave), Marcus Stoinis (Trent Rockets), Steve Smith, Riley Meredith, Chris Green (Welsh Fire). Hilton Cartwright's late call-up by Southern Brave has taken to 24 the number of Australians who will figure in this year's Hundred, the controversial white-ball franchise competition that has divided English cricket. The 31-year-old Western Australia and Melbourne Stars allrounder, capped at Test and ODI level in 2017, is an injury replacement for South African Faf du Plessis. When the competition begins on 5 August most matches will feature an Aussie accent with 13 of the 16 teams signing an Australian. Only one women's team, Brave, are without one, with 15 Australian women selected. Birmingham Phoenix, Northern Superchargers and Trent Rockets all used their full complement of three overseas players to sign Australian women. The in-demand nature of Australia's all-conquering women's team is reflected in the salaries they will receive. Six will each receive the top-tier Stg 65,000 ($A135,000) fee - Ellyse Perry, Georgia Voll, Annabel Sutherland, Phoebe Litchfield, Ash Gardner and Grace Harris, with a further five collecting the second-level Stg 50,000 ($A102,500). Fewer of the current leading Australian men have signed up with David Warner, Marcus Stoinis and Steve Smith the big-name recruits. The former will pick up Stg 100,000 ($A205,000), the latter two Stg 120,000 ($A246,000). There are also seven Australian coaches, four with men's teams, including Justin Langer at London Spirit. Also signed in Tuesday's final selection were two Englishmen at opposite ends of their careers: James Anderson, who will be 43 when the tournament starts, and Rocky Flintoff, 17, who has joined the Northern Superchargers team his father, former England allrounder Andrew, coaches. This is the last season before the impact is felt of the sale of large chunks of most teams to private owners. Several have sold stakes to Indian Premier League clubs with Sunrisers Hyderabad buying all of Northern Superchargers from hosts Yorkshire. Created by the England and Wales Cricket Board to attract new fans the competition has been fiercely opposed by traditional supporters who feel it has drawn resources away from the traditional 18-club county structure and imperils the four-day game. However, the ECB feel the sale process, which is set to bring in Stg 520m ($A1.1 billion), valuing the teams collectively at Stg 975m ($A2.0 bn), will save the sport from bankruptcy. However, those 11 counties who do not host a franchise - and most of the Hundred venues also stage Test matches - fear they will be left behind. AUSTRALIANS IN THE HUNDRED Women Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Georgia Voll (Birmingham Phoenix), Grace Harris, Georgia Redmayne (London Spirit), Beth Mooney (Manchester Originals), Phoebe Litchfield, Annabel Sutherland, Georgia Wareham (Northern Superchargers), Amanda-Jade Wellington, Meg Lanning (Oval Invincibles), Ash Gardner, Alana King, Heather Graham (Trent Rockets), Jess Jonassen (Welsh Fire). Men David Warner, Ashton Turner (London Spirit), Ben Dwarshuis (Northern Superchargers), Jason Behrendorff (Oval Invincibles), Hilton Cartwright (Southern Brave), Marcus Stoinis (Trent Rockets), Steve Smith, Riley Meredith, Chris Green (Welsh Fire). Hilton Cartwright's late call-up by Southern Brave has taken to 24 the number of Australians who will figure in this year's Hundred, the controversial white-ball franchise competition that has divided English cricket. The 31-year-old Western Australia and Melbourne Stars allrounder, capped at Test and ODI level in 2017, is an injury replacement for South African Faf du Plessis. When the competition begins on 5 August most matches will feature an Aussie accent with 13 of the 16 teams signing an Australian. Only one women's team, Brave, are without one, with 15 Australian women selected. Birmingham Phoenix, Northern Superchargers and Trent Rockets all used their full complement of three overseas players to sign Australian women. The in-demand nature of Australia's all-conquering women's team is reflected in the salaries they will receive. Six will each receive the top-tier Stg 65,000 ($A135,000) fee - Ellyse Perry, Georgia Voll, Annabel Sutherland, Phoebe Litchfield, Ash Gardner and Grace Harris, with a further five collecting the second-level Stg 50,000 ($A102,500). Fewer of the current leading Australian men have signed up with David Warner, Marcus Stoinis and Steve Smith the big-name recruits. The former will pick up Stg 100,000 ($A205,000), the latter two Stg 120,000 ($A246,000). There are also seven Australian coaches, four with men's teams, including Justin Langer at London Spirit. Also signed in Tuesday's final selection were two Englishmen at opposite ends of their careers: James Anderson, who will be 43 when the tournament starts, and Rocky Flintoff, 17, who has joined the Northern Superchargers team his father, former England allrounder Andrew, coaches. This is the last season before the impact is felt of the sale of large chunks of most teams to private owners. Several have sold stakes to Indian Premier League clubs with Sunrisers Hyderabad buying all of Northern Superchargers from hosts Yorkshire. Created by the England and Wales Cricket Board to attract new fans the competition has been fiercely opposed by traditional supporters who feel it has drawn resources away from the traditional 18-club county structure and imperils the four-day game. However, the ECB feel the sale process, which is set to bring in Stg 520m ($A1.1 billion), valuing the teams collectively at Stg 975m ($A2.0 bn), will save the sport from bankruptcy. However, those 11 counties who do not host a franchise - and most of the Hundred venues also stage Test matches - fear they will be left behind. AUSTRALIANS IN THE HUNDRED Women Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Georgia Voll (Birmingham Phoenix), Grace Harris, Georgia Redmayne (London Spirit), Beth Mooney (Manchester Originals), Phoebe Litchfield, Annabel Sutherland, Georgia Wareham (Northern Superchargers), Amanda-Jade Wellington, Meg Lanning (Oval Invincibles), Ash Gardner, Alana King, Heather Graham (Trent Rockets), Jess Jonassen (Welsh Fire). Men David Warner, Ashton Turner (London Spirit), Ben Dwarshuis (Northern Superchargers), Jason Behrendorff (Oval Invincibles), Hilton Cartwright (Southern Brave), Marcus Stoinis (Trent Rockets), Steve Smith, Riley Meredith, Chris Green (Welsh Fire).

