Test Match Special - Edwards: England's fitness issues have been put to bed
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Mark Chapman, Alex Hartley, Raf Nicholson and Kirstie Gordon are joined by England Head Coach Charlotte Edwards to preview a big year for England's women.Is the domestic game hampering the Internatio...nal team? How important could a home tournament be for the game? Have England's fitness issues been addressed? What's it like being part of The Hundred Auction?
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Huge year for the England women's side.
A home T20 World Cup, only two and a half months away.
A year on from the Ashes Whitewash will assess where everything is now,
what shape the team are in.
Ahead of the summer head coach, Charlotte Edwards,
will join us shortly to.
Welcome to winner Alex Hartley, journalist Raff Nicholson
and captain of the blaze and former England international,
Kirsty Gordon, back at Scotland,
are with us, it is a big year, isn't it?
It's a long introduction for Kirsty Gordon that one, was that?
Yeah, no, yeah.
Well, yours was very simple.
To be honest, I'd take yours, Alex, really.
In all serious, there's a huge year for England women.
There's been a lot of scrutiny over them over the last year or so.
Charlotte Edwards has almost had a year of grace,
a year of almost betting into this role that she's got as England head coach,
almost been able to have the year and just get on with her job.
I think she's had a lot to change and a lot of.
to do within the England environment
but a home world cup things don't get bigger
that use of the phrase
grace is quite interesting because it's almost
as if you're saying well I've been
raffing on this a moment it's honestly saying right
okay now it gets serious
you don't get a year's grace but you don't
but I think Lottie was like
in a win-win situation
you know the girls had come off the back of an
Ash's series everybody
was looking at her to make changes and actually
you don't make those changes overnight they do take
time.
You know, a lot of the skills on how you play spin or bowling at the death or whatever it may be,
the fitness stuff, you can't change that overnight.
Those things take a long time to change.
You know, they take camps.
They take going to the subcontinent.
They take, you know, countless fitness sessions.
So when I see a year of grace, it's almost like actually you've got this year to almost
embed everything you want to as a coach.
I wonder how much, Rath, that change will be a theme.
between now and 10 o'clock.
Well, I'll be really interested to hear what Charlotte Edwards has to say about that
because obviously they've just had these intra-squad fixtures out in South Africa,
England v England.
So England have both won all those games and lost all those games,
depending on your perspective, depending on whether your glass is half full or half empty.
So it would be interesting to hear whether she thinks that anyone has really kind of staked
to claim for their place.
If you actually look at the top three leading run scorers in those matches,
They're all people who have perhaps kind of already in the squad.
So Sophia Dunkley, Alice Capsie and Danny White Hodge.
So it may be that we're actually going to be looking at an 11 in that opening fixture of the World Cup against Sri Lanka on 12th of June.
It's actually quite similar to the one which surrendered the ashes rather embarrassingly in January last year.
But I don't know, maybe over to Charlotte Edwards to tell us a bit more about her plans.
Well, and we will bring her in shortly.
Can we also just frame this, and we'll talk to Kirsty shortly,
so she's got the big introduction, but we haven't got her yet.
Sit in silence, Kirsty.
When you, we've kind of just focused on the last year,
but let's look at the backdrop on what is now nearly a decade
since the 50-over World Cup win.
If you had thought, if I had said to you in 2017,
this is where we're going to be at going into 2026,
with the domestic game and the international game
as far as England's women are concerned.
Would you have taken it?
Would you have been frustrated?
No. I think it had been disappointed.
But it's hindsight, isn't it?
It's go, you win a World Cup in 2017.
It's almost like if you could have your fairy tale
and all the rose petals,
you win another World Cup in 2020.
You win the 2024 World Cup out in New Zealand.
You do everything you can to win those World Cups.
And ultimately the game's changed.
You know, Australia have been domic.
and India have now gotten so much better than they have been.
Yeah, so I think if you'd have said where England cricket is right this very second.
Are you looking purely on results?
I'm looking on results.
I think when you then...
Medals, trophies, results.
Yeah, I think if you then add in the domestic game and now the fact that everybody's professional,
I think that took a little bit longer than, you know, I would have liked,
but that's if I could have had everything my own way,
where you just pump loads of money into the game,
being a female athlete, you know, I want millions into the game
to allow these girls to come out of school straight away
and be professional athletes, whereas now that can happen, it's taken time
and I understand that takes time.
So, yeah, I think when I look at the game now
and, you know, everyone being professional,
we've got the T20 blast, we've got the Charlotte Edwards Cup,
we've got all those structures, we've got the 100.
When it comes to the structural side of things,
I'm pretty happy with where the game's at.
What would you say, Raf, would you say,
say where we're at structurally is good, but we could have been there sooner?
Yeah, I think that's exactly what I would say.
I think if you look back now, that amazing win in July 2017,
it then took three years to introduce the first professional domestic contract.
We're only now in a situation where we can actually call our domestic structure fully professional.
And obviously, we'll see what happens come June-July time,
but is it actually a little bit soon to be relying on that very, very new still professional county structure
that we've only had in place for one season to be winning us a World Cup?
And actually, Alex is absolutely right.
The results that we've seen since 2017 just haven't lived up to the excitement and the hype that that tournament really generated.
I've actually been revisiting some of these years recently a little bit of a cheeky plug
because my book, The Women in Wights, the history of...
You've done that within the first 10 minutes.
Excellent.
I know.
I know.
I thought I better get it in early.
That's a 50 quid fine, by the way, Ralph.
It's coming out in June.
And actually kind of revisiting that period
and looking at some of the plans
that the England and Wales cricket board had.
There was actually a plan for a 50 over Kier Super League
that about four or five days after the World Cup final.
