logo
England target series win over India and World Cup momentum

England target series win over India and World Cup momentum

Dean and her team-mates head into Tuesday's third match at Chester-le-Street having avenged their four-wicket defeat at Southampton with an eight-wicket victory in a rain-affected clash at Lord's on Saturday to set up a decider in the north-east.
A win would make amends for the 3-2 T20 series defeat by the Indians which preceded the 50-over encounters and provide a boost as Charlotte Edwards and her players work towards this Autumn's World Cup campaign in India and Sri Lanka.
We beat the rain ☔To claim victory over India! 🙌We now head to a decider! 💪2nd ODI highlights here 👇 pic.twitter.com/1H31QKk3MF
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 20, 2025
Dean said: 'It is massively important. We are taking every game as it comes, but ultimately we want to win the series. It will put us with great momentum into the World Cup.
'We've still got a lot of time and a lot of cricket before then, but hopefully it will only help us.'
England chased down a revised total of 115 from 24 overs at headquarters to gain a foothold in the series, but they were also able to take positives from their defeat in the opening game when after being reduced to 97 for four, Sophia Dunkley's 83 and a half-century from Alice Davidson-Richards helped them post 258 for six.
Dean said: 'While we don't want to be in those situations, it's brilliant that we can learn from that and really grow and put those platforms together where previously we might have crumbled.
'We always want to be on top but realistically, we are not going to win games by 120 runs now, they're going to be closer, so the more that we can spend time in pressure situations and be on the right side of them, the better.'
Edwards replaced Jon Lewis as head coach in April and has had little time to hone her squad – from which Alice Capsey has been released to play for Surrey – for what lies ahead, but Dean has been impressed by her consistency in reflecting upon results good and bad.
She said: 'That's what really good head coaches do, they stay consistent and I think that will hopefully allow us to really hone in on the learnings that we're having.
'I guess when you've got a World Cup coming up, it doesn't matter too much about the results beforehand as long as you take those learnings and you improve and do that quickly.
'That's maybe where frustrations are if we are making the same mistakes, but hopefully that won't continue to happen as much as we grow and get better.
'I love working with Lottie and she's got a brilliant tactical mind around the game, so I can definitely see us going from strength to strength.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The genius behind Joe Root's seismic batting achievement
The genius behind Joe Root's seismic batting achievement

The Independent

time8 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The genius behind Joe Root's seismic batting achievement

On Tuesday, Ben Stokes felt the briefest of tributes to Joe Root was the most eloquent. 'Sometimes less is more,' he argued. 'I don't need to say anything else except he's just the absolute GOAT.' Three days later, Stokes was at the other end as Root put himself second in the all-time standings for Test match runs to the man many an Indian would describe as the greatest of all time, Sachin Tendulkar. Root leapfrogged three legends in one day with his score of 150 off 248 balls, leaving Rahul Dravid and Jacques Kallis and Ricky Ponting behind him. He already had a status as England's finest ever Test batter – certainly their best in the last half-century – and now only one person in the history of the game has made more runs in this format. Chasing down Tendulkar, still 2,512 ahead of him, will be no simple feat. Yet, England vice-captain Ollie Pope argued, it is not impossible. 'I wouldn't be surprised if he can chase him down,' he said. 'I am sure if his body allows he will have the hunger.' Root has given himself a chance. He has given England an opportunity to clinch the series against India, too, putting them in a commanding position, a score of 544-7 giving them a lead of 186. But one run among them brought a standing ovation: when he passed Ponting. This was a seismic achievement from a player with a habit of making history. 'He is not a big one for landmarks but I think that is a pretty cool one,' added Pope. There were others. Root already had more Test runs at Old Trafford than anyone else but he passed 1,000. Root already had more Test runs against India than anyone else but he added 150. Root already had more centuries against them than anyone else but he took his tally to 12, the last two in successive matches. A 38th Test ton put him alongside Kumar Sangakkara; this is the company he keeps on the leaderboards. Fittingly, Ponting was on commentary as Root caressed a single to third man to get his 13,379th run. The Australian had travelled thousands of miles to see himself deposed from second spot. He was generous in his praise. 'Just one more to go,' he said. 'The way his career has gone over the last five years, there's absolutely no reason why not.' Ponting had a point. Since the start of 2021, Root has made 5,586 runs at 56.42 with 21 hundreds. It has taken him from the ranks of the very good to the great. There can be a smiling ruthlessness to Root; a class, too. The shot that took him level with Dravid was a beautifully timed cover drive off his back foot. There was a serenity to Root, a capacity to make batting look natural. On days like this, he is England's elegant accumulator, pressing home their advantage with an exercise in calm run-making. 'He was pretty flawless,' added Pope. 'The amount of runs he is scoring now is just amazing.' Until Root was stumped off Ravindra Jadeja, Ollie Pope was a greater danger to him than the Indian bowlers. On 22, Root could have been run out by yards after Pope's bad call but Jadeja missed the stumps. Root then looked untroubled until, extracting bounce with the second new ball, Mohammed Siraj beat him on 98. He almost bowled him off his pads. Even a man with so many centuries may have been afflicted by the nervous nineties, albeit briefly. It may have helped, though, that Jasprit Bumrah left the field after one over with the second new ball; he could instead leg glance the debutant Anshul Kamboj for four to bring up his century. It was a second hundred by a Yorkshireman to be applauded at Old Trafford in two weeks after Jonny Bairstow 's blitz of sixes in the Roses Twenty20. After Bairstow's brutality came Root's artistry. He made India look distinctly average. It made it all the odder that Washington Sundar was not called upon until the 69th over. He struck twice in swift succession with clever use of flight and drift. Pope was caught at slip, Harry Brook, lured down the pitch and playing for turn that never arrived, stumped. After four second-innings wickets at Lord's, the off-spinner has felt underused. It felt a fruitless toil for his teammates as England enjoyed three century partnerships. Pope had been dropped by Dhruv Jurel, with the wicketkeeper standing up to seamer Kamboj, and made 71; each of the top four reached 70 but, typically, Root was the one to convert it to a bigger score. Stokes was the fifth half-centurion, making his first 50 of the summer. The captain was not always fluent. The new ball left a red mark in a particularly painful place when he was struck there. He fell flat on his face reverse sweeping Jadeja. But when he started to get more expansive and ambitious, he departed, retiring hurt with cramp. 'The amount he has pushed his body over the last four or five weeks, he has pushed himself to some serious limits,' rationalised Pope. Stokes' departure prompted a belated Indian revival, Jamie Smith and Chris Woakes going as Bumrah and Siraj produced a couple of hostile deliveries. So Stokes resumed his innings, though not fully comfortable. Liam Dawson accompanied him to the close. India found themselves a long way behind in the game. And Ponting, Kallis and Dravid now find themselves behind Root.

