Test Match Special - World Cup semis 'at the very least' & Woakes retires
Episode Date: September 29, 2025Steve Crossman is alongside England Ashes winner Steven Finn, 2017 World Cup winner Dani Hazell, and the BBC's Chief Cricket Reporter Stephan Shemilt to discuss England's chances at the 2025 Women's W...orld Cup in India.England Head Coach Charlotte Edwards looks ahead to the tournament saying her side should reach the semi-finals 'at a bare minimum' as she leads the team in a major competition for the first time. Former captain Heather Knight talks about her return to the England squad after a hamstring injury ruled her out for much of the home summer.They react to the news that Chris Woakes retires from international cricket and ask the question - is the nicest man in cricket also the most underrated?Plus, international commentator Andrew Leonard talks about Nepal's SHOCK T20 series win over the West Indies in Dubai.
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You're listening to the TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live.
Hello there, I'm Steve Crossman.
Welcome to Five Live cricket.
Loads to go at on the eve of the 2025 Women's World Cup in India,
where head coach Charlotte Edwards and Captain Nat Siverbrunt
will lead England in a major tournament for the first time.
We're going to hear from Charlotte Edwards.
We'll also hear from former captain Heather Knight,
who's back in the England squad after missing so much of the summer through injury.
We will also talk Chris Wokes on the day he retired from international cricket.
We will discuss it all with England Ashes winner Stephen Finn.
with World Cup winner Danny Hazel
and with our Chief Cricket reporter, Stefan Schemelt.
Good evening, everybody.
Hi, Steve.
Hello.
Hello, how we all doing, Danny?
Stephen, you're all right?
Good, thank you.
Excellent.
Can't complain.
Well, you can if you want, Stephen.
We've got 56 minutes.
It's up to you.
It's not in my nature to complain, Steve.
Oh, I thought it was Stephen Finn.
It must be somebody else who we've got on the show.
Right.
Danny, World Cup Eve.
What's going down at this point?
What's going through your mind?
What are the players doing?
Yeah, I think you're just buzzing to get going, aren't you, really?
I think they've been out there for a couple of weeks now via Avedabi,
so I think they'll be chomping at the bit to get the World Cup moving.
And do you think a relaxed state of mind at the moment?
Is that where they will be, or is it going to be difficult to sleep?
What are they going to be doing?
I think you're as relaxed as you can be,
but the end of the day, it's still a World Cup.
And I think it's, you know, how far or how much.
much change has been over the last year.
I think it's a lot of eyes on England this year.
And yeah, we're looking forward to getting gone,
but I imagine a few nerves as well.
I can't imagine that's how you felt, Stephen, to be honest.
I think you'll have slept like a rock.
Did you see how our World Cup went in 2015?
That was nightmare sort of stuff.
They weren't good night's sleep before those games.
But look, it's exciting, isn't it?
And I think actually the biggest thing when you're on the eve of a World Cup
and you have all that anticipation of how things might go.
You think you've prepared well,
but you don't know until you get in that first game
and in those first tricky moments.
So there'll be excitement.
There'll be a degree of trepidation
because I think the team is in transition.
The England women's team is in transition.
And it's a great opportunity for them
to go out there and lay a marker down early on in the World Cup.
I know we're going to talk a lot about England
and how they might go as well.
But I think the really interesting thing
is how this World Cup has received in India
12 years ago the tournament was in India then
and it was only held in Mumbai and Danny played in that
and it was a shambles it was barely promoted
no one in the grounds
Pakistan was staying on the other side of the country
for security reasons
since then we've seen
the women's cricket take off in India
with the WPL and yes
there is still a slightly shambolic element
to this tournament because games have been moved at the last minute
tickets have only gone
on sale at the last minute
but it should make a much
bigger impact in India
particularly if India do well
different world Danny
12 years ago
that sounds ridiculous
yeah it is and I think
you know they've obviously had the
starting to have how big impact from the
WPL and you're starting to see
you know some of the Indian players come through
that system and it's you know
I imagine they are
kind of up there as one of the favour
to win this India and I'm sure
they'd be getting a lot more local
support than they did back 12 years ago
so a huge opportunity
for India itself for their country
and for how they want
their women's cricket to be perceived
but a huge opportunity for them to
lay a marker
obviously then with Australia probably
arguably your two favourites
so a chance now
for them to get the hands on a World Cup
in the home country
Stephen how far down the list
are you going to find England then in the list of favourites?
I think they're probably third favourites still.
I think on their day, they can definitely challenge those two teams at the top.
They've just beaten Australia, haven't they, in one of the warm-up games.
So, yeah, absolutely by no means are we ruling England out,
but just looking at the way that the teams have played so far,
it certainly does feel like Australia with their history
and the class of player that they have
and the experience they have at the crucial end of tour,
is going to be crucial and then India as well that home support is really going to be something and and yeah build on the success of the WPL which probably leaves England down in third place what was the home support like when you were last there then Danny I think it was starting to build I think you know towards the end of games you get a lot more people coming in I was involved in actually the first I think exhibition game that was before the WPL and that was probably
one of the bigger crowds in India I'd been involved with.
So I think that was probably the start of when it was coming.
I think now they get some really good crowds for the WPL.
So hopefully they can encourage them people to come along.
And especially if you start winning,
I think with India get themselves on a role in that competition,
then you'll see thousands of people starting to flock into them stadiums.
Steph, you have correctly predicted that a lot of our discussion
is going to be around England and how they might go.
So do you want to give us a bit of the story so far under Charlotte Edwards?
Because that will tell us a lot about expectation before we hear from her.