In 2017, the England famously won at Lords
then got cancelled, basically.
It got ditched.
and as I say then takes until 2020 for the domestic structure to even begin professionalising.
It just feels like it's been a bit of a, it's been really slow for those changes to happen.
And it's also been a bit kind of discombobulating as well in the sense that there have just been all of these changes.
We've gone from having a Kea Super League that then gets abolished to then moving into brand new regional teams that people have spent kind of hours, years trying to get in place.
then finally you get a little bit of stability.
And then the ECB turned around and say,
oh, no, actually we're going back to county cricket.
Now, I'm not saying we haven't ended up in a good place
and probably the right place.
But I think perhaps if people had thought a little bit harder
and maybe a little bit longer term about things in 2017,
we could have got here a bit quicker.
Kirstie, let me bring you in.
Do you think that, do you follow Alex's point of England
could have won more since the World Cup in 2017?
should have won more?
Yeah, of course they could have, but that's that sport, isn't it?
You can't have it all your own way.
And, you know, they've had a couple of difficult defeats along the way.
Obviously, you look back to that World Cup in South Africa,
being outdone by rain and things.
So there's been little bits along the way
that they could have done better, of course, in those pressure moments.
But ultimately, I think now we're at a stage
where we can look back and go domestic structures
in the best place it can possibly be in, I think.
You know, we just had the 100 option a few weeks ago,
and now we're getting such great exposure.
There's really no excuse for the English game to be moving on.
And we've seen how good the likes of the WPL has done for India,
whereas before India, we're probably underperforming.
They've now sort of hit that mark where, you know, they're in the conversation.
So it's certainly getting tougher,
whereas before it probably was just England and Australia,
whereas now I do think it's much harder to win these world events.
Let's bring Charlotte in there, Charlotte, I'm just waiting to talk to us.
Your first anniversary in charge is Wednesday.
So how have you found your first year looking at going into your second year?
I've absolutely loved it.
It's been definitely a roller coaster of a year,
obviously taking over the role, you know, straight into a...
a big series against West Indies and India and then obviously a World Cup,
yeah, which was an amazing event, obviously, to be part of,
but obviously we didn't quite get to where we wanted to in that one.
And then obviously the last six months has been sort of preparing the players for the T20 World Cup,
which has been really nice for me to actually spend some time with the players.
And yeah, so I'm, yeah, it's been a real whirlwind,
but really, really enjoyable.
but I think we're in a really good place moving into the English summer.
Does this, how much of your first year was finding out,
and therefore to sort of follow Alex's point from the start,
how much does this feel like, right, you've had a year, now here we go?
Yeah, I think, you know, initially it was, you know,
there's a lot of things I was finding out for myself
and firstly also getting to know a lot of the players.
So, yeah, I think that was an important,
it's been an important 12 months,
but like you say, the hard stuff starts now
and we know we're in a good position.
We've got our home World Cup,
which is really exciting for us as a group.
So, yeah, I'm massively looking forward to it,
but I know we've got to start providing the results
that this team should be obviously doing now.
So you say the hard stuff starts now.
Does it feel a little bit unfair that the hard stuff starts now
you've got a home world cup
or does that make it more exciting?
Well, I think, you know, when I took on the job,
I knew what was in front of us as a group,
a 50 over World Cup and then a T20 World Cup at home.
I think it's really exciting.
I think we've seen on the back of what's happening
previous years with other sports,
the excitement around this event
and what you can create.
I mean, you guys, girls did it in 2017.
I was part of the 2009 World Cup.
You know, you know, you can.
really create something really special.
And off the back of what the red roses and the lionesses have done is,
I think it's just pure excitement going into this summer.
And what we can do, not just for the team, but for the whole game.
And, you know, it's really exciting.
And Lottie, how much are you using your own memories of that amazing win at home in 2009
in the first ever Women's T20 World Cup?
How much are you using that to kind of spur on this team that you're now coaching?
A lot's changed since I was playing in 2000.
Ralph. I mean, you think of amount of ticket sales that's happened since then, where the game is,
as Kirsty just mentioned around the, you know, the auction that happened a few weeks ago,
wow, the game's just changed enormously. So, you know, obviously I'll go back to those moments of,
you know, of playing that, you know, they're very similar, but the games changed enormously in
that time. So to think that, you know, we're going to play playing most of our games in front of
full houses, at the big stadiums, you know, I could have only dreamt of that.
And I think we could have only jumped to that as a game a few years ago.
So, yeah, it's, yeah, I'll be pulling on a few things.
But, you know, I'm just so proud to be part of this team
and leading into what could be one of the biggest summers for our sport.
Just on the 100 auction, what did you make of it?
And is there any element of it that will provide a challenge for you with your squad?
I watched every minute of it. It was fascinating. I was normally on the tables a few years ago, so it was nice to be off the table.
Oh, wow. Actually, just on that. How, I mean, how no, do you know what, answer the first question, then I'll come back to that.
Can't answer the first question.
What was the first question?
Do you know what? I can't remember now because all I can think of it was. No, it was. What did you make, well, you've answered partly what you made of it.
But what challenges that auction could bring for you as an England head coach, if any?
Yeah, I mean, I was thinking that as the auction was taking place,
but what I was most proud of, you know, being around the players,
because they all turned up in South Africa,
was how maturely they dealt with it all.
And, you know, they were amongst each other.
There was people earning lots of money, some not so much,
but they just cracked on, they just went to training,
and they just got on with it.
And just even talking to some of the players, just, you know,
their focus was then on performing in our series out there.
So, yeah, I was really,
chuffed with how they all dealt with it. Who knows there might be challenges down the line,
but I think the players are used to it now. They're used to now going into auctions.