England v Spain referee: Who is trailblazing Euro 2025 final official Stephanie Frappart?
England v Spain referee: Who is trailblazing Euro 2025 final official Stephanie Frappart?

The Independent

time8 minutes ago

  • The Independent

England v Spain referee: Who is trailblazing Euro 2025 final official Stephanie Frappart?

Stephanie Frappart will referee the Euro 2025 final between England and Spain, in the lastest in a long line of achievements for the trailblazing French official. Frappart, 41, is one of Uefa's leading officials and has made history by taking charge of several high-profile men's fixtures in recent years. Frappart became the first woman to referee a men's World Cup match when she officated Germany's match against Costa Rica at the 2022 tournament. She also become the first woman to referee a men's Champions League match when she took charge of the fixture between Juventus and Dynamo Kyiv in 2020. In 2019, Frappart also became the first woman to referee a men's European final, overseeing Liverpool's victory over Chelsea in the Uefa Super Cup. In France, Frappart was also the first female referee to take charge of men's fixtures in Ligue 1 and Ligue 2. Frappart is also an experienced official in the women's game and officated matches at the 2023, 2019 and 2015 World Cups. At Euro 2025, Frappart took charge of the games between Germany and Poland, Switzerland and Finland, and the quarter-final between Italy and Norway. Frappart was the referee when the Lionesses defeated Brazil to win the 2023 Finalissima at Wembley, while she has also officiated the England men's team on two occasions, including last month's friendly defeat to Senegal at the City Ground. Frappart was the fourth official during the Euro 2022 final, then overseen by Ukraine's Kateryna Monzul, which was won by England when they defeated Germany in extra time at Wembley. Frappart said her appointment for the Euro 2025 final was a 'big honour and a proud moment'. Frappart is one of 13 elite female referees at Euro 2025 and Uefa has demanded high standards of the officials employed to take charge of games during the tournament. Uefa's managing director for refereeing Roberto Rosetti said all 13 referees at Euro 2025 passed the same fitness test that is conducted for the elite men's referees. The referee team for the Euro 2025 is multinational, with an Italian assistant referee in Francesca di Monte and an Italian fourth official in Maria Sole Ferrieri Caputi. Referee team for Euro 2025 final Referee: Stephanie Frappart (France) Assistants: Camille Soriano (France), Francesca di Monte (Italy) 4th official: Maria Sole Ferrieri Caputi (Italy) Reserve Assistant Referee: Susanne Küng (Switzerland) VAR Assistant: Christian Dingert (Germany)

Warwickshire towns proud of local Lionesses ahead of final
Warwickshire towns proud of local Lionesses ahead of final

BBC News

time9 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Warwickshire towns proud of local Lionesses ahead of final

Friends and fans in the Warwickshire hometowns of football stars Jess Carter and Hannah Hampton have spoken of their pride at the Lioness' took her first steps in football with Warwick Juniors as a six-year-old and those who watched it happen said she stood out instantly."She just shone, she had to play against the quality players of West Bromwich Albion, and Coventry City FC and was superb, " said Dean Brandrick, a coach for Warwick added: "At the end of her career with us she won the county cup, she was just above anybody at that time." Mr Brandrick coached Carter until she left for Birmingham City and they have remained in contact. He described how seeing her being presented with a cap to mark her 50th appearance was a proud moment."Tremendous achievement for her, from being a grassroots footballer for so long, she's achieved everything I think possible," the coach Studley, where goalkeeper Hampton grew up, pride is evident as specially knitted postbox toppers have lined the Smith, of Spotty Pots Pottery Painting, told the BBC: "She came from Studley, she's played here, she's part of the fabric of this little village. "There's a lot of buzz around, we've got lots of flags in shops, people are talking about it and we are just so proud of them all and so excited to see what happens on Sunday."England will face Spain in Sunday's final at 17:00 BST. Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store