England's Hundred will have strong Australian accent
England's Hundred will have strong Australian accent

Perth Now

time15-07-2025

  • Business
  • Perth Now

England's Hundred will have strong Australian accent

Hilton Cartwright's late call-up by Southern Brave has taken to 24 the number of Australians who will figure in this year's Hundred, the controversial white-ball franchise competition that has divided English cricket. The 31-year-old Western Australia and Melbourne Stars allrounder, capped at Test and ODI level in 2017, is an injury replacement for South African Faf du Plessis. When the competition begins on 5 August most matches will feature an Aussie accent with 13 of the 16 teams signing an Australian. Only one women's team, Brave, are without one, with 15 Australian women selected. Birmingham Phoenix, Northern Superchargers and Trent Rockets all used their full complement of three overseas players to sign Australian women. The in-demand nature of Australia's all-conquering women's team is reflected in the salaries they will receive. Six will each receive the top-tier Stg 65,000 ($A135,000) fee - Ellyse Perry, Georgia Voll, Annabel Sutherland, Phoebe Litchfield, Ash Gardner and Grace Harris, with a further five collecting the second-level Stg 50,000 ($A102,500). Fewer of the current leading Australian men have signed up with David Warner, Marcus Stoinis and Steve Smith the big-name recruits. The former will pick up Stg 100,000 ($A205,000), the latter two Stg 120,000 ($A246,000). There are also seven Australian coaches, four with men's teams, including Justin Langer at London Spirit. Also signed in Tuesday's final selection were two Englishmen at opposite ends of their careers: James Anderson, who will be 43 when the tournament starts, and Rocky Flintoff, 17, who has joined the Northern Superchargers team his father, former England allrounder Andrew, coaches. This is the last season before the impact is felt of the sale of large chunks of most teams to private owners. Several have sold stakes to Indian Premier League clubs with Sunrisers Hyderabad buying all of Northern Superchargers from hosts Yorkshire. Created by the England and Wales Cricket Board to attract new fans the competition has been fiercely opposed by traditional supporters who feel it has drawn resources away from the traditional 18-club county structure and imperils the four-day game. However, the ECB feel the sale process, which is set to bring in Stg 520m ($A1.1 billion), valuing the teams collectively at Stg 975m ($A2.0 bn), will save the sport from bankruptcy. However, those 11 counties who do not host a franchise - and most of the Hundred venues also stage Test matches - fear they will be left behind. AUSTRALIANS IN THE HUNDRED Women Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Georgia Voll (Birmingham Phoenix), Grace Harris, Georgia Redmayne (London Spirit), Beth Mooney (Manchester Originals), Phoebe Litchfield, Annabel Sutherland, Georgia Wareham (Northern Superchargers), Amanda-Jade Wellington, Meg Lanning (Oval Invincibles), Ash Gardner, Alana King, Heather Graham (Trent Rockets), Jess Jonassen (Welsh Fire). Men David Warner, Ashton Turner (London Spirit), Ben Dwarshuis (Northern Superchargers), Jason Behrendorff (Oval Invincibles), Hilton Cartwright (Southern Brave), Marcus Stoinis (Trent Rockets), Steve Smith, Riley Meredith, Chris Green (Welsh Fire).