They know what's at stake. And I think it's just a great thing for the game. I really do.
And I love watching it and obviously watching the players, you know, get what they deserve
now. It's absolutely amazing.
What I was going to ask you then as the follow-up was how reckless you would have been with
your paddle with someone else.
else's with someone else's money?
Yeah, that's a good question.
I never got to hold the paddle, so I would have quite like that.
But look, I knew some players were going to go at a lot of money.
I think that was the word going into it.
I think it played out exactly as I thought it might,
maybe just maybe 20,000 more than I thought,
but I knew there was going to be high amounts spent.
And, you know, it's just fantastic for women's cricket
that these amounts of money that are being paid to players now.
which yeah, it's only great for the game.
How did it make you feel a lot
when you've coached some of these youngsters
for such a long period of time
and you know how good they are,
you've seen them perform in the 100 before.
I want to talk about Tilly actually,
and I'm just going to name drop her in particular,
but you've seen her grow as a player
and now you've brought her into the England environment
and then she's gone for £110,000 or whatever it was.
How did that make you feel?
Really proud.
I said to her she owes me a Coke
or Pepsi Max
actually. But she's so mature, she's so level for an 18 year old. It's just incredible how she
deals with those types of things. And again, she was the first one to come up to me and say,
look, the focus is now on playing out here. And she kind of just kind of forgot about it by the end of it.
I won't let her forget about the Pepsi Max she owes me. But like, I've been nothing but
impressed by Tilly from a 16-year-old, now an 18-year-old, but she's matured beyond
her years and I was really, really pleased for her.
Kirsty, I mean, there's a valid question, isn't it, how it will change dynamics?
And it will in the Men's 100 as well, you know, some of the, some of those players,
you've got big contracts being in amongst county cricket as well, where the money
is nowhere near what it is for the 100. It will be a challenge for everybody.
Yeah, 100%. And I'll just start by saying that Lottie might have enjoyed
watching it but I certainly did not enjoy watching it.
I'm not sure it was as good as somebody
waiting to be up on the screen.
How was that a feeling, Kirsty,
knowing that you, there is a chance you might not get a pick.
There's also a chance that you might go for 90 grand.
Yeah, it was, honestly, it was awful.
I've never experienced anything like that.
My phone was off.
I was fine, and then as soon as my name came up,
I was like, all panicky.
And then for me, it was, like, silent for like a good, like,
30 seconds and I was like, oh no, my worst night is coming true.
But no, that was all right.
But no, to you question, it's true.
It does pose a difficult dynamic in any environment, really,
not just in England ones and across the county game.
And I think Rabi Bapara was speaking during the 100 auction about his experiences
as a player and as a coach in these auctions.
And it was a really poignant point around how, you know,
players go for 10 times more than their counterparts.
but they're never going to produce 10 times the output
and actually just having that perspective around,
you know, the value you go for is not your worth as a player,
whether that's loads of money or you've been unsold,
just finding that for the first time.
And that's what we're going through as female cricketers,
female athletes is we're sort of finding that out for the first time
and the guys, they've been doing that for a number of years.
So it just takes a bit of getting used to,
but I echo what a lot he says,
everybody in our environment has sort of just cracked on
and dealt with it all really well.
That was my next question,
because you're obviously still playing.
You're, like, knee-deep in international cricket
and county cricket at the minute.
Was there any anxiousness going to cricket training
the next day after the auction?
How are people going to react?
Is so-and-so going to be salty about whatever it may have been?
Yeah, it was really difficult.
We sort of discussed it as a leadership group
and decided to make training on the actual day of the option optional.
So obviously some people still went in.
I definitely wouldn't have gone.
Isn't the first rule of optional training
that it really isn't optional?
Isn't that normally how it works?
But go on.
No, I went into the gym actually, like in the afternoon.
So I'd already been picked up.
So I had a bit of relief.
But then I went in and they were watching it on the TV
when I got into the gym.
and I was a bit like, oh, this is a bit weird
because there was girls in the gym
that hadn't been picked up yet.
They hadn't come up.
And then I was, there was a couple of us sat there
already sort of knowing our feet.
And I was like, oh, this is just a bit weird,
sort of just very unprecedented.
But, yeah, everybody handled it really well.
And I think it's a strength of the good culture
that, you know, we all got round each other
that had done well and those that had maybe not had the day they wanted.
And, yeah, similarly, like, it was kind of forgotten about
by the end of the week.
Charlotte, let me bring back to England
and preparation, have you benefit,
or do you think you'll benefit from having a winter off?
I know some of the players haven't because of the WPL and therefore,
but in terms of you as a group,
you haven't had cricket since last October?
Yeah, I personally think we will.
I think you don't often get these sort of periods of time
where you can actually work on your skills
and have time away from that sort of performance pressure
of playing international cricket.
And certainly for the time that I've been in the role,
it came at a perfect time.
So I really think the kind of preparation we've got now,
we're heading into some Modi-Is against New Zealand
and then some T-20s against New Zealand and India.
I think we've got more than enough cricket now leading into that World Cup.
And we've got on the back of that, we've had a lot of time together.
We've done a lot of training and working on our skills
and hopefully upskilling ourselves.
So hopefully come May will be in a really, really good place.
And presumably benefit from those players
who are now established in the WPL.
Yeah, obviously a lot of our players
are still playing a lot of cricket.
And I think that competition has done so much for women's cricket globally,
but more importantly for some of our players
who get the opportunity to play out there
and play under extreme pressure.
And I think that only benefits those individuals
to have that exposure.
So to have six players out there this winter was really beneficial.
And obviously then for us to spend a lot of time with our younger players
is I think really going to help us as a group.