Yeah, and obviously there was a new leadership team that came in after such an awful winter last year, T20 World Cup.
And the Ashes, new coach in Charlotte Edwards, new captain in Nat Siver Brunt,
expectedly beat the West Indies in their first series in charge,
and then came second against India, which are results that we would have expected.
I think women's cricket in general in England is actually in a really interesting spot.
And if you think going back to 2017 when there was a World Cup win on home soil,
has that really been capitalised on, maybe in the way that the lionesses have captured the imagination,
or maybe the Red Roses will want to over the next couple of years,
there's a T20 World Cup in England next summer.
And that's going to be held at big grounds that the ECB need to sell out.
and they will have a big job on their hands
if fans think England are a bit rubbish
because they haven't just had a good 50 over World Cup.
So there is more at play at the moment
rather than just England winning games of cricket now
there is a future to think of too.
That's a lot to have on your shoulders
given Danny they've got this tournament
which is happening right now or about to.
I think as a player that's probably something
you can't be thinking about too much in the moment.
Yes, it's part of the bigger picture.
But I think you can look after what's right in front of you.
And it's their job to go out and perform their job to put themselves
in positions to win games of cricket.
And if they do that, I think they're a very skillful side.
They didn't see the best of them for India this summer.
But they're a very skillful side with some really experienced, talented cricketers.
I think they were missing, obviously, Heather Knight during the summer,
and she's a huge miss for them.
So with her coming back into the World Cup,
I think she's going to play a real big role,
just a little bit of that stability around,
a bit of an older head, bit of a kind of been there, done that.
Obviously, you know, World Cup winning captain as well.
So I think that that kind of will give them a little bit of oomph.
And sometimes in World Cup, it's about getting yourself on a role.
If you can get yourself on a role and winning becomes a habit,
then once you get towards the back end of the company
and they can happen with obviously very talented
talented group.
Is it Stephen sort of the start of chapter two if you like
for Charlotte Edwards in England?
Well it certainly feels that way, doesn't it?
I felt as though she was definitely the right person
to take the job on.
I think her legacy with the women's team
is something that gives her the authority
to be able to rule that dressing room
and command the respect of the players
which I think the team probably needs.
at the beginning of this cycle and yes she'll be really excited about coming into it now
I think with that history and having stepped outside of it into franchise cricket and learned
about players around the world, learned about conditions as a coach honed her style with that
to then come back after a short break away from the England team into the fold. I think it gives
her a fresh set of eyes on it as well. So I'm really excited about what she can do across her
lifetime as England women's coach clearly this is one of the first major assignments for her
and it's going to be interesting to see how she goes she made some ruthless calls already
Kate Cross hasn't got a contract and isn't in this team which I think under almost every other
coach she probably would have been so she's not frightened to make big calls and and yeah she's
she has a fantastic opportunity here to take this team forward because because it could only go
up from that Ash's loss earlier this year.
With Finney saying that it can only go up, I do think expectations are low.
And Charlotte Edwards, we're going to hear from it soon.
With her saying semifinals as an expectation, well, actually, that is quite low from an
England point of view.
If you think this is an eight-team tournament, each team plays seven games, you've only got
a win four to get into the semifinals.
And England would expect to beat Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan most days of the
week, I do think expectations are quite low.
Maybe the success of this England team under Edwards will be taken both in this competition
and in what happens here next summer.
What is interesting, and both Finney and Danny have mentioned it,
is that Charlotte Edwards was the right person for the job.
I think most people agreed with that, but she was appointed without process by Claire Connor,
and England put the Rooney rule to one side.
So if this doesn't go well, particularly next summer,
but if things go really badly at this World Cup,
then maybe the finger might start getting pointed somewhere else.
Let's hear from Charlotte Edwards, leading England into a major competition
for the first time with a very handy warm-up win over Australia under their belts.
Pretty special for whether it's a warm-up game or not,
it's always nice to get one over on the Aussies.
More pleasing with how we went about it.
We were under quite a bit of pressure throughout the game.
They started quite well and obviously we were 30 for three.
So we showed a lot of character within the game.
And we obviously got over the line pretty easily in the end.
What does it do in terms of expectations within the group and your expectations?
The fact you've beaten India and Australia now in Warburnt matches might just send a few ripples around the tournament.
I think it just gives the group confidence and belief in what we're trying to do.
We've set up a game plan now and I think they're really starting to trust that game plan against two of the very best teams.
And I think that's what's most pleasing for me that it's going to give us confidence and lots of belief going into this tournament.
we very much know that we're not the favourites for it
but what we do know is that we're working really really hard
and you know like I say having that belief now winning
four games on the bounce in our prep games
is yeah it's been really nice to watch
and see many people perform within those games
which is the most pleasing thing for me
you see you're not the favourites
what are the expectations well I've definitely come here
to win the tournament, of course.
But, you know, there's a lot of other people that, obviously,
and rightly so, Australia are always going to go in favour.
I think India in their backyard.
So, yeah, we know where we sit,
but we also know, as I've said previously,
that we can beat any team on our day.
And I think we've shown that as the last week,
but we've got to do it consistently.
We've got to do it under pressure in big events.
But I think what we are doing is,
you know, obviously believing in a game plan that we believe in these conditions we can do really well.
What is that game plan?
And you mentioned the conditions, because there are going to be elements of the unknown in terms of weather.
There's a lot of talk that there could be rain-affected matches, that sort of thing.
I think around our batting, you know, we've got sort of set out a blueprint that, you know,
we want people to get big scores, big partnerships, set up the game for the last 20 overs.
And I think the players are starting to understand batting time,
batting those middle over is going to be critical in these conditions.