Bears & Blaze reach Women's T20 Blast Finals Day
Bears & Blaze reach Women's T20 Blast Finals Day

BBC News

time13-07-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Bears & Blaze reach Women's T20 Blast Finals Day

Davina Perrin hit 70 off 48 balls as the Bears made sure of joining Surrey at Women's T20 Blast Finals Day with a 16-run win over 18-year-old struck nine fours as they posted 165-9, and despite 58 from Australia's Ellyse Perry, the Hawks could only muster 149-6 in reply."We came into this as underdogs," said Perrin. "We have a really young group, with veteran Laura Harris being the only anomaly."I did the average age of the squad the other day and it is 22. So to get to Finals Day with such a young squad is credit to our coaches, staff and team."The Blaze will also be part of the showpiece at The Oval on 27 July following a 35-run win over Essex at Chelmsford, in which captain Kirstie Gordon took 4-23 and the home side lost six wickets for nine runs in 16 balls in their total of 104-9. Alice Monaghan made an unbeaten 57 off 32 balls as Surrey beat bottom side Somerset by 68 runs, but Lancashire's hopes of progress to the knockout stage were ended by a two-wicket loss to Durham despite Emma Lamb's Day will see the teams finishing second and third meeting for the right to take on the group winners with the trophy at stake. Bears went into their game against Hampshire at the Utilita Bowl in second place, one point ahead of the Blaze and seven clear of Lancashire in were in trouble on 40-4 and later 92-7 as spinner Bex Tyson picked up 3-27 for the Perrin kept her nerve, reaching 50 off 34 balls with a lofted drive and put on 52 with Georgia Davis (15) before she sliced a full toss from Perry (2-23) to mid-off and was opened the batting for the hosts and reached her first Blast 50 from 36 balls in an opening stand of 75 with Rhianna Southby (29). But they were unable to stay with the required rate and scoring 63 off the final five overs was beyond them, despite Georgia Adams' unbeaten Blaze were not at their best with the bat after winning the toss against Essex, with sisters Sarah and Kathryn Bryce both falling to Abtaha Maqsood in the same over as they struggled to Graham top scored with 33 and Sarah Glenn (17) and Lucy Higham (14) added 30 valuable runs before Eva Gray (4-18) took three wickets in four balls in the final over as they were all out for lost Lauren Winfield-Hill, caught off Glenn for eight, and fell behind the asking rate despite 33 off 31 balls by Jodi Grewcock. It was Grewcock's dismissal by Glenn (3-17) that triggered a collapse from 77-3 to 86-9 in which the home batters merely provided catching Coppack and Maqsood prevented them being bowled out but they finished well short. At Old Trafford, England batter Lamb continued her good form for Lancashire, hitting a six and eight fours in her 48-ball innings before being caught at mid-wicket off Sophia Turner (3-27). But no-one else reached 20 as they totalled 148-7. Suzi Bates set Durham's run-chase in motion with 33 off 22 balls before she was caught at short third man as she tried to swing Tara Norris into the leg-side, leaving her 10 runs short of 400 in the competition.A spell of 3-24 by Australian spinner Alana King kept Lancashire in the game, but 43 off 23 balls by Bess Heath pushed Durham on towards their target. Although she was bowled by Darcey Carter in a slump from 139-5 to 143-8, the visitors squeezed past the target with four balls in did not have Danni Wyatt-Hodge in their side at The Oval and found themselves on 68-4 in the ninth over, with Alice Capsey among those dismissed, caught behind for 27 as she tried to sweep Chloe Skelton (2-20).But Monaghan hit four sixes and added 89 with Emma Jones (34), having missed part of the season with a broken finger, as the home side set Somerset - who had won only one of their 11 previous matches - a tough was a task that proved beyond them as wickets fell regularly throughout their reply and spinner Dani Gregory returned figures of 4-13 as she bowled Erin Vukovic to end Somerset's innings on 107, with 15 balls unused. Tuesday fixture Chester LS: Durham v SurreyMatch starts 14:30 BST

Charlotte Edwards will get England firing, says Australia great Ellyse Perry
Charlotte Edwards will get England firing, says Australia great Ellyse Perry