Can I ask Lottie, to what extent have you or will you select your World Cup squad
based on those intra-squad matches in South Africa?
And to what extent will any of those games against New Zealand or India
feed into the World Cup squad?
I think a lot of the, I guess, selection will be based on
those games and the winter it's not just those games because you know we've had a really big
winter as a group but i would imagine our team going into those new zealand um oh sorry t20s and
india that will be the world cup squad so we'll know what that squad is um before those games
because i think those games are so important to us to be as a as a group um on the back of obviously
not having much international cricket and alics oh gone go on rough i was just
going to say Alex mentioned Tilly Cortine Coleman,
who's obviously left arm spinner,
going to have to work really hard to kind of get far enough up the pecking order
to displace Sophie Hocleston or Lindsay Smith.
Has she done enough?
She's bowled very, very well, as she always does, you know,
and she keeps performing and that's the headaches we want now
as a selection panel going into, you know, big tournaments.
So I think the depth of talent now within England is,
is getting bigger, which is fantastic.
And that's off the back of all the, you know,
the money that's been spent in terms of our domestic structure.
And I think, you know, Kirstie's played in it.
You guys have been watching it lots.
You know, there's a lot of money that's been spent on that area.
And I think we're starting to see the benefits of all of that now.
And I've obviously worked in it for a number of years now.
So it's great to see we're producing our players through that system.
I also think the exciting thing for me that's changed over the last.
I want to say two and a half years is actually I probably could have for the last 10 years
given you a 15 for most England tours and gone that'll be a 15 that'll be a squad for a
World Cup that will be a squad for a tour in India that will be the one for the New Zealand
now there's so many more options and that's credit to where the game is and the domestic
structure you know it's really important these girls are playing domestic cricket
they're performing on the stage in the hundred and therefore they're getting call up to
the camps and stuff that lottie lotis
had and I think the game is in such a better place than it was two years ago because now
you go, okay, you can probably guess 9, 10 of those people that are going to be in a
World Cup squad.
But actually there could be people that you go, they actually deserve it because of what
they've done.
So if you were looking at it then, I mean, could I show her this because she's your opinion,
but if you would go, there's the 15, how many would you widen your pool out to?
I think there's, for me personally, there's definitely two or three that we've not seen in
England squad before that I'd love to see in that 15.
Just because they've performed, I think, look, it's always a risk bringing someone into a squad,
but you've got to bring people into a squad at some stage, you know, if you throw them into
the deep end, see if they can swim.
I think, you know, somebody like Tilly, for example, I think she's a brilliant character,
a brilliant bowler, she was one of the bowlers in this tour to South Africa to stand up
in every game that she played.
You know, she looked like she played really well.
Watching those games from afar, look, I'm not.
picking the 11 and I'm not picking the 15 but somebody like her she for me if she was
called up it wouldn't necessarily now be a surprise where as in the past it would have what would
you say the pool is that you're selecting from shal think you know on the back of Alex's point there
that that's been I think the brilliant thing over the last 12 months is we're genuinely picking
from you know 25 30 players now which I think as Alex said you know two three years ago it was
you know, 15 or 16 players and one would miss out because, you know,
that we didn't have the domestic structure in place that was generating these players.
So it was a bit of a closed shop.
I think, you know, what's going to drive, you know,
the England team forward is the fact that there is massive competition for places.
They're under pressure now in five-match series that we've just had.
It's only going to help them when we play international cricket
and playing the big games that they've had to go through this.
I actually think what we've just been through in South Africa is far harder than
playing international cricket because when you're in the 15 for England, you know, you're in it
and you feel a confidence, whereas when you're trying to get into the team, that's harder.
So, you know, it was brilliant to be over in South Africa.
I was pretty much a little bit removed from the two teams.
So I could see, you know, the games felt like international cricket and it was fantastic.
And I asked at the start of that tournament, it had to be competitive.
You had to play it like it was an international game.
And there are lots of friendships within the team, but they have to be.
put aside.
Is it hard for a spot?
Is it harder then because they are playing off against each other
rather than, rather than in inverted commas, an enemy?
Yeah, I think it's always harder when you're playing against people you know
or people you're competing against because you're always then going to compare your
results to that person or, and, you know, we've picked the teams really carefully
to make sure we had really good balance.
And, yeah, it was, it was really good and really, you know, a good.
five games, but equally, you know, we went through quite a lot to get there because we
didn't at one point three weeks ago. I didn't think we were going to have that tool, which would
have been really disappointing. So, no, we gained a lot from it. And, you know, I'm certainly
further into who we think, you know, we're going to pick going into, you know, the World Cup.
I think from a player's point of view, when you're playing against your teammates, me and
Kirstie were competing for the same spot. She's always supported me. I've always supported her.
but never, ever did I want her to do well
because I'd never get back in the team.
You know, every time she'd take Fiver for England
or England Academy, I thought, well, that's me not playing again.
And ultimately that's what happened.
She ended up getting a contract and I didn't.
But, you know, these are the...
You're over it now.
You know what?
Thank you.
I didn't have to do it for longer.
But, you know, you have friendships
and you respect that person,
but ultimately if they keep performing
and you're not, they are taking your place
that starting 11, whether you like it or not?
But also, would you not say as well, Kirsty,
you sort of look at how this England team has evolved over maybe even the last,
well, nearly 20 years, if we go back to 2009.
The rejuvenation of a team tends to have happened in clumps
rather than, you know, an individual comes in here
or an individual comes in here.
Players seem to have come through in groups
and therefore that actually then makes the rejuvenation of that team a little bit harder.
Yeah, it's an interesting point.
I do feel that that happens with a lot of sports teams, though.
You see them go through sort of those big highs and sort of created a team over a number of years.