And against spin, we know we're going to come up against lots of spin,
knowing what our options are.
I think that's just that real clarity around what each individual's role is.
And I think now the players are really starting to believe in that.
And, you know, they've got the games to be able to bat long periods of time,
which you have to do in these conditions, but equally, you know, be aggressive when you need to be.
with the ball. It's, it's, you know, having those options with our attack. I think, you know,
we've come here with four seamers and four spinners. We know there could be varying different
conditions, as we've seen over the practice game. So really understanding when we control
the game and when we attack. And yeah, and I feel the team are really starting to to buy into
that and believe in it because, you know, we've obviously played some good cricket over the last
couple of weeks. You've had success here in the women's Premier League. What lessons can you pass on to the
side. I think 50 over cricket is very different to the T20, but I think, you know, obviously I know a lot
about the conditions here, the due factor. I think that will play its part at some point. I'm
absolutely certain of that, you know, they are quick scoring grounds. It's quite can be short
boundaries, so understanding, you know, what combinations you need to use. So there's lots of different
things. I'll pull on, I'm sure, over the next four weeks. And, you know, and I think just playing in front of these
massive crowds, I'm sure we will do when we play against India and Sri Lanka, yeah, and dealing
with that. But the players have been excellent. It's been really nice to spend some time with the
players. I think in my role, you don't often get that kind of prolonged period of time,
certainly in training environments. And we've had a brilliant time in Abu Dhabi. We've had a really
good week in Bangalore. And I feel, you know, we're in a really good place heading into Friday.
Do you know your best team for that opening game?
Yeah, we're very close to it.
I think, yeah, I think we'll have to look at the condition in Guilwati,
but we're pretty clear now what team we want to play.
I think there's been some brilliant performances over the last couple of weeks.
Yeah, very close.
You were captain here 12 years ago for a World Cup.
The landscape has changed beyond recognition.
Can you believe where the game is in terms of Indian women's cricket, the global game?
No, if I'm honest, you know, if I think 2013, I mean,
even my first World Cup in 97 and to think of the difference, I was sat on the bench the other
day trying to explain to the players how different it is. And I don't think they honestly
believe me. I'm just enormously proud of where women's cricket's at. I've spoken to the players
about that journey we've been on from 97 to now. And we've had a few players to the girls as
well around that journey from not 73 to see now to 2025. It's incredible. And, you know,
they're so lucky, we're all so lucky to be involved.
And I think this is going to be quite some tournament
and I think quite a moment for the women's game.
Just a very last question.
Is there a bare minimum for England this tournament?
We want to be at the semi-final knockout phases
and then we know anything happened from there.
But I very much hope we will be.
But we know it's going to be tough and we've got to play well.
Do you know, Danny, the first thing that occurred to me
listening to her there was
I wonder when the last time would have been
that England went into a World Cup
thinking semi-finals is a success
that's quite abnormal that isn't it?
Yeah, but I think
you know how she's how she's worded that
as being, you know, that's a minimum.
They are fully going there expecting
but believe that they can win the World Cup
So I think it's maybe, yeah, maybe played down slightly,
but the talk, you know, talk around that group will be like,
we have the ability, we have the players, we've just got to go out and perform.
I think there's no doubt that they can do it.
It's just now it's now down to them.
I say there might be a few bumps along the road during the group stages,
but, you know, once you get into that back end,
it's about players who have been there, players who have done it,
experiences that they've got.
And like they say, they can beat anybody on their day.
And equally, Stephen, there's two ways to look at that.
People might think, oh, you know, why isn't she saying we're going to go and win the
World Cup and that's what we're here for?
You know, if that's realism, that's completely acceptable as well.
Yeah, I think what you do now as a coach is that when you're speaking to the media,
you're reinforcing the message that you're telling your players within the dressing room.
I think a lot of coaches use that, a lot of captains use that.
and I think the language inside the dressing room will be trying to take pressure off these guys
and I think that they'll be trying to convey calmness throughout the dressing room
and yeah in that she's saying we are underdogs we feel as though we're the underdogs
and that's a really dangerous mindset in terms of a good dangerous mindset for England to find
because it will free them up I think when England have played badly over the last few years
They've looked so tense in the moment.
They've snatched at their chances to take catches.
They've frozen with the bat in hand.
And I think Charlotte Edwards will understand that.
And this is all just a method of taking pressure off those players
so that they can go and perform,
as they have done in these two warm-up games,
because they've hammered India, they've hammered Australia.
That should give them real confidence going into this well-come.
And also, Charlotte Edwards says that,
but Danny will know no one likes winning more than Charlotte Edwards.
No, definitely not
She is
You stand up in your chair then
Yeah, I did, I did
Yeah, it's when you're captain's speak
She's got a stand up, haven't you?
Yeah, she's a born winner
Right, there'll be no doubt
In her mind that
They're there to, they are there
To win that competition
And yes, I think
You know, Finney's right
They're just trying to take a little bit of pressure
Off the dressing room
But deep down, all them
players know how good they are. Lottie knows how good they are and when they get in
them small pressured moments, are you the one, are you the player that's going to step forward
and take them over the line? So I think yeah, that's just taking a little bit of pressure off
but you know they do have the ability to do it. I've got to say Danny that the way that you
reacted there I feel like says a lot about just what she might be able to achieve via
presence alone before we even talk about her as a coach, you know?
Yeah, and that's, you know, that's how a bigger, bigger character, bigger person she is in the
women's game.
She quite rightly will command a dressing room as a player and, you know, as a coach now
who's been, you know, hugely successful in domestic cricket, you know, not just in England.
