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Matthews defiant but England complete T20 clean sweep

Matthews defiant but England complete T20 clean sweep

The Advertiser27-05-2025

England have completed a 3-0 clean sweep in their T20 series against West Indies despite a superb all-round display from opposing captain Hayley Matthews at Chelmsford.
Matthews, who led Melbourne Renegades to victory over Brisbane Heat in last December's WBBL final where she was named player of the match, took three for 32 as England were restricted to 5-144.
She then cracked 71 from 54 balls as the tourists looked to salvage some pride in the series on Monday.
Yet it was not enough as England, for whom Heather Knight earlier top-scored with an unbeaten 66, limited the West Indies to 8-127 to secure a 17-run victory.
Matthews put England in to bat after winning the toss and was rewarded with a disciplined display from her attack.
Zaida James removed Danni Wyatt-Hodge with the first ball of the match - her second successive golden duck - and Sophia Dunkley also fell cheaply.
New captain Nat Sciver-Brunt (37) and Knight repaired the innings before Amy Jones added a useful 22.
Knight occupied 47 balls, hitting seven fours and a six in what was her eighth T20 international half-century, although it did come at the cost of a hamstring injury.
The West Indies also lost a wicket first ball as Lauren Bell bowled Qiana Joseph but Matthews ensured their reply built momentum.
She lacked significant support with Realeanna Grimmond (15) remarkably dropped off three successive balls before holing out to Wyatt-Hodge off the bowling of Charlie Dean.
A rain interruption also broke Matthews' flow and the visitors' hopes effectively ended when the skipper became the sixth wicket to fall when she was caught on the boundary by Em Arlott off Bell.
England have completed a 3-0 clean sweep in their T20 series against West Indies despite a superb all-round display from opposing captain Hayley Matthews at Chelmsford.
Matthews, who led Melbourne Renegades to victory over Brisbane Heat in last December's WBBL final where she was named player of the match, took three for 32 as England were restricted to 5-144.
She then cracked 71 from 54 balls as the tourists looked to salvage some pride in the series on Monday.
Yet it was not enough as England, for whom Heather Knight earlier top-scored with an unbeaten 66, limited the West Indies to 8-127 to secure a 17-run victory.
Matthews put England in to bat after winning the toss and was rewarded with a disciplined display from her attack.
Zaida James removed Danni Wyatt-Hodge with the first ball of the match - her second successive golden duck - and Sophia Dunkley also fell cheaply.
New captain Nat Sciver-Brunt (37) and Knight repaired the innings before Amy Jones added a useful 22.
Knight occupied 47 balls, hitting seven fours and a six in what was her eighth T20 international half-century, although it did come at the cost of a hamstring injury.
The West Indies also lost a wicket first ball as Lauren Bell bowled Qiana Joseph but Matthews ensured their reply built momentum.
She lacked significant support with Realeanna Grimmond (15) remarkably dropped off three successive balls before holing out to Wyatt-Hodge off the bowling of Charlie Dean.
A rain interruption also broke Matthews' flow and the visitors' hopes effectively ended when the skipper became the sixth wicket to fall when she was caught on the boundary by Em Arlott off Bell.
England have completed a 3-0 clean sweep in their T20 series against West Indies despite a superb all-round display from opposing captain Hayley Matthews at Chelmsford.
Matthews, who led Melbourne Renegades to victory over Brisbane Heat in last December's WBBL final where she was named player of the match, took three for 32 as England were restricted to 5-144.
She then cracked 71 from 54 balls as the tourists looked to salvage some pride in the series on Monday.
Yet it was not enough as England, for whom Heather Knight earlier top-scored with an unbeaten 66, limited the West Indies to 8-127 to secure a 17-run victory.
Matthews put England in to bat after winning the toss and was rewarded with a disciplined display from her attack.
Zaida James removed Danni Wyatt-Hodge with the first ball of the match - her second successive golden duck - and Sophia Dunkley also fell cheaply.
New captain Nat Sciver-Brunt (37) and Knight repaired the innings before Amy Jones added a useful 22.
Knight occupied 47 balls, hitting seven fours and a six in what was her eighth T20 international half-century, although it did come at the cost of a hamstring injury.
The West Indies also lost a wicket first ball as Lauren Bell bowled Qiana Joseph but Matthews ensured their reply built momentum.
She lacked significant support with Realeanna Grimmond (15) remarkably dropped off three successive balls before holing out to Wyatt-Hodge off the bowling of Charlie Dean.