And then that team sort of disbandings, if you like, and they sort of have to start again.
And maybe like England's going through a little bit of that now or have done in the last 12 months where they've sort of had to blood a few new people.
And that's a transition period, I guess.
but there's been some mainstays of that team
for a number of years really
look at Heather Knight, Amy Jones, Danny White Hodge
and so there's still, even if around them
they're still in the team, there's a real sort of pillar
of that core group
which I think is also fundamental
you can't have a team of 11 youngsters
come in and expect them to go and perform
under pressure straight away
so I think actually now where they've got to
is probably quite a healthy position of three or four, five strong key players and some
youngsters around them.
Ralph?
Well, I was actually thinking I wanted to ask Kirsty about a previous point about
teammates playing against each other.
I mean, you're going to be in potentially quite a unique situation this summer.
I know that Scotland haven't announced their World Cup squad yet, but let's assume that
you are in that Scotland World Cup squad and you're taking to the field against England.
What's that going to be like?
like? Yeah, I mean, I've tried not to get into it too much in my own head yet until sort of
it comes around, but it'll hopefully be quite a special moment, I guess, a full sort of 360
in my own career, but yeah, it would be hugely exciting for us at Cricket Scotland,
such a big game on a big stage, essentially for us as well, a Home World Cup. So yeah, it's
hopefully we can maybe cause an upset
but certainly put on a good show.
I'd just say it looked like a wry smile on Charlotte's face.
Is that the best way to describe that facial expression?
I think it's fantastic.
You know, we've got Ireland and Scotland within our group
and, you know, they're going to be massive games for both teams
and, you know, we're playing Scotland at Hedonle.
So, yeah, probably have quite a lot of Scottish supporters down there, I'm sure.
It's as close to Scotland as you'll get.
Yeah.
Let me go back to that point, though, about how you, how is a head cut, I'm not saying
you're going to do it for this tournament, but how you slowly rejuvenate aside.
Bearing in mind, the bulk of your top order have been together for seven, eight years.
Yeah, I think, you know, absolutely right.
There is a sort of bulk of that sort of age group that have been around and played a lot
of cricket together.
I think the skill now is to integrate the younger players in, which we're starting to do.
you know, even through the World Cup.
You know, I thought Alice Capsie had a brilliant World Cup
in terms of what she contributed as a young player.
And we've got to remember, she's very young.
And, you know, these players, you think they've been around for a long time,
but still very young in terms of cricketing age.
So, yeah, so, no, I think, you know,
that's the job we've got to do over the next 12, 18 months.
You know, we've got a new four-year cycling going into an ODI World Cup.
But I think we've got to worry about that after,
after the T20 World Cup, I think
our real focus is on
on obviously doing well in this comp
with the players we've got
and we've got some,
I think we've got a really nice blend of youth and experience
and hopefully we can use that to our benefit.
How does that look when it comes to lead us a lot?
Because that's been a bit of a,
I don't want to say a problem,
because it's not a problem.
It's been a discussion.
It's been a discussion, yeah, thanks chappas.
And then we've seen out in South Africa
that obviously Charlie Dean's been captain, Danny Gibson,
Was that a conscious effort to create more leaders?
Yeah, absolutely.
I think it's one of the things I kind of recognised and observed
that we needed to create more leadership opportunities for young players.
And this winter's been such a great chance to do that
in a lot of our kind of warm-up games in Stirling Bosch.
We played a number of fixtures out there,
giving different players the opportunity to lead.
Because you get to, you know, we got to a point in the summer last year,
as Sophia Dunckley,
captain but she'd never really captained in a game. So she has, she's now got a number of games
under about this winter through being captain. And they're all just then just gaining more sort of
confidence in that role. And it's hard to do it through county cricket, if I'm honest,
with the players in and out. So we've had to sort of, I guess, create our own opportunities for
these players. And I think this winter's been a great chance to do that.
Just explain why leadership's hard to develop.
County cricket then shall.
I personally think captaincy and leadership in cricket full stop
is the hardest thing to develop.
It's like Noah the sport, given what you have to take on.
Well, one, the players don't play a full season.
And, you know, Kirsty knows through captain in the blaze.
You know, you need a captain who's going to be around for most of the season
and then drive standards, etc.
So it's very hard for England players to captain their counties
because of their in and out, which is fair.
enough and I totally respect that.
So that's probably a challenge.
The players are playing more now.
So that's been a real positive, I think, in the last 12 months.
So there may be opportunities that we can ask counties for that sort of, you know,
if there is an opportunity to captain that they can, they can do that.
But, you know, at the moment we're having to use probably our A programs and are probably
winter camps to probably use that as an area to develop.
Are we going to see the England girls play more county cricket this season?
You absolutely are.
They'll be available for a lot of the April games.
We have got a few T20 camps that we're going to have to prioritise,
but you know how passionate I'm about playing county cricket
and the players playing.
And the great thing is now the players are coming to me saying I want to play.
and I'm really loving.
They've found I love and want to play county cricket
and see the benefits in that
and hopefully the game does as well
because I think some of the games early last season
the first seven games were some of the best
50 over cricket I've watched in county cricket
and Kirsty was playing she can probably echo that
but I thought it was really competitive
and thought some outstanding games of cricket.
Fighting very hard not to make a sarcastic comment
about whether you could pass that message on to the men side of things
and I won't say.
Go on Kirstie, we won't land you in trouble, Charlotte.
Go on Kirstie on that, on the importance of playing it.
Yeah, 100%.
I totally agree.
And I think that was one of the most pleasing things
when Lottie came into the job last year.
It was one of the first things that, you know,
she said to the media around players playing county cricket,
I'd love to see even more, to be honest.