So as a, you know, as a coach, she's probably got one foot on the lad.
already the players already
everybody's nice and quiet and listening to what's
going on but again
also somebody that's you know
she's a people person and we'll be
trying to connect with the players very
individually but with
a burning fire in the background of wanting to win
games of cricket for England
I think the other thing Steve as well if you remember that the
criticism that was levelled at England
last winter when it went so badly wrong
in the T20 World Cup and the ashes
was the mistakes
was a bit of attitude, was preparation correct,
were the things they were doing between games,
the right things to be doing to win a World Cup or win the ashes,
there'll be none of that with Charlotte Edwards.
And England might make mistakes,
and they might have an off day.
Charlotte Edwards can't go out there,
bat bowl and field for the players.
But what she can do is make sure that everything else is right.
And that's what you expect from a character and a coach like Charlotte Edwards.
And Stephen, going beyond that, there are other aspects.
For example, she won the WPL with the Mumbai Indians twice.
So what impact does that have?
I read her talking about, she said, I understand the dew factor.
What on earth is the due factor?
Well, how long have you got?
32 minutes.
Yeah, okay, yeah, I can make it last that long.
No, it's effectively in the subcontinent in particular,
When the temperature drops and the night time sets in and the floodlights come on,
the first half of the game will be played in the daylight where the pitch might be grippy,
the outfield will be completely dry.
But then the second half of the game is played under floodlights when it's dark and it's a little bit cooler.
And at that stage of the evening, Dew does form on the ground.
So little water droplets on the grass.
When the ball goes across the grass, it gets wet.
It becomes a lot harder to grip for a bowler to be able to.
execute your skills, whether that's slower balls, yorkers, whatever skills you might require
as a white baller. And then also sometimes in those conditions, it makes it skip onto the bat
a lot better in the second half of the game. And it becomes easier to time and pitches that might
be a bit stoppy and spinny in the first half of the game can completely change under the conditions
of due. So it is a big factor. We've seen World Cups before decided pretty much on who wins the
toss. I hope this isn't one of those
cases, but it's good that we've got a coach that understands
them. Yeah, look, I
assume players will understand that
perfectly well anyway, Danny,
but nonetheless, to have a coach
who's won the WPL twice
is surely that's significant. Surely that's
a big tick. Yeah,
I think it's also just
being out there and understanding
the culture and understanding
what it's like to
play in India. You know, it's
a cricket crazy nation.
And there's obviously a lot more eyes that are on you constantly, you know,
around the hotel, walking from the hotel to the bus.
There's just people everywhere.
The bus is going down the road.
And there's just, you turn up with the ground to practice and there's still, you know,
hundreds of people around.
So I think it's just putting kind of quieting down and all that stuff as well.
And it's just enjoying the moment.
But, you know, when it comes down to go time, I'm sure they'll be fired up and ready to go.
Danny, have you noticed anything
she spoke a lot about the game plan
we've got a game plan
the players know the game plan
from these two warm up games
have you spotted anything that might be
different that she's sprung upon us
not so much
but I think just being around
the domestic game
I remember I was down in Beckenham
when we played against
Surrey and I bumped into Lottie
and it was just chatting to her
quite generally around the game
and you know puts a lot of emphasis on
England players playing domestic cricket
So I actually think that's been
That's been a huge impact as well
Then players coming back
And understanding sometimes
How to build an innings
I think we got to the point before that
Where
And maybe they didn't know how to bat 50 overs
Like just understanding that batsmanship
And I think she puts a lot of emphasis
On people making smart decisions
In the right moment
But obviously still taking
a positive approach of things
but end of the day it's about winning
games of cricket and it's about how you get over
the line and if that takes somebody
to bat a little bit smarter
through the middle take a bit of time
to kind of get themselves into them
be able to propel towards the back end
I think she just, she's put a lot more
emphasis on game smart
and how players go about the game
that's right in front of them in that moment
Danny there was a couple of things in the warm up game
where I wondered if England
I don't know if they looked stronger,
but it looked like they may just been a slight tweak.
One of the advantages, of course,
is if Nat Siver Brunt can bowl,
because she hasn't been bowling since the ashes.
So that maybe means that England can play an extra batter
because there's been times in one day
as when Sophie Eccleston's been batting at number seven,
and that's looked a little bit too high.
So maybe if they can get a Danny Wyatt Hodgin at number seven,
bowling options with Nat Siver, Emma Lam,
and maybe Alice Capsie in the top seven.
and then also if they only play one out and out seamer
are they going to be opening the bowling with spin
might lindsay smith be opening the bowling is that an option
yeah i think we saw a little bit of that the other day
didn't we with lindsay smith opened the ball and it's it's not something
that she hasn't done before i think
there was kind i think we went for a bit of a stage where
you know lindsay smith and sophia eccleson
didn't play in the same side and i think
they're very different cricketers they're very different bowlers
and i think if that's that's a way
where the England want to go
having Nat bowling
is massive
and if you can pick up
pick up some overs
from an M-A-LAM or an Alice
Capsi that can
you know England have obviously gone with
the four spinners that was
you know maybe when the squad came out
that was one question mark
that people had
but if that's the routine
you're going to go down then I think
the role that Natsiva plays with the ball
and whether they can
you know hopefully she's fully fit to ball
for the entire comp but that's obviously
another question
with somebody
who hasn't
you know
hasn't ball
for quite a while
really
let's talk about
the quicks then
shall we
because the ones
that we know
which we'll be able
to bowl at the minute
Lauren Filer
Lauren Bell
and you've just been
talking about
Nat Siverbrunt
and seeing
what happens with her
Danny you
you coach Lauren Filer
at Durham
and I find her
fascinating
especially because
side note
and I'm sure
it's not as important
to her
as trying to win
this World Cup
she's trying
at the moment
to become
the first
female bowler
in a women's international
to bowl 80 miles an hour
and she is not far away.