A rain interruption also broke Matthews' flow and the visitors' hopes effectively ended when the skipper became the sixth wicket to fall when she was caught on the boundary by Em Arlott off Bell.

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"I think the three things Newcastle needs when it comes to hiring a coach are a big name, a proven winner and if possible somebody from the area." McKinnon stopped short of suggesting club legends Andrew and Matthew Johns, but said Cordner was developing into an elite coach in his lower-grade role at the Roosters and an assistant for the Blues. "To coach the Knights you need a presence and Boyd certainly has that. He's hugely respected in Newcastle where he's still got plenty of family and friends. "He won premierships, Origin series, World Cups; everywhere Boyd went, he won. "With the greatest of respect to Josh Hannay or Matt King or Ben Gardner, who appear to be next in line for a NRL head coach role, Knights supporters need a name they can really identify with and throw their support behind." With Newcastle potentially just a loss away from falling to dead last, O'Brien, who is in his sixth season at the Knights, said the spotlight and pressure was part and parcel of the game. "There's always pressure. I'm no different to the players," O'Brien said. "We hear all the outside noise. "But like I said to the playing group, how we behave, how we act and how we look after each other in this period, it absolutely includes me. "I can't worry about it. I've just got to focus to do my part to help them get out of this. "We're all in it together." Knights legend Robbie O'Davis has called for Queensland to bench Kalyn Ponga for Origin II and criticised the Newcastle skipper's club form, labelling him "not the best fullback". O'Davis' comments on a fan podcast come as another ex-Knight tossed up Boyd Cordner as a potential replacement for Knights coach Adam O'Brien should he be sacked. Ponga, who has missed Newcastle's past two games due to Origin and injury, is yet to score a try in 10 NRL games this season and struggled to make an impact in Queensland's 18-6 loss to NSW last week. A two-time premiership winner with the Knights and former Queensland fullback, O'Davis said Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, who played centre in Origin I, could be a better option for the Maroons. "I'd put an in-form player like Hammer back at fullback," O'Davis said, speaking on The Knighted podcast. "KP is going to end up being the best player we've ever seen, the way he moves laterally ... He moves forward and laterally at the same speed, and no one has ever seen that before ... He is just a freakish talent. "[But] he has never been taught, I think, to play fullback. "He stands 60 yards back on play one ... He runs out of the defensive line on plays four and five to try and make a tackle on the kicker when he is supposed to be back there catching it. "Just little stuff like that. He jumps with the wrong knee in the air ... He is a bloody good player, but he is just not the best fullback. "There are a lot better fullbacks than him." O'Davis, who was part of Newcastle's 1997 and 2001 premierships, and played 223 games for the club and 12 Origins for Queensland, said he felt Ponga was too involved in Newcastle's play-making, rather than operating like a traditional fullback. But he acknowledged Newcastle's injury toll this season, particularly the loss of centre Bradman Best. "He is getting in the habit of getting in front of his halves at club level," the 52-year-old, who also played eight Tests for Australia, said of Ponga. "It's something he does very well at times, he plays our halves out of form a lot of the time ... [but] someone has got to get in his ear and say, 'Kalyn, you're such a good runner, you're the best ball-break runner in the game' ... [but] we're missing Bradman a bit I think ... KP can show him the ball a few times and then make the decision of whether he gives it to him. "Having Kalyn come off the bench [in Origin], he could run out of dummy-half and tear a side apart." Ponga, who is now in his 10th season of first grade, may be yet to cross the try-line in a struggling Knights side, but he is averaging 161 run-metres per game and has notched six try-assists in 2025. Asked about his marquee player's form on Wednesday, Knights coach Adam O'Brien said Ponga was a "product" of Newcastle's collective battles this season. "It's unrealistic and unfair to put a heap of pressure on Kalyn when we've had the amount of injuries and suspensions, and lack of go-forward and lack of experience," O'Brien said. "He is a product of having to go through that. "And I think he is not on his own, there's some other guys there ... you can see [in] the games ... when we've had that on deck, we've played quite well and there hasn't been as much noise. "The moment they're absent, people seem to forget that they're absent and then all the pressure comes back on Kalyn." O'Brien confirmed Ponga would start against Manly at McDonald Jones Stadium on Thursday night but had struggled with an ankle problem. He has also dealt with a rib issue. He said the skipper, 27, felt the weight of expectation and was desperate to try to