And it's easy to say that when we've got Nats and Rundt
on the Blazers books, and we haven't seen her too much.
But no, absolutely.
I think it's only positive for the county game.
and the standards, you know, when we have the England players back playing,
it drives the whole standard of the county game up,
competition for places, professional behaviours, everything.
So if you have a young player, a young county player performing around England players,
I think that just stands out even more that they, you know,
they should be getting earmarked and how well, you know, those performances stand up.
So it's hugely vital, I think, for the game for them to be playing,
as much as they can around their England commitments.
And also then on the flipside counties
will want their players to do well to go and play for England
knowing that they're going to come back.
What happened for a long time was, you know,
Kirsty gets called up for England
and she doesn't play for Nottingham for such a long period of time.
They go, well, what was the point of us developing her then?
Because we've just lost her.
Well, actually now you develop her,
she goes and plays for her country
and she comes back and plays a majority of the season as well.
So it works for both parties.
It's really important to keep that relationship as well
because you've mentioned the men's game
and you're exactly right.
You know, as a young player in the men's game,
you're probably thinking,
what am I aspiring for?
Are my performances in county cricket being noticed
versus hopefully that's not the case on the women's side
that if you're performing week in, week out consistently
in the domestic game,
you're going to be rewarded with an England A
or an England development opportunities and so on and so forth.
Right.
I mean, I think it's really,
important in the context of this summer as well and a home World Cup because one of the things
that the ECB are really keen to do is kind of to create some superstars in this tournament.
They're trying to find women's cricket's Ellie Kildun and launch her into the big time.
They've got her Lauren Bell, she's got millions of followers.
She has, but they are mostly Indians at the moment.
So it would be lovely if she could have a few more followers who are English, who are actually
going to turn out and watch her maybe going and playing.
for Hampshire. And I think that was the kind of point that I was trying to make really,
it would be so nice if we see these superstars playing in the World Cup,
but then girls are inspired and can then go and watch them play domestic cricket.
And I don't just mean the 100, I mean actually for their counties.
So I think that that's really important.
And if you're thinking about kind of potential legacies of the 2026 World Cup,
then that's a really important one.
How hard is it for you as a head coach, Charlotte, to balance legacy and faces of sport
with just winning?
It's really hard.
You know, as I've just said there,
I'm very passionate about the players playing county cricket,
all cricket,
but ultimately then at certain points,
I've then got to look after what's the best thing
for the England women's cricket team.
And, you know, someone like Lauren Bell is a great example.
You know, we've got a big summer ahead of us.
You know, we want her to play some county cricket,
but she can't play too much
because we've got to save her energy
so that she's ready to, you know,
I guess peak at the right time in June
July. So yeah, I mean
it's very difficult getting
that balance right. I think we've got
a good balance at the moment
but it's always
something we're striving to
do.
It's a very competitive summer, isn't it?
To be having this
home World Cup.
And originally we were doing something with the
ECB a year ago and I say, oh my God, you're
launching it on the same day as the
men's football World Cup and not many things can compete with a men's football World Cup.
But actually, it should work.
It should, actually, if you take a step back, it should work quite well, given a lot of those games going to be late at night and into the morning.
So you can actually sell it as here's your day of sport.
It does, I mean, it actually does work.
I'd love to see that.
I'd love to see the momentum, momentum.
Get behind, you know, the work.
football World Cup and then people on the back of that go actually there's more cricket on
there's more sport on you know let's go and watch the girls World Cup because imagine if we do
the double it'd be amazing wouldn't it yeah it does work charlotte I think yeah I mean I've I've not
really been foreign what else is going on at the moment I'm a bit focused on and to be fair like
hearing you know the ticket sales for this this comp so far we're in a really good place so I'm
hoping lots of people will come and support I'm told also that people get more interested in the
women's events, the closer to the time as well.
So I'm really confident.
I know the World Cup team are really confident
that we're going to have a, well,
the best represented sort of World Cup in terms of fans we've seen.
So, yeah, I'm looking forward to that.
The other thing, Raff, which we haven't massively mentioned,
which we should really, is that there's a Lord's Test
against India as well.
I forgot about that.
Well, it's a good job I'm here then, isn't it?
Well, yeah, and I think that pertains to Lottie's point, actually, about the workload of the players.
I mean, yeah, there's a Lord's Test, England v India.
I think it's a week after the World Cup final.
That is going to be four days of tough cricket.
And, you know, is Lauren Bell going to be in any fit state to open the bowling for England at Lords?
I mean, I'm sure she would absolutely love to do that.
This is, I was going to say, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
I mean, it's the first ever women's test.
at Lords in, you know, a hundred years, almost a hundred years of international women's cricket,
which is ridiculous, by the way.
But we don't know.
She'll be lucky we can get in the long room.
Yeah, but I mean, we don't know when there's going to be another women's test at Lords.
So I would imagine that all of those England players are absolutely chomping at the bit to be playing
in that test match.
But they will have just played a World Cup.
Hopefully a World Cup final.
I'm touching wood.
How do you manage it, Charlotte then?
Because that Lord's test and against India, the crowds will be huge for that.
Yeah, I mean, it's all part of the planning.
I mean, this is what we've been doing for the last six months is we're building up to the World Cup
and then knowing that the girls are going to play a test match five days later.
And as you said, it's going to be one of the biggest test matches we've ever played in England
and the first ever at Lord.
So everyone wants to be part of that.
So, yeah, there's a lot to juggle.
I am firmly focused on the T20 at the moment,
but that is in the background,
and we're having to prepare players and overs for that game,
and it will be quite an occasion.
I mean, Kessar even though Alex forgot about it,
players will be chomping at the bit for that, weren't they?