Yeah, she's an exciting talent
and she's the one, you know,
the women's game is getting quicker
but I think that top end,
there's still probably maybe three or four
that can genuinely hit, you know,
them sorts of 75 to 78 mile an hour consistently.
So, yeah, she's a huge asset
and I think used in the right moments of the game
I think she could be quite a big impact baller
I think she obviously been involved with Durham
hasn't played too much in our first year
but I was involved obviously with her in the 100
and she was used quite a lot as that impact bowler
in the middle, a bit more pace looked to hit the wicket
and that might be something in India
that if you're in the second half
in the ball skidding on nicely she's probably going to be quite a handful
when that jews around so yeah interesting
and how they would use her if she plays
and, you know, how the balance of that side would work.
I think as well, Stephen.
I mean, I was lucky enough to be there for her debut
when she was bowling in the women's ash test at Trent Bridge.
That's summer 2023.
And straight away, it was like, wow,
she got Elise Perry out, didn't she, on 99?
You know, she's box office, isn't she?
Yeah, and it's not just the fact she got her out on 99.
It's how she got her out.
You bounced her, made her look really uncomfortable,
and then followed it up with another uncomfortable ball that got her out.
That was a real marker and that's, I think, the moment that people sat up and thought,
wow, this is a really exciting talent we've got here.
What I hope England do with her, as someone who's probably considered a strike bowler myself,
is use her and give her the freedom to take wickets because wickets in the 50-over game
are your currency as a bowler.
And there's even more importance through those middleovers.
if you've got the pace to be able to ruffle feathers
and to disrupt the pace of the game,
then that's the way that you need to be used.
So, yeah, if she plays
and if England do decide to have her in the balance of their team
and not really load it with spinners,
then I hope that she's given the freedom
to just go out there and try and take wickets
because, yeah, it's vitally important
and that's what I think she's best at.
Just wondering, we're ticking off the Stephen Bingo cart here.
He's been geeking out about Jew.
Now he's just referred to himself as a strike bowler.
What would you refer to yourself as, Stefan?
A journalist and a bad wicketkeeper.
Thanks for acknowledging.
The thing with the fast bowling, though,
is it's the area of the team that's evolved the most recently
with Arlott, with Lauren Bell and with Lauren Filer in the team.
This is the first World Cup England have played
without Catherine Siver Brunt for 25 years.
She has played in each of the last five.
She's always had Anya Shrubesole there.
alongside her as well
and it was Ania Shrubsoll
basically dragged England
through three years ago in New Zealand
they were on the brink of going out
it was Shrubsoll who scored the winning runs
on a wet day in Auckland
against New Zealand
and was England's best bowler
throughout the tournament as well
and England are an old squad actually
they've got nine players
who are 27 or above
but it's those fast bowlers
that duck under that age
and are the ones that could be around
for a little while
so when we're thinking the likes of Heather Knight
Danny Wyatt Hodge, Tammy Beaumont, Amy Jones, Nat Siverbrun,
they probably won't see another 50 over World Cup.
It's actually the Seamus that could be around for a little while.
Right, just before we hear from Heather Knight,
because there's been a few ifs there from all three of you
as part of that Lauren Filer conversation.
Charlotte Edwards said she was very close to knowing her best team.
So can we maybe isolate Steph the areas
where she might not be sure if we can speculate?
How many spinners they want?
I think that would depend on the conditions
and there might just be a battle in the middle order
for maybe the last batting spot.
Maybe that's a Dunkley or a Wyatt Hodge.
But I had nine names, maybe inked in.
I think it'd just be depending on the conditions,
how many spinners do they need,
and who might that last batter be
if they've got a specialist at number seven.
Heather Knight's name's not in ink, is it?
It's in black marker, everything.
Yeah, you can't get rid of it.
Absolutely, absolutely.
Because even though she's been removed at the captain's,
you're still England's second-best batter
behind that silver brunt.
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Right, let's hear from her then.
Heather Knight is back in the England squad for the first time since she was replaced as Captain Byr now at Siverbrump.
She missed much of the summer due to injury and nothing else.
and Heather's been telling Stefan about that hamstring problem.
Yeah, it's good.
Yeah, it's getting there.
I'm still kind of building up, I guess,
to be ready to play with full fitness in the World Cup.
But things are really on track.
It was always going to be quite a sort of back-end heavy rehab.
It's one of those.
I try and let it heal as long as possible.
And then, bam, quick, go, run, bat, a field, etc.
So, yeah, it's going really well.
Like, it's not been the most enjoyable couple of the months.
I'm not going to lie, it's not quite a fun process, the rehab process.
I'm not, yeah, it's not the most enjoyable, but kind of through the other side now,
hopefully, which is really nice.
And obviously, we've got that week in Abu Dhabi building up, a couple of warm-up games
where we can be quite flexible, so hoping to play some sort of role in that.
And then, obviously, a couple of warm-up games before the World Cup gets going.
So, yeah, a bit of cricket to hopefully get me where I need to be.
October the 3rd, is that touch and go?
or is it still a bit too early to say?
No, it's on track unless anything happens.
I'm not going to be a bit undercooked physically
because of the amount of stuff I've been able to do.
I guess three months in a swim and pool
doesn't quite cut the vigours of a World Cup.
But, yeah, I've been managed really well by the medical staff.
We've got an amazing team of people
that have been looking after me.
