Zürcher Nachrichten - England's 'outsiders' aim to break trophy drought at Women's Cricket World Cup

EUR -
AED 4.376258
AFN 78.044871
ALL 97.593682
AMD 450.340723
ANG 2.13283
AOA 1092.580545
ARS 1687.741549
AUD 1.679798
AWG 2.14465
AZN 2.021069
BAM 1.962053
BBD 2.398253
BDT 145.523769
BGN 2.000923
BHD 0.449152
BIF 3521.991511
BMD 1.191472
BND 1.511028
BOB 8.245381
BRL 6.187437
BSD 1.1907
BTN 107.947376
BWP 15.692207
BYN 3.43178
BYR 23352.85305
BZD 2.394762
CAD 1.615267
CDF 2639.110465
CHF 0.913502
CLF 0.025735
CLP 1016.170304
CNY 8.247968
CNH 8.239595
COP 4373.882144
CRC 590.288618
CUC 1.191472
CUP 31.574011
CVE 111.223619
CZK 24.2175
DJF 211.748097
DKK 7.471739
DOP 74.645324
DZD 154.242024
EGP 55.833696
ERN 17.872081
ETB 184.857039
FJD 2.60837
FKP 0.875932
GBP 0.870055
GEL 3.210985
GGP 0.875932
GHS 13.117885
GIP 0.875932
GMD 87.569535
GNF 10437.893399
GTQ 9.134109
GYD 249.117046
HKD 9.311253
HNL 31.520385
HRK 7.533436
HTG 156.149598
HUF 376.726203
IDR 20016.731186
ILS 3.672592
IMP 0.875932
INR 108.140807
IQD 1561.42418
IRR 50190.762165
ISK 145.014472
JEP 0.875932
JMD 186.243538
JOD 0.844767
JPY 185.761235
KES 153.700033
KGS 104.194635
KHR 4805.206804
KMF 499.226863
KPW 1072.317263
KRW 1737.142213
KWD 0.365532
KYD 0.992275
KZT 588.041428
LAK 25616.650128
LBP 105680.60342
LKR 368.536032
LRD 221.791971
LSL 19.424
LTL 3.518107
LVL 0.720709
LYD 7.536051
MAD 10.94368
MDL 20.224709
MGA 5290.135743
MKD 61.633211
MMK 2501.703724
MNT 4249.132116
MOP 9.586271
MRU 47.479863
MUR 54.86697
MVR 18.407948
MWK 2069.586733
MXN 20.49805
MYR 4.68785
MZN 75.955818
NAD 19.423145
NGN 1626.871546
NIO 43.723057
NOK 11.421428
NPR 172.715601
NZD 1.967693
OMR 0.458063
PAB 1.190705
PEN 4.012284
PGK 5.082839
PHP 69.698135
PKR 333.250714
PLN 4.208089
PYG 7851.020364
QAR 4.338567
RON 5.091117
RSD 117.388633
RUB 91.744506
RWF 1731.208953
SAR 4.468589
SBD 9.601059
SCR 16.330338
SDG 716.674747
SEK 10.625834
SGD 1.507939
SHP 0.893913
SLE 29.131498
SLL 24984.57321
SOS 680.917918
SRD 45.241981
STD 24661.066782
STN 25.080488
SVC 10.419205
SYP 13177.174863
SZL 19.415191
THB 37.076821
TJS 11.151278
TMT 4.17611
TND 3.392711
TOP 2.868779
TRY 51.936226
TTD 8.06681
TWD 37.598444
TZS 3078.283743
UAH 51.328378
UGX 4238.507672
USD 1.191472
UYU 45.655499
UZS 14625.319573
VES 450.358729
VND 30871.041966
VUV 142.590546
WST 3.253577
XAF 658.062459
XAG 0.014234
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.220013
XCG 2.145966
XDR 0.821945
XOF 660.67047
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.046544
ZAR 18.942988
ZMK 10724.686409
ZMW 22.511024
ZWL 383.653528
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.5300

    17.41

    +3.04%

  • CMSC

    0.0750

    23.585

    +0.32%

  • NGG

    0.3300

    88.39

    +0.37%

  • RIO

    3.4400

    96.85

    +3.55%

  • AZN

    -5.0200

    188.01

    -2.67%

  • BTI

    -1.6500

    61.15

    -2.7%

  • GSK

    -1.2200

    59.01

    -2.07%

  • BCE

    0.5400

    25.62

    +2.11%

  • BP

    0.2100

    39.22

    +0.54%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    23.97

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    0.3700

    15.48

    +2.39%

  • RELX

    0.1000

    29.48

    +0.34%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    89.02

    -2.26%

  • JRI

    -0.1600

    12.81

    -1.25%

England's 'outsiders' aim to break trophy drought at Women's Cricket World Cup
England's 'outsiders' aim to break trophy drought at Women's Cricket World Cup / Photo: Marco Longari - AFP/File

England's 'outsiders' aim to break trophy drought at Women's Cricket World Cup

England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt hopes her team of "outsiders" can thrive at the Women's Cricket World Cup as they seek to end a painful eight-year trophy drought.

Text size:

The team are one of the best-funded in the women's game but have been overshadowed in recent years by Australia and India.

Since winning the 50-over World Cup at Lord's in 2017, England have fallen short on the global stage, raising questions about their ability to cope under intense pressure.

They were beaten finalists in 2022, losing by 71 runs to Australia despite an impressive 148 not out from Sciver-Brunt.

England have also underperformed at T20 World Cups, losing to South Africa in the semi-finals in 2023 and failing to make it out of the group stage last year.

Earlier this year they were put firmly in their place by Australia, suffering a humiliating 16-0 loss in the multi-format Women's Ashes.

But there have been signs of progress under the leadership of all-rounder Sciver-Brunt and coach Charlotte Edwards, both of whom have only been in their posts since April.

England defeated reigning world champions Australia and co-hosts India in tournament warm-up matches, though Sciver-Brunt accepts they will still be the teams to beat.

- 'Outsiders' -

"We were never going to be going in as favourites, that's India and Australia, but not having that label will hopefully free us up," she said.

"The expectation of being outsiders will spur us on, I guess, but internally we have certain expectations to put something out that we are proud of and compete against the very best teams.

"In terms of the last few world tournaments we've been disappointed not to get the results we wanted because we set standards as an England side.

"But having a new coach and new captain, hopefully that is a fresh start in terms of not dwelling on previous tournaments."

England begin their campaign against South Africa in Guwahati on Friday.

And while a winning start is clearly the aim, the round-robin format of the one-day international tournament, also featuring matches in Sri Lanka, means there is plenty of time to overcome a loss.

Sciver-Brunt, 33, is one of four survivors in the England squad from the victorious 2017 side, together with former skipper Heather Knight, Tammy Beaumont and Danni Wyatt-Hodge.

Back then, England opened their tournament with a defeat by India before recovering strongly.

"We lost our first game in 2017 and came full circle to beat the same team in the final," said Sciver-Brunt.

"In these tournaments it's not about how you start, it's how you finish and if you peak at the right time."

The minimum expectation for England, whose players now enjoy high-profile domestic competition thanks to the women's Hundred, will be a semi-final spot.

Mindful of the slow, turning pitches they will encounter in the subcontinent, England have travelled with a quartet of spinners -- a decision that led to veteran seamer Kate Cross's omission from their 15-strong squad.

England's Sophie Ecclestone is the world's top-ranked bowler in women's ODIs, with fellow slow left-armer Linsey Smith, off-spinner Charlie Dean and leg-spinner Sarah Glenn also available to Sciver-Brunt.

A.Wyss--NZN