Yeah, 100%.
I didn't realise it was so close to the end of the World Cup, actually.
so it could be a bit messy if England go on and win
and I want to have a few celebrations.
I actually just text Kirsty, say the girls,
if they win the World Cup,
I'll turn up in their coloured kit.
Well, you don't allow the celebrations, do you,
Charlotte?
You've got to wait till it's all done and dusted.
Oh, dear.
Do you set your aims for by the end of this summer,
or do you, how far ahead,
I know you're only planning for the, for the,
T20 World Cup, but how much are you bigger picture?
I think, look, you've got to be bigger picture, I think, in the role I'm in and when
I took the role on. But equally, we've gotten a massive event that we're really prepared
for and ready to go for. So, yeah, I mean, I've got half an eye on the future, half an eye on
six months time, and I think that's how you've got to be. But,
Yeah, I think come, you know, come May, which is, you know, six weeks away now,
we'll start our first internationals, which it feels, yeah, from when we finish the World Cup in November,
it's come around very, very quick.
So, yeah, we're looking forward to playing some international cricket again.
It's mad how quick it comes around.
When you go, oh, the girls haven't got cricket all winter,
and you go, actually their first game, it's going to feel like it's in two minutes.
Well, yes, exactly.
Well, time feels like it's flying, you know, very, very, everything feels like it was only two minutes ago.
Someone told me COVID was six years ago. I was like, nah, that was four minutes ago.
Right, okay, Nana.
Fly we don't you two?
I mean, the other thing that what you're seeing, Kirsty is, well,
and we talk about Scotland and Ireland coming into this.
But across the board, the strength in depth rises each international tournament.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think it's, you know, the global game is.
in a good place. It's getting better.
I think there's still a gulf between
maybe the top four, so
South Africa, India, England, Australia
and then there's another sort of
golf and then there's the associate teams
but I really think
especially that gap between associate teams
and the rest is
massively
you know getting smaller, reducing
and I think the more
cricket we can play against those nations.
to prove that, you know, we can compete.
It is really important.
But I think a few years ago, you would have said it's just England and Australia,
and now it's, you know, South Africa and India extremely strong as well.
So there's no doubt that the global game is in a good place.
But it probably goes along with, you know, Lottie's decisions
and then England's decisions to have that winter with more inter-squad games
because actually that, seeing 30 players across five games
is probably still more beneficial
than a three-match series against
and the likes of Sri Lanka
who still are arguably not providing England
and Australia with enough challenge.
But how much, Raf, would you judge that,
maybe not Sri Lanka then,
but that group of countries between the associates
and between the Big Four,
how much would you judge that they are closing the gap on the Big Four?
Well, I think they are.
I mean, it's not so long ago that England looked like they were going to lose to Pakistan in the 50 over World Cup, right?
It was rain that saved England.
I'm sure Lottie remembers that day quite well.
And Bangladesh gave England the scare as well.
So I think it's quite dangerous, actually.
I mean, because we could look at the groups for this summer and go, you know, England are in an easy, in inverted commas group.
We've got New Zealand, Sri Lanka, West Indies, Ireland and Scotland in our group.
And somehow on the other side of the draw, Australia, India and South Africa are all on the
other side with Bangladesh, Pakistan and the Netherlands. But I don't think that's, I think that can
be quite a dangerous way of thinking. And so I do think that we did see some really positive signs
in the in the 50 over World Cup. I also look at that group that England are in. And England are,
for me, the best team in that group. But what a great opportunity for a team like Scotland that have a
lot of girls that play in our domestic setup could quite easily qualify in that group.
Because New Zealand, we've seen them play a number of times. Yes, they won that T20 World Cup,
but they can be an amazing team
or they can be awful.
Same with the West Indies.
So I think it's a huge opportunity
for a team like Scotland.
Personally, Ireland,
I never really know
what a team's going to show up,
but Scotland have got some great players,
especially now they've got Kirsty by.
She was in for a coaching roll, Al.
Yeah, I miss my back.
I'm on this year.
Just a final thing with you, Charlotte,
and thanks for your time this evening.
When you see the younger players
coming into your squad now.
How different are they to say when you were starting out?
It's so much different.
They're so ready to be part of these environments now,
but that's on the back of probably three or four years
of professional domestic cricket.
And I think I've just been so impressed
by how they've held themselves within the group,
but they've been exposed to so much more cricket
and so many more environments.
if you take a Davina Perrin, for example,
the experiences she's had in the last 12 months at her age
and now coming into our team,
it's not daunting at all for them.
They just sort of settle in and feel like they're part of it.
So, yeah, I've been really pleased.
And that's a lot of that's down to our England performance programme as well,
who are really, I guess, developing these players
and preparing these players for higher honours.
And, yeah, the future looks pretty bright for us.
I think for me it's these kids that are coming through now,
they're proper athletes.
You know, they're...
And it's like even, you know, the game's changed from...
And I'm so thankful where the game is now,
but from when Lottie was first involved
to when I was first involved to two years ago.
But these kids coming through now,
they're so strong, they're so fit,
they're so agile in the field.
And it's something that looks more natural
because they've done it from such a younger age
because it's been a, I guess,
something that you start at school,
then it's a real career prospect
for some of these young kids.
young kids now. You can never underestimate Kirstie, can you,
the benefit of starting the sport at, I don't know,
five, six, seven or eight, because you have the opportunities
to start the sport at five, six, seven or eight.
It can completely change your development, well, understandably,
completely change, your development and therefore your progression.
Yeah, undoubtedly, you know, the programmes that are in place now for kids
starting out boys and girls at a young age,
but the biggest difference is probably now the academy systems.
So girls that are pretty good at age 10, 11, 12,
they're straight into EPPs and academies.
