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June 6, 2008

Posted by Cri-Zelda Brits at 6:36 AM in

The future looks bright





‘I know that my game really improved after playing a summer of cricket in England’ © ICC
Cri-Zelda Brits

I can’t believe we are already in June and the first ball of the ICC Women’s World Cup is only nine months away. We have recently completed our first training camp and it was great to be back together as a team for the first time since winning the World Cup qualifier in Stellenbosch in February.

There was a great spirit among the team and there was a lot of focus not just on our upcoming tour of England, where all the girls can’t wait for the opportunity to play at Lord’s for the first time, but on how we can get the best out of the squad ahead of the two major ICC events next year.

These training camps are really important for us as there isn’t a huge opportunity to play national competitions in South Africa – one of the main challenges is that as the country is so big and the players aren’t full-time, which makes travelling to matches a real issue.

So while we do have a regular 50-over competition, which will serve as our main domestic warm-up to the ICC Women’s World Cup, we do suffer from not playing as much cricket as other countries.

There are also plans to introduce a new domestic competition for Twenty20 cricket, based on the Super Fours model in England. This is a really positive step and yet another sign of support from Cricket South Africa, who have been great to the team since they took over the running of the women’s game a few years ago.

We are lucky to have a very talented squad of players, who, if they offer everything that they did to be at the Women’s World Cup Qualifier, have a chance of competing with the very best.

Not many of my squad have had the opportunity to play in English conditions before, so this will be a great learning experience. The performances of Olivia Anderson in Stellenbosch earlier in the year, after spending a summer in Ireland, are testament to the improvements it can make to an individual’s game.

I know that my game really improved after playing a summer of cricket in England, where I was lucky enough to play alongside Charlotte Edwards, so I hope that we can all use the experience wisely.

The lifestyle challenges of playing women’s cricket for your country, knowing that you have to fit in training around work, mean that there is a chance you may lose some of your most talented players. It was a big blow for us when Johmari Logtenberg retired, especially after all the time and effort we had spent on her development and the promise she had shown at such a young age.

To protect our side against losing quality players, we need to improve the strength and depth in our squad, which hopefully the new domestic Twenty20 competition will help provide, as well as increase the number of people playing at a grass-roots level.

South Africa is a proud sporting country so we know one of the ways we can increase our profile is by winning – we get far more coverage at home as a result of winning the Women’s World Cup Qualifier than we ever did before.

So that is why all the squad are determined to put in as much hard work as possible to ensure we can benefit from being in the spotlight at the World Cup and the World Twenty20 next year and take women’s cricket in South Africa from strength to strength.

 
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Comments

Posted by: Ashwin at June 11, 2008 10:53 AM

South Africa's winning will do a world of good for cricket on a grass roots level there. However it is Australia that will take honors! Lets see how things pan out and hopefully the World Cup is televised!

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Mithali Raj
Mithali Raj, India's former captain, has been on the international circuit for a decade. In August 2006, she led India to their first-ever Test and series win in England and capped off the year by winning the Asia Cup - the second time in 12 months - without dropping a game. India, under her captaincy, also reached the World Cup final in 2005. Now, as one of the senior members of the side, and the premier batsman, a lot will be riding on her for the two World Cups - 50-over and Twenty20 - that India will play in 2009.
Urooj Mumtaz
Urooj Mumtaz managed to juggle a course in dentistry along with captaining Pakistan. Their most recent triumph was qualifying for the World Cup next year and the 22-year old Urooj will lead a young team to Australia in hope of creating a favourable impression of the Pakistan women's team among the other sides as well as back home. A legspinner, she has a hat-trick against Zimbabwe.
Cri-zelda Brits
Cri-zelda Brits became South Africa’s captain at the age of 23, standing in for Shandre Fritze in the home series against Pakistan in 2007. She followed this by captaining the side to a 3-0 series whitewash against the Netherlands as well as winning the first-ever Test between the two sides by 159 runs. In 2008 she scored her maiden ODI hundred and led South Africa to a spot in the World Cup after beating Pakistan in the Qualifiers final in Stellenbosch. She also coaches the Northwest women's team, based in Potchefstroom, and runs her own academy.
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Shelley Nitschke combines playing for Australia and her state with working in cricket, as a school officer. A useful spinner, her batting is also worth talking about – she has developed into a handy allrounder. Her major achievements to date are winning the 2005 World Cup, taking 7 for 24 against England in Kidderminster in 2005 and being nominated for the ICC Women's Player of the Year in 2006-07. Although she has played netball, softball and basketball, cricket has always been her stand-out sport.
Ebony Rainford-Brent
Ebony Rainford-Brent made history as one of eight England players to be handed a Chance to Shine coaching contract, allowing her flexibility around training. A top-order batsman, she fought back from what doctors thought was a career-killing back injury and could one day bowl again – calling her determined is an understatement. She is on the Surrey Academy and her Super 4s side is Diamonds. Proficient in basketball and athletics, she settled for playing cricket … and the drums.
Haidee Tiffen
Haidee Tiffen has played for New Zealand for more than ten years and is now their captain, having begun her career with Otago Under-21s before heading to Canterbury. She has played representational hockey, basketball and rugby – but cricket is her passion and won out over New Zealand junior hockey. She is particularly proud of winning the World Cup in 2000, reaching the 100-ODI milestone and being skipper. Her experience also includes playing for Sussex for two winters and she was also part of the first female academy in Lincoln. Somehow she also finds time to teach Health and PE at Hillmorton High School.
Isobel Joyce
Isobel Joyce,a class bat with a steely mentality, comes from a family full of cricketers - twin sister Cecilia plays alongside her for Ireland and brother Dom for the men’s national team, while another brother, Ed, plays for England and Middlesex. Her first half-century came against a strong New Zealand attack in Dublin in 2004 and her figures of 4 for 20 helped her side beat Scotland by six wickets in the European Championship in 2001, where Ireland won all their three matches. Her 46 against Netherlands in the summer of 2007 helped to maintain her place in the World Cup qualifiers in South Africa. She was in outstanding form with both and ball during the tournament, scoring 148 runs at 37 and taking 10 wickets at an average of 7. She ran out five Pakistani players in Ireland's first match, before earning two successive Player-of-the-Match awards against Scotland and then Zimbabwe, against whom she scored 70 and took 4 for 10. She was named captain for their next series, against West Indies, after Heather Whelan pulled out because she was expecting.
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