And, yeah, I've planned this rehab pretty meticulously.
Obviously, went for the non-surgical option.
to be ready for this World Cup.
So, yeah, things are on plan.
I'm sort of not far off running at full speed now
and batting completely freely
and pretty much fielding at full intensity.
But, yeah, it's just me managing myself
in that lead up to the World Cup
to make sure I'm really ready physically and cricket-wise.
How were those few games in the ranks,
slotting back in?
I mean, it must have been less hard work.
Phone wasn't going quite as often,
fewer conversations to have.
How did you cope, albeit for what actually turned out to be quite a short period of time?
Yeah, like I say, it was quite brief, but yeah, I was surprised how much extra time I had.
I was sort of twiddling my time and wondering what to do with myself.
But yeah, I think I quite enjoy that sort of having that extra time and like a little bit more time to play the guitar and just be out and about with the group a bit more, I guess,
and not have their extra responsibility.
And I guess the challenge for me now,
because I've kind of been captain for so long,
and I always thought it got the best out of me as a person, as a batter.
So the challenge now for me is kind of how do I do that as a player,
and I felt like I was starting to find that rhythm.
Obviously, played reasonably well in that series.
Felt like I was in really good nick.
But, yeah, it was always going to be a bit strange
when you do something for nine years,
and you sort of slide into a different role.
yeah like I say that injury
one's small silver lining
is I think it's helped me sort of move on
a lot more and yeah
I'm quite excited to kind of slot back in
and yeah just be one of the players
and see how I can make an impact
in a different way
and I think one thing
when you're captain you kind of
you have to be a bit diplomatic sometimes
and maybe sort of
not always be as honest as you want to be
so yeah, I can be a bit more honest now
and a bit more vulnerable
and hopefully other people
are a bit more honest with you as well
because I think obviously when you are captain
you're in charge of decisions around selection
and things like that
then naturally is that sort of small distance
or water or whatever it is between you and the group
so yeah, I'm looking forward to slot him back in to that hopefully.
I'm just pausing here slightly, Steph
because it says here in front of me
that Heather said something unbroadcastable in the interview.
She did.
I can reveal that it is printable, though.
Oh, is it?
You'll be able to read about it on the BBC Sport website.
Are there any stars to replace letters?
Comes with a disclaimer.
Does it?
But she revealed, and Danny can tell us more about this,
that she had an alter ego and a nickname
when she first came in to the England team.
And Heather Knight said, well, when I found out that I wasn't captain anymore,
I knew for a little while
and then I sent out a message
to all the players to say
watch out my alter ego
nickname that we can't say right now
is back
because apparently when she was a younger player
she was a bit of a prankster
around the dressing room
a bit like when Joe Root
took the men's captaincy
he was a bit of a cheeky chapy
and taking on a position
of responsibility
Heather Knight had to tone that down
a little bit so maybe Danny
can tell us what Heather Knight
was like when she first came
into the England team
and if that character is back
what we could expect from her from now on?
Yeah, I think Heather Kitt,
I think I was in India
and I think she got called up to the trip in India.
And yeah, she was just, you know, young
and a bit of a bit of a mess about or a bit of fun.
So yeah, it'd be really nice for her to...
She'll enjoy being back in the ranks, actually.
I think from a cricket in point,
point of view, you probably add
arguably, so you might go and see the best
next couple of years out of her.
Somebody who now can be a little bit
freer off the field, enjoy
what she does, and sometimes
that just frees you up on the field even more.
But equally, I think
that there was times
probably at the back end of the
summer last year, v India,
where, you know, India
got hold of England and, you know,
kind of got away with
the games. I think, you know, Heather's going to be
massive for Nat on the field
how they use Heather
she's still a very very good
captain of the game
and how Nat uses her and I know they
get on really well and how
they work together could be really
good in them pressure moments
I think you know Heather was always somebody
who was calm in their moments and got
England through when we
needed to with bat and in the field
so I think she's going to be a you know a huge
cog in the wheel of
trying to get momentum heading towards the back end
of the comp.
Yeah, there was a lightness to her in that interview, Stephen, I thought.
Yeah, I think it's a massive job being England captain and the transition that the
women's game has gone through under her stewardship as well.
And the added scrutiny as she became later in her captaincy years.
Yeah, there'll be something really liberating about just dropping back into the ranks.
I'm looking forward to meeting this version of Heather Knight.
I've only met the serious one before.
So I'm very much looking forward to meeting her next summer.
But look, I think that she is absolutely without doubt one of the crucial cogs,
not only as a batter, but as a confidant for Nat Siverbrunt,
who is tackling her first World Cup as a captain.
And Heather will be very careful, I'd imagine,
not to be too overbearing, not offering advice all the time,
but she'll be a shoulder to lean on, certainly,
when there will be tricky moments throughout the tournament
because it is such a long one.
Well, I've just found out the nickname
and all I can says, I'm really glad nobody said it on the radio
and I'm amazed you've got away with it on the website for there.
If you want to find it, that's where you can go and find it.
You can hear how England get on 10.15 Friday morning
on BBC Sounds and five sports extra first game against South Africa.
Our team are there for it.
First game of the tournament full stop is tomorrow,
1015, five sports extra, India versus Sri Lanka.
Let's move on to England's men and a modern day great has called it
a day.
England need one to win.
Start comes in, Bowles to Wokes,
his steps away,
and slashes it for four.
And Ingram have won.
If you want to become a genuine all-rounder
and I feel like I'm going in the right direction to do that.
Handing of Bowles to Wokes it shortly,
pulls it away, Miss Cuber,
it's going out towards Woyne,
long arm, this could be it.
