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July 2, 2008

Posted by Isobel Joyce at in West Indies in Ireland, 2008

Positives gained despite setbacks





There was not much to celebrate for Ireland in the series against West Indies © ICC
It has hardly stopped raining since the arrival of the West Indies squad, apart from when there is nobody trying to play cricket. They came with lots of layers of clothing both on them, and in their bags. They had packed well, at least for the first leg of their trip.

Our first match on June 24 started late due to rain, but only eight overs were lost. Nadine George won the toss and, after a short conference with coach Sherwin Campbell, decided to bowl first. It was a day for bowling, and Ireland’s batting started very slowly. Wickets fell at regular intervals, and apart from Nicki Coffey, who scored 32, the performance was below-par.

Ireland were bowled out for 123, but we knew we were still in with a shout of winning the game. Once I and the other opening bowler, Marianne Herbert, became aware of just how much the ball was swinging, the West Indies top order struggled. Though they were scoring quickly, wickets were also falling regularly. At 32 for 4 from just 8.1 overs, the rain came to save the batting side. By the time we got back we had lost a lot of time. The second innings was reduced to 20 overs, which meant that the two opening bowlers had bowled all of their overs.

Next to bowl were debutants Melissa Scott Hayward and Amy Kenealy. Both struggled in their first overs because of the combined difficulty of the weather and the left and right batting combination. We knew we needed to get an early wicket, and two chances came. One was a catch at long-off, and the other a run out opportunity. Neither chance was taken and West Indies made us pay. They pushed the good balls for singles, and almost every bad ball went for four. Ultimately, that was the difference between the two teams.

Our match on Thursday was rained off, then came the Twenty20 on June 27 – Ireland’s first international in this form of the game.

We bowled after I won my first toss as captain, and started decently, but not before umpire Rodney Molins paid tribute to John Wright. Wright, who was a huge contributor to Irish cricket, and was presented with an ICC Global Award on his retirement, died last week. We had a minute’s silence in his honour before the match.

Once again West Indies lost a few early wickets, but soon Stefanie Taylor got into her stride, making 90 as they powered their way to 184. The Irish opening pair of Coffey and Clare Shillington looked comfortable early on. The tide turned when Coffey didn’t quite commit to a pull, causing her to be caught on the boundary. My sister, Cecelia, batted well to make 41, but that was the highlight of our final score, 109 for 7.

The sun finally came out for our last game on June 29, which was Joanne McKinley’s first match. We batted first, and were starting to get into our stride at 42 for no loss after 14 overs, but once again the ran made an appearance. Cecelia and Emma Beamish looked to have retained their touch when we came back out 50 minutes later. Their partnership was ended by a superb piece of fielding by Taylor, who effected a direct hit at the non-strikers end from point to end Cecelia’s knock of 38. Shillington batted very well for 54 before she was caught. We made it to 163 for 9 after the 50 overs.

Taylor anchored the innings again for her side with 66, and once again West Indies showed their ability to punish the bad ball, and stay disciplined for the good ones. They reached their target after just 35.5 overs with six wickets in hand.

Though it might look like there are too many positives for Ireland to take from this series, that is not the case. The team has changed a lot over the past few months, and a lot of responsibility was put on the shoulders of our inexperienced players. They proved that they are good enough to be playing at international level, and now know exactly what they need to work on to start taking wickets and making runs. I look forward to getting the squad back together again for some training sessions before our next ODI against South Africa in a few weeks' time.

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June 24, 2008

Posted by Isobel Joyce at in West Indies in Ireland, 2008

Leading the side against the unfamilar Windies





I hope to be able to juggle my advent into the position of captain for the series with keeping up my own playing form © ICC
The build up to the next World Cup Qualifiers starts here as far as Ireland is concerned. We were very disappointed not to do better in South Africa last February, but that is in the past, and all that matters now is the ODI series against the West Indies which starts tomorrow.

There have been a few changes to the squad since the ICC Trophy – Beggsie (Caitriona Beggs) and Lenny (Anne Linehan) retired at the end of the tournament, Elaine Nolan started her world travels from South Africa, Jill Whelan is also taking time out to travel, and captain Heather Whelan has stepped back from the game for a year.

A complete change is going on behind the scenes too. Our coach Miriam Grealey has retired after two years of hard work, as has our manager Sandra Dawson. However, we are very excited to have Matt Dwyer taking us for the upcoming series. A former international himself, Matt has a knowledge of the game that few can boast. We just hope he goes easier on us than he does on his son Mark!

Of course when players retire, or leave the game for a while, there are always those ready to take their places. There will be three new faces on the squad since February who will all want to prove themselves and cement their places before the roving travellers arrive back to try and reclaim their positions.

Amy Kenealy, Joanne McKinley and Cathy Murphy have worked hard so far this season to make themselves valuable additions to the team.

Having played West Indies only once before, and that being approximately five years ago, I personally don’t know much about them. I’ve been told bits and pieces about the last time the girls played them, but I think they are a somewhat unknown quantity. Their last international match was in the 2005 World Cup, and much has probably changed since then – only five of their 16-strong squad has been capped before.

This is our opportunity to see what stage we are at, to try and prove that we are there or thereabouts when it comes to teams that are just a few places above us in the world rankings, to see what we need to work on, and to hopefully regain a bit of pride.

So far as individual players go; Clare Shillington has been prolific with the bat in the domestic league so far this season, and Marianne Herbert extremely miserly with the ball. We will be hoping that both of them can carry this run of form into the series.

We are also excited to see the return of Melissa Scott-Hayward into the fold after a gruelling few weeks of examinations.

Personally, I hope to be able to juggle my advent into the position of captain for the series with keeping up my own playing form. Luckily I have some experienced senior players to help me in the shape my vice-captain Nicki Coffey and former captain Shillington. First of all though, we need the weather to do us a favour and clear up so we can get the series under way tomorrow!

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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.
Shelley Nitschke
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.
Nadine George
Nadine George has been a regular for West Indies since her debut in 1999. She first led the side on their tour of Europe in June-July 2008, when West Indies thrashed Ireland and Netherlands while putting up a respectable performance against England. Nadine combines playing for West Indies and her national team, St.Lucia, with her day job as a Sergeant in the Police Marine Unit of the Royal St.Lucia Police Force. A left-hand batsman and wicketkeeper, Nadine says the highlights of her career are receiving an MBE at Buckingham Palace in 2005, being the first West Indies woman cricketer to score a century in a Test (in Pakistan in 2004), playing in the World Cup in South Africa (2005), and playing club cricket in Australia in 2006. Nadine also plays netball and volleyball and loves the marine environment and is passionate about diving. She is a qualified open water diver and during her working hours captains a 65 and 82 ft vessel. Her motto in life is "with hard work and dedication one can achieve".
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