Monday, June 8


Skipper Sciver-Brunt holds the key to England’s success.
| Photo Credit: AFP

The second bracket of the expanded 12-team ICC women’s T20 World Cup might seem lighter on action when compared to the Group of Death featuring heavyweights Australia, India and South Africa. Group B pits inaugural winner England, holder New Zealand, former champion West Indies, Sri Lanka, Scotland and Ireland in a six-way tussle for the two semifinal slots.

Nat Sciver-Brunt’s England will be one to watch for reasons far beyond the pitch. As host, the England and Wales Cricket Board has packed an ambitious marketing campaign to boost the women’s game and will be heavily helped if the home team does well.

Charlotte Edwards, who lifted the first-ever Women’s T20 World Cup trophy at Lord’s 17 years ago, is now hoping to replicate her feat as coach. But batting inconsistencies and line-up confusion stand in the way. A 2-1 series victory over India leading up to the showpiece would have been a shot in the arm.

England has never lost a home World Cup across formats and will hope that record stays intact.

New Zealand may have surrendered 1-2 to England in a bilateral series a few weeks ago, but White Ferns should not be underestimated. They benefited from spirited performances and senior players stepping up to the job, coinciding with other teams making fatal errors in a tournament stingy with its second chances, in the last edition.

Old issues remain in 2026, too. The batting order can be quite fickle and ever so often fall back on the ever-dependent Sophie Devine. But with a new captain, Amelia Kerr — the Player-of-the-Series in the 2024 edition — the Kiwis will want to go back to back, particularly to give senior pros Devine, Suzie Bates and Lea Tahuhu — who will bow out of the format after this tournament — a fitting farewell.

West Indies won’t find it easy to repeat its 2016 heroics, not with Chamari Athapaththu’s Sri Lanka, Scotland and Ireland breathing down its neck in the group stage. But if rain delays that have interrupted the warm-ups endure during the tournament, the Windies have the firepower to be on the favourable side of Net Run Rate conversations.

Scotland and Ireland are at a disadvantage of not playing full member nations as often as they might like to really measure their strengths. That said, they will keep a top-eight finish in mind to lock automatic qualification for the next World Cup to be hosted by Pakistan.

This edition will have the most number of European teams (four) in any World Cup and given geographical proximity, teams can expect crowds to raise the roof.

England, though, will hope that with this marquee event to be followed by a historic Test against Harmanpreet Kaur & Co. at Lord’s, and The Hundred, women’s cricket gains greatly. A shiny addition to its trophy cabinet will be the icing on the cake.



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