First Test 100 for Chris Wokes,
and it's a test hundred at Lourdes.
Wokes, Bossey, ball then.
Third wicket.
Not playing half an hour.
and Australia are in big trouble.
Wokes.
Oh, it's a beauty from Chris Wokes.
Perfect length and off stump,
the top of which has to be knocked back.
A five back for Chris Wokes.
A five for a he achieved half an hour ago.
He's achieved now.
Australia all out for 317.
Listen to this as Chris Wokes appears.
He has got an arm guard on his right forearm.
He's got his left arm in a sling.
Here he comes.
What an entry.
And Chris Wolkes heroically.
And in some pain, scuttles to the non-striker's end.
I don't think the streets will ever forget that moment at the end there for Chris Walks.
Let me just read you what he's been saying about his international retirement today.
Playing for England was something I aspired to do since I was a kid.
Dreaming in the back garden.
I feel incredibly fortunate to have lived out those dreams.
62 tests
call him the Brummy Botham
192 wicket
scored over 2,000 runs
won the ashes twice
2019 World Cup as well
T20 World Cup in 2022
it's a heck of a legacy
and actually Stephen Finn
before we say anything else
none of us get to choose
really how we go out
but if you could choose
that was the way to do it
for Chris Walks in a sling wasn't it
yeah I mean you'd always
like to know when you're going out so you can say for the moment maybe a bit more but but yeah it's iconic
isn't it and it will um go down as one of the moments that people remember for a long long time and
look he's just um he was my first roommate for england 19 so we go back a long way me and wokesy
he's a month older than me um i retired two years ago um and he's been going strong so look he's
um he's a marvelous player and a marvelous person um and i think that last
moment of him walking out to the crease with his arm in a sling, I think, encapsulates his
attitude towards playing for England. And it was whatever I can do, whenever I can do, I'll do it
for my country because I love doing it so much. So, yeah, really sad to see him retire. I'm sad
for him that he didn't get the Swan song and be able to walk off knowing that it was his last
game, but he's done so much to be proud of. Finney's writing that it's not the way that Chris
Wokes would have chosen to go out, but for a team man like Wokes, doing something like that
was really, really fitting. And I think a lot of us at the Oval on that day knew that it was
probably going to be the last time that we saw Chris Wokes in an England shirt, because
once he'd got that injury, making the ashes was going to be so, so difficult. And then
realistically, win-lose or draw in Australia, there was always going to be a really good chance
that England would go in another direction
come the home summer.
His achievements probably weren't lauded in real time
because he was an opening bowler in the era
of James Anderson and Stuart Broad
and he was an all-rounder in the era of Ben Stokes.
But what you've just reeled off there,
one of only four men to have played in both World Cup finals
that England won,
one of only six England men
to have won both World Cups and won the Ashes.
And more recently, in 2023,
England would 2-0 down before Wokes and Wood came into that home ashes.
And Wokes ended up as Man of the Series
after only playing three test matches.
If England had lost that series,
where might the whole Basball project be right now?
They owe a lot to Chris Wokes.
Do you know, Danny, the other thing that occurs to me is,
if we're talking about maybe he doesn't necessarily have,
the level of resonance that he deserves.
Steph was just saying the era of Ben Stokes.
The problem with being an England all-rounder is
there are legends in every era, aren't there?
There's a long list which includes both and which includes
Flint off, which includes any other number of players.
So if you are an all-rounder,
you are always going to be compared to these guys
who have just set the bar to a ridiculous level.
Yeah, I think it's just fallen behind.
some exceptional cricketers, hasn't he?
But I think anybody who's a true cricket fan
would know the value of a Chris Walks on your side.
I think he's probably being one of the, you know,
the person a captain would go to.
Whoever they play, they're going to need somebody to bite,
he needs something to ball,
he's going to be the person that you look at.
And, you know, that final test match,
that he's obviously now being his final test match,
probably just epitomises the person that he is.
I don't know him personally,
but I think you're just watching that game
and just showed you could just see
somebody who was beaming
I'm a team man
and whatever you need me to do
I'm going to go out there and do it for you
he's done it very Chris Wokes way as well
hasn't he? He's done it mid-afternoon on a Monday
a couple of days after the Red Roses
have won a World Cup so just
minimal fuss which I think sums him up
completely. Villa had won as well
which he'd have been
pleased about
the other thing is him going
out as important as he is to the England team. And he'd taken on an important since Jimmy Anderson
and Stuart Broad had moved on. And he made his debut back in 2013. Since then, England played
150 test matches. Wokes only played 62 just because the competition for pace bowling spots
was so fierce against Finney and Olly Robinson and Mark Wood and Matthew Potts. But then in the past
Two years, 18 months, he stepped up as that attack leader
and he did go out as England's pace bowling spearhead
and when he got injured in that last test at the Oval
they really missed him.
So we're coming to the end right, but we have arrived now, Stephen Finn,
at the question I've been most looking forward to asking all night.
Chris Walks is universally regarded as being the nicest
man in cricket so as someone who knows him so well tell us about a time he's been nasty
oh um he's um that's a good question i i mean the fact that i'm stumbling my words like this
means that it's very hard for me to remember a time where he's been um where he's been nasty
but i can tell you where he got his wizard nickname from um and so he's called chris the wizard
wokes and we were playing darts on an englander 19's tour in two thousand
2008 where we roomed together.
And you had to give yourselves a Darts nickname.
So I was Stephen the Shark Finn and he chose Chris the Wizard Wokes.
And that nickname just stuck for him from then on.
That's why everyone knows him as the Wizard now.
