England resist spin issues after Sri Lanka’s shock triumph

Sep 07, 2023 at 10:08 AM
England resist spin issues after Sri Lanka’s shock triumph

England Women will take a choose group of batters to Mumbai for a coaching camp after their tied Ashes contest and more moderen 2-1 T20I collection defeat to Sri Lanka uncovered weaknesses towards spin that head coach Jon Lewis believes different groups will look to use.

With a tour of India scheduled on the finish of this 12 months adopted by the 2024 T20 World Cup in Bangladesh and the 50-over model in India in 2025, Lewis stated dealing with spin was a key space his facet should enhance if they’re to contend for trophies.

“Off the back of the Ashes, and from what I saw at the World Cup, it’s pretty clear that the way we play spin bowling is a big area for development for us,” Lewis instructed reporters after Sri Lanka’s seven-wicket victory in Derby on Wednesday evening gave the vacationers a historic 2-1 collection win towards England. “And it’s been highlighted here. It’s brilliant exposure for our players to understand this is where you’re at in your cricketing journey, these are the bits of the game that we need to improve.

“We’ve bought a 20-over World Cup in Bangladesh, we have a tour to India and we have a 50-over World Cup in India. So our subsequent three huge challenges in actuality, there’s going to be a number of spin bowled at us. People will watch us play spin and so they’ll go, ‘proper, okay, we predict we will exploit this crew in that space’. So I’m actually eager to get to work with the women, and the way they play the spin bowling and the choices that they’ve, as a result of there’s there a number of areas for development.”

Lewis didn’t identify which players would be a part of the camp, but told the BBC it would be held “earlier than among the ladies go off to the Big Bash”. Of the eight England players picked up in the inaugural WBBL draft this week, seven are batters; captain Heather Knight, Danni Wyatt, Alice Capsey, Maia Bouchier, Bryony Smith, Bess Heath and Danielle Gibson. Heath was named in England’s T20I and ODI squads for Sri Lanka’s visit but remains uncapped so far while Smith made the last of her nine international appearances during the T20 leg of India’s tour to England a year ago and the rest all featured in the T20Is against Sri Lanka.

In the opening match of this latest series in Hove, England raced to 186 for 4 in 17 overs, with Capsey scoring a 26-ball half-century, before rain curtailed Sri Lanka’s reply and the hosts won by 12 runs under the DLS method. But they were then bundled out for 104 and 116 in the next two games as Sri Lanka became the first side other than Australia to beat England in a bilateral T20I series since New Zealand in 2010.

Of the 24 English wickets to fall in the series, 17 were to spin, providing further evidence of a key weakness after England’s struggles against Australia’s Ashleigh Gardner, who finished with 23 wickets as Player of the Series during the drawn Ashes.

Kavisha Dilhari, Sri Lanka’s 22-year-old off-spinner, emerged as a threat with five wickets at 10.20 and an economy rate of 5.66 while Chamari Athapaththu, their captain, proved damaging primarily as the leading run-scorer of the T20Is by a long way with 114, but she also took five wickets at 11.40 and an economy rate of 5.18.

“We’ve been outplayed,” Lewis reflected. “Credit to Sri Lanka, I assumed they performed some actually, actually good cricket. In explicit, they bowled extremely tight traces with all their spin bowlers and clearly we struggled to deal with that and did not play it significantly effectively. And there was some sloppy cricket at occasions in it with our batting.

“Chamari Athapaththu played exactly how I’d like our batters to play and put us under a lot of pressure. I thought she played fantastically well in the two innings that she got away in the last two games. The pace that they got away at in both games is obviously the difference between the teams with the bat as well.”

England had been with out a variety of extra skilled gamers, opting to relaxation star allrounder Nat Sciver-Brunt, batter Sophia Dunkley and the world’s main spinner, Sophie Ecclestone, who subsequently dislocated her proper, non-bowling, shoulder through the Hundred. They additionally misplaced seamer Lauren Bell to sickness and Tammy Beaumont continues to be missed within the shortest format as England search to show youthful gamers to the worldwide stage.

That technique has opened the door for Mahika Gaur, the tall, 17-year-old left-arm seamer who has beforehand represented UAE at Under-19 stage, in addition to Bouchier on the high of the order and compelled Sarah Glenn and Charlie Dean to shoulder extra of the spin-bowling duty Ecclestone would usually carry.

Sciver-Brunt and Beaumont will return for the three-match ODI collection, beginning in Durham on Saturday, however Lewis expressed no regrets over England’s youth growth coverage.

“We’re trying to work out how we want to play and the mindset we want to go into each game with, and which individuals are capable of doing that,” Lewis stated. “And you won’t find that out unless you expose them to international cricket. So the decision-making before the series was very much around trying to give people opportunity who’ve been sat on the edge of our squad or just outside our squad, to try and learn about what they’re capable of under pressure.

“Obviously each time we have taken some threat by way of successful, however what we’re hopeful of is the alternatives we have given the gamers will generate sensible teaching conversations and an understanding of the place every participant is at by way of themselves on their journey and the way they should develop as a result of we’re a creating crew.

“We’ve got three teenagers out playing for us at the moment, which is fantastic, but they will now go away from this experience and be able to learn about how to improve their game, to be able to become brilliant international cricketers, to be able to dominate the top teams in the world. Those are the conversations that we’ll be having with our players over the course of this next series and over the course of the next year or two.”

Valkerie Baynes is a normal editor, girls’s cricket, at ESPNcricinfo