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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Sport
Rory Dollard

Nat Sciver-Brunt explains why being ‘outsiders’ might help England at Cricket World Cup

Nat Sciver-Brunt (left) hopes her team can play with freedom as tournament outsiders (Nick Potts/PA) -

England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt is comfortable with her side going into the Women’s Cricket World Cup as “outsiders” as they look to rebuild their reputation as trophy contenders.

Sciver-Brunt is one of only four survivors from the team that became world champions at Lord’s in 2017 and has witnessed a series of tournament disappointments in recent years.

Since finishing as beaten finalists in their 2022 title defence, they have struggled to make their mark on the global stage, exiting the T20 World Cup in the semi-finals and group stage at the last two editions.

Nat Sciver-Brunt will lead England at the World Cup in India (PA)

But with Sciver-Brunt and head coach Charlotte Edwards still in the first six months at the helm, there has been a reset of sorts.

Warm-up wins over reigning champions Australia and co-hosts India has not seen England leapfrog the pair in the bookmakers’ reckoning but Sciver-Brunt is happy to fly under the radar.

“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 told the PA news agency.

“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.

“We’ll be happy if we get our best cricket out there, because if we do that as a team we can compete with anyone out there.”

England triumphed at Lord’s in 2017 (PA)

England begin their campaign against South Africa in Guwahati on Friday, an important chance to set the right tone but not a make-or-break curtain-raiser given the round-robin structure.

Heather Knight, Tammy Beaumont and Danni Wyatt-Hodge all lifted the trophy alongside Sciver-Brunt eight years ago and will remember that they began their road to glory with defeat to India in their opener.

“It does seem like quite a long time ago but I guess that’s where our experience will come in really handy,” Sciver-Brunt said.

“We lost our first game in 2017 and came full circle to beat the same team in the final. We can share that knowledge with the group. In these tournaments it’s not about how you start, it’s how you finish and if you peak at the right time.”

Nat Sciver-Brunt teamed up with Sage, the Official Accounting Software Partner of The Hundred, to launch the Sage Small Business XI competition this summer. To find out how Sage can help your small business, visit sage.com

PA

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