The Independent

time07-07-2025

  • Sport
  • The Independent

Charlotte Edwards will get England firing, says Australia great Ellyse Perry

Australia great Ellyse Perry is convinced Charlotte Edwards will get England back on the right track. England have endured a difficult past 12 months, with elimination at last year's Women's T20 World Cup in the group stages followed by Australia's 16-0 whitewash win in the Ashes over the winter. The twin setbacks led to Edwards' appointment as head coach and, while she started life in the hot seat by clean sweeping the West Indies, England have struggled in a T20 series against India and trail 2-1. But Perry, regarded as one of the best female players ever, is sure it is only a matter of time before Edwards gets England ticking again, having worked under her at Sydney Sixers in the Big Bash League. Perry told the PA news agency: 'Without a shadow of a doubt. I don't think that team needs too much lifting. You look at England's personnel – they're a wonderful team and they'll have a lot of success. 'Sometimes you just go through a patch of things not falling the way you want them to and learning a few different things, making a few tweaks and it's funny how things just fall into place from there. 'I've got no doubt Lottie will guide them in that direction. It will be great to see her in control of that team and where she can take them.' Former England captain Edwards has had a trophy-laden coaching career, winning titles with Southern Vipers, as well as Southern Brave in The Hundred and Mumbai Indians in the Women's Premier League. Asked why she has had so much success, Perry said: 'She just intuitively knows the game inside out. Her ability to impart her knowledge and wisdom on to players across the spectrum is probably unparalleled. 'What people don't see is just how bloody hard she works. I don't know a coach that is more invested in what she's doing than Lottie. It's not a surprise she's had success. 'She's incredibly well-credentialed for the role, but it's the work she puts in that makes her successful.' Edwards was supposed to take the reins of Hampshire in the first year of the women's domestic restructure and persuaded Perry into a stint at the Utilita Bowl during Australia's off-season. Perry, an eight-time World Cup winner and named women's cricketer of the decade for the 2010s by the International Cricket Council, has started her Hawks spell but has profited from Edwards' absence. The all-rounder, who is set to star in The Hundred for Birmingham Phoenix next month, added: 'I've benefited because I'm staying in her seaside apartment – so I'll take it.'

Women's T20 Blast round-up: Bryce leads Blaze to victory
Women's T20 Blast round-up: Bryce leads Blaze to victory

Yahoo

time04-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Women's T20 Blast round-up: Bryce leads Blaze to victory

Kathryn Bryce's four wickets and a run out led The Blaze to victory over Hampshire Hawks [Getty Images] Kathryn Bryce took 4-13 to eclipse Australia legend Ellyse Perry on her Hampshire Hawks debut and put The Blaze in a strong position to qualify for the Women's T20 Blast finals day. Perry removed Scotland captain Bryce with her first ball for her new team but the Blaze all-rounder hit back by claiming the wicket of the Hawks newcomer, who is the only person to play in both ICC and Fifa World Cup finals. Advertisement Kirstie Gordon's side bounced back from their defeat by Warwickshire by recovering from a scrappy start to reach 188-6 thanks to Heather Graham (73 off 47 balls) and Ella Claridge (51 not out off 36). Perry ended with 2-23 as Blaze lost three wickets in nine balls, including that of Kathryn Bryce from Perry's very first ball in the competition, finding the outside edge. Graham was immediately fluent and, though Davies returned to trap Sarah Bryce lbw with a yorker, Claridge was the perfect foil for the Australian. After Graham's departure, Claridge closed the innings with a flurry of fours to reach a 36-ball half-century and, with Sarah Glenn, plundered 37 from the last 14 balls of the innings. Advertisement Hampshire replied with 151 all out, only Rhianna Southby's classy T20-best 64 (42) defying a Blaze attack led by Kathryn Bryce. Perry had launched Hampshire's reply with three fours from her first nine balls but perished in pursuit of a fourth when she lifted Kathryn Bryce to mid-on. The Hawks' defeat means they, or any other side, have a great deal to do in the remaining games to reel in top three Surrey, The Blaze and Warwickshire. Durham's double Durham completed the double over Somerset in the meeting of the bottom two, beating their winless West Country visitors by six runs at the Banks Homes Riverside. Advertisement Having been asked to bat first, Durham made 154-4 in their 20 overs, with Suzie Bates making 48 and skipper Hollie Armitage 41. Despite Bex Odgers celebrating the award of her first contract by making 54, Somerset finished on 148-7, with Mia Rogers making three stumpings and Phoebe Turner taking 1-15 from her four overs. New Zealand batter Bates and her opening partner Emma Marlow put on 50 in 5.2 overs before Marlow was caught at long-on off Chloe Skelton and Bates was caught at short third by Odgers off Alex Griffiths when two short of her third Durham half-century. The departure of their marquee signing made little difference. Armitage was unluckily run out for 41 at the bowler's end when Skelton deflected Mady Villiers' fierce drive into the stumps and Durham's momentum was also slowed by Erin Vukusic, who conceded only 29 runs from her four overs. Advertisement Somerset's openers began in expansive fashion, Odgers taking 16 runs off Grace Thompson's first over and despite the loss of Niamh Holland and Fran Wilson, the visitors ended the powerplay three runs better placed than Durham, albeit having lost one more wicket. A significant setback followed for Somerset, though, when skipper Sophie Luff was run out for three off her own bowling by Phoebe Turner after a mix-up with Odgers. Odgers responded by reaching her half-century off 35 balls but was stumped by Rogers off Katie Levick for 54 two balls later. Durham's spinners put the brakes on Somerset's progress following the opener's dismissal and the 40 runs needed off the final five overs proved too high a target as Phoebe and Sophie Turner choked off the runs with tight medium pace bowling.

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