They're getting high-quality coaching, high-quality S&C,
so that exactly like Al said,
by the time they get into county programs, domestic first teams,
they're really highly skilled.
You know, we've got some 15, 14, 15-year-olds on the academies
that you're looking at them like,
wow, if I had that much, half of that talent at 14, that would be amazing.
And that's sort of where the men's game has been.
And it's the same with football where it was a number of years ago.
But now we're getting them into the academies.
They're so much more advanced, I guess, by the time
and had that level of training and load building and et cetera,
et cetera, by the time they get to this level.
I think to put it into perspective, my first day on an England camp,
I went to the gym.
It'd been like the first time I ever went to a gym.
I got sent home.
I was that stiff the day after.
I couldn't put my shoes and socks on
because I was just a spin bowler.
I wasn't an athlete.
I wasn't a fielder.
I'd never been to the gym.
I'd never run.
I actually got sent home from Loughborough
because I was stiff.
I mean, these girls that are now going to
sell them to watch on these camps.
They're athletes.
They don't get stiff from playing cricket.
Do you therefore think that the fitness thing
has been put to bed, Charlotte?
Oh, 100%.
I don't know if anyone watched the fielding
and from the recent series,
but it's some of the best fielding I've seen,
certainly from our group, the improvements we've made,
but that comes hand in hand.
Physical and fitness comes hand in hand.
And, yeah, we're in a really good place.
The results are all so high.
And, yeah, I couldn't be more chuff, really,
in that space that we've made real progress.
Did you have to have some tough conversations
about that when you first got the job?
I wouldn't say they're tough conversations.
It's just an expectation.
Alex. And I think once you set out the expectation, the players know what they need to do.
And we've added in sort of benchmarks over the winter. We've been, you know, kept the players
fully in the loop with what we're doing. It's not a yes or no on selection. It's more around.
We've got to keep raising the standard. And that's as an individual and as a team. And the players
have fully brought into that, which, yeah, that was, you know, I guess what I set out to do.
And, yeah, really pleased with the buy-in from everyone.
what you think, but I don't think
fitness testing should be as daunting
as everybody makes it out to be.
You know, it should be a thing that
just is part and parcel of being an athlete,
but I don't know whether it's,
we've all built it up in our heads over the
last however many years that it's,
oh my God, it's fitness testing week.
Has that mindset almost
changed from when I was involved?
I think it has,
and I think we call it profiling.
And it's not just about the running,
it's about all your
other we've got the big five that we test on. And basically, I think that's really helped the players
understand that it's not just all on the running. It's all about your other elements to your fitness
as well. And I think doing it more often, it just becomes the norm. And so we do it three times a
year, it becomes the norm. And actually you start seeing improvements. You actually want to do it
again because you've worked really hard. So I think it has this just knock on effect, which it certainly
has with our group and the players are starting to see the rewards, you know, sort of off
and on the pitch.
What are the big, sorry, what are the big five?
It's not the safari.
It's not the safari.
So they do a round two, they do the, what else do they do?
The 2K or the yo-yo, max velocity, and they do the CMJ jump.
So it's all about power output as well.
So it's across the whole board.
It's across the physical spectrum then, isn't it?
Our S&C coach will be very happy.
I've just explained this on BBC.
But it's great to get context to what they do.
And it's not just all about whether you can run around a track.
It's all the other elements to it that we've tried to make just as important.
Charlotte, thank you very much.
We wish you well for the summer ahead.
I'm sure we'll talk again very soon.
Raff, when we get to the end of this summer,
what will you have wanted to have seen?
And I'm not just, you can say win the World Cup, obviously.
I'm taking that as a sort of given.
Again, I go back to the sort of bigger picture, bearing in mind we started with the base of the bigger picture.
Well, I was talking about legacies a little bit earlier.
And I think that, you know, whether or not England managed to win,
because that's not necessarily kind of within anyone's grasp, it's professional sport.
And, you know, it's just going to be completely dictated by who performs best on the day ultimately.
but I think that there are bigger things to be concerned with
and I know that the ECB have been kind of talking about this World Cup
as a movement, not a moment,
which I think is a really great encapsulation of the fact that we don't want it to just be
about what happens on the pitch in June and July.
We actually want to see more girls taking up cricket would be wonderful.
Girls able to go, I mean, and boys, of course,
able to follow the people who they've seen,
the women who they've seen playing this World Cup,
to then go on and see them playing in domestic cricket.
We're still very new in our current domestic setup.
It would be wonderful to think that actually a legacy of this World Cup
could be proper fan bases for the women's county teams.
Kersey?
Yeah, I think Raffs probably hit the nail on the head there.
It's about the growth of the game ultimately.
And I think cricket in England has that platform.
from this World Cup to do that.
You know, I've spoke a couple of times to Beth Barrett Wilde,
who's sort of running the World Cup operations, I guess, at the ECB,
about how do we transfer this?
Because for someone like me, who's not playing for England at the World Cup,
but is massively involved in domestic cricket,
how do we get these crowds that we're going to have into domestic cricket,
in through the doors, to watch the T20 blast,
to watch the Metro Bank and then ultimately to hopefully pick up a bat and a ball as well.
I think that's the real juicy stuff, I suppose, that the ECB have got to work out how they do that.
For me, I want to see better attitudes from the England team.
I think when push comes to the shove, they're under pressure, under the pump, which they will be.
I want to see them lift their heads high, pump their chest out and take the game on.
Alex, thank you. Raff, Kirstie as well, thank you very much for being with us.
This Friday, by the way, it's the 3rd of April, so that obviously means the men's country championship is back.
Every ball of every match will be available via the BBC Sport website.
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