And he is an absolute hustler actually because you look at him.
He's got a six-pack.
He's incredibly well-groomed.
He's got the crisp hair all the time.
But he is a pub sports hustler.
He's outstanding at snooker and outstanding at darts.
So maybe the meanest Chris Wokes has ever been
was when he hustled us out of money in Sri Lanka in 2008.
I can tell you that I've been let down by Chris Wokes.
Have you?
Yeah, his test match special debut,
he was injured for the Champions Trophy in 2018
and he was commentating for TMS,
England's semi-final.
I think they lost to Pakistan in Cardiff.
I went to check into my hotel the night before the game
and the reception said
I'm really sorry
your room is no longer available
I thought what's going on here
what's happened
that oh it's gone to a Mr.
Wokes
and never ever got an apology
from Chris Wokes
from taking my hotel room
see that's why I like to hear
you know it's not all sweetness in light
now we know the real Chris Wokes
guys feel free any of you
to get involved in this
because it is the last story
of five live cricket tonight
and it's a great one
a seismic result
in the T20 series
between Nepal and the
West Indies. So the side ranked 18th in the world have taken a 2-0 lead over the 2016 world
champions, West Indies. There's only one match to place. That's an unassailable lead. This
afternoon, Nepal won by 90 runs. They bulled the West Indies out for just 83. Let's speak to
international commentator Andrew Leonard, who was working on the match in Sharger and joins us
now. Andrew, what a story. That must have been a remarkable thing to watch.
Guys, good evening. Yeah, great to be with you live from the UAE and still catching our breath
here after, well, Nepal have made history their first ever win of any kind over a full member
nation a couple of days ago and they've doubled down on that, taking a 2-0 series lead in this
first ever inaugural Unity Cup here between Nepal and the West Indies. It was a phenomenal
performance. They completely outplayed the West Indies in all three departments, particularly
with their fielding. Must have been pretty emotional scenes at the end for them.
Yeah, there really was because for those following the news, obviously this month has been
a month unlike any other
with the Gen Z protests back in Nepal
but hopes of a brighter future
now ahead and indeed the Captain
Row at Poutel dedicated the victory
two days ago to all the martyrs
from those Gen Z protests but then
the performance tonight was just full
of joy, thousands of
Nepal fans who really
are their trademark. Cricket is such
a passion there in the Himalayan nation
and they completely outplayed
the West Indies. It's the lowest ever total of
November have made against an
associate. And, yeah, Nepal's trajectory very much echoing that of Afghanistan and Ireland from
probably about 10 years ago, they're coming up as one of the foremost associates in the game
right now. I am going to mention the terrible form that West Indies have been in in a second.
However, I don't want to take us too far away from Nepal too quickly because of the size of that
story. So when they won the first match at that point, would you have said, well, there's every
chance they're going to do it now? Or when that happened, did that feel like it could be
sort of a magical one-off?
Well, I think for those who follow the associate game
and know how good the leading associate sides are now,
the likes of Scotland and the Netherlands,
the USA, of course, with their brilliant Super 8 run last year,
the T20 World Cup. Of course, there's a connection to Nepal there.
The head coach then was Stuart Law.
He is now the head coach of Nepal.
There's a growing sense of belief within the associates
that the gap is narrowing, particularly to the lower-ranked test nations.
And with the West Indies sending a younger side here,
they still have the quality of the likes of Jason Holder
and Akeel Hussein who's captaining for the first time
Kyle Mares, Obed McCoy, Fabian Allen.
Plenty of experienced internationals in there
alongside some young CPL breakout stars.
But I don't think even in their wildest dreams
they would be thinking of a series whitewash potentially
which is what they could complete tomorrow night.
And there's every chance maybe Nepal will feel
as though they're going to be favourites.
The conditions obviously here in Sharjah somewhat favour them.
They've got a fantastic spin bowling attack
but their fielding is simply world class.
the likes of Depender Singh, Irie and Kusselbertel and Gulshin Jha,
who took two of the best catches you will ever see tonight.
They're an inspiration to watch, and they really are one of the most joyous stories in sport.
Brilliant to have you on, and obviously a great story to have witnessed.
Andrew, thank you very much for talking to us.
A pleasure, guys. Keep fighting a good fight and good to choke to you.
Top man. Andrew Leonard there, who is in Sharja, and yes, Steph,
this is a West Indies team who a couple of months ago were bowled out for 27 in a test match,
so bad to worse.
Yeah, it feels like we've talked about this.
decline of West Indies cricket a lot over the past few years and it's something that doesn't
look like halting and to bring it full circle back to the start of the night when we talk about
the Women's World Cup, the men three-time champions, two-time champions of the 50-overs World Cup
didn't qualify for the last men's 50-over World Cup in 2023. This time the women were semi-finalists
three years ago in New Zealand. They're not there this time in India. There is a malaise across
West Indies cricket that the whole
cricketing world and cricket and fans
want to see reversed. Thanks to Danny
Finney and Stefan, that's it for this
episode. Don't forget to subscribe so you never
miss one. Remember you can hear every ball
of every match of the Women's World Cup on BBC
Sounds England begin their campaign on Friday
against South Africa. As always,
thank you so much for listening.
Welcome to the team
behind the team. A new podcast series
in partnership with the Open
University where we'll be showcased
the people, the tools and the techniques
to help athletes and teams reach elite level.
Like all elite sports, it's a pyramid
and everybody's trying to get to the top.
It's not just my vision. It's a shared vision
amongst the team. What is this? This is not the way I see the game.
The team behind the team with Katie Smith.
In partnership with the Open University.
Listen on BBC Sound.
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