turn Newcastle's season around. "He realises the position as much as anyone else that we're in, and he understands the importance of getting out there and fighting hard together," O'Brien said. "He is excited to get out there and help." Newcastle are third last, or 15th, ahead of hosting seventh-placed Manly, who are coming off a 34-6 win over Brisbane last week. Much like recent seasons when Newcastle's form and ladder position has dipped, O'Brien's future has come into the spotlight this year, and on Wednesday the club's former recruitment officer - and player - Alex McKinnon suggested if the coach was moved on, the club should look at former Roosters, NSW and Australian skipper Boyd Cordner. "Let me be very clear, I don't think Newcastle should part ways with Adam O'Brien, I've been one of his biggest supporters from day one," McKinnon wrote in his semi-regular Fox Sports column. "But the NRL is becoming an increasingly fickle business and as they say, it's a lot easier to sack the coach than half the players. "So if the Knights do call it a day on Adam's six-year tenure, I have the perfect replacement - albeit a little left field. "I think the three things Newcastle needs when it comes to hiring a coach are a big name, a proven winner and if possible somebody from the area." McKinnon stopped short of suggesting club legends Andrew and Matthew Johns, but said Cordner was developing into an elite coach in his lower-grade role at the Roosters and an assistant for the Blues. "To coach the Knights you need a presence and Boyd certainly has that. He's hugely respected in Newcastle where he's still got plenty of family and friends. "He won premierships, Origin series, World Cups; everywhere Boyd went, he won. "With the greatest of respect to Josh Hannay or Matt King or Ben Gardner, who appear to be next in line for a NRL head coach role, Knights supporters need a name they can really identify with and throw their support behind." With Newcastle potentially just a loss away from falling to dead last, O'Brien, who is in his sixth season at the Knights, said the spotlight and pressure was part and parcel of the game. "There's always pressure. I'm no different to the players," O'Brien said. "We hear all the outside noise. "But like I said to the playing group, how we behave, how we act and how we look after each other in this period, it absolutely includes me. "I can't worry about it. I've just got to focus to do my part to help them get out of this. "We're all in it together." Knights legend Robbie O'Davis has called for Queensland to bench Kalyn Ponga for Origin II and criticised the Newcastle skipper's club form, labelling him "not the best fullback". O'Davis' comments on a fan podcast come as another ex-Knight tossed up Boyd Cordner as a potential replacement for Knights coach Adam O'Brien should he be sacked. Ponga, who has missed Newcastle's past two games due to Origin and injury, is yet to score a try in 10 NRL games this season and struggled to make an impact in Queensland's 18-6 loss to NSW last week. A two-time premiership winner with the Knights and former Queensland fullback, O'Davis said Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, who played centre in Origin I, could be a better option for the Maroons. "I'd put an in-form player like Hammer back at fullback," O'Davis said, speaking on The Knighted podcast. "KP is going to end up being the best player we've ever seen, the way he moves laterally ... He moves forward and laterally at the same speed, and no one has ever seen that before ... He is just a freakish talent. "[But] he has never been taught, I think, to play fullback. "He stands 60 yards back on play one ... He runs out of the defensive line on plays four and five to try and make a tackle on the kicker when he is supposed to be back there catching it. "Just little stuff like that. He jumps with the wrong knee in the air ... He is a bloody good player, but he is just not the best fullback. "There are a lot better fullbacks than him." O'Davis, who was part of Newcastle's 1997 and 2001 premierships, and played 223 games for the club and 12 Origins for Queensland, said he felt Ponga was too involved in Newcastle's play-making, rather than operating like a traditional fullback. But he acknowledged Newcastle's injury toll this season, particularly the loss of centre Bradman Best. "He is getting in the habit of getting in front of his halves at club level," the 52-year-old, who also played eight Tests for Australia, said of Ponga. "It's something he does very well at times, he plays our halves out of form a lot of the time ... [but] someone has got to get in his ear and say, 'Kalyn, you're such a good runner, you're the best ball-break runner in the game' ... [but] we're missing Bradman a bit I think ... KP can show him the ball a few times and then make the decision of whether he gives it to him. "Having Kalyn come off the bench [in Origin], he could run out of dummy-half and tear a side apart." Ponga, who is now in his 10th season of first grade, may be yet to cross the try-line in a struggling Knights side, but he is averaging 161 run-metres per game and has notched six try-assists in 2025. Asked about his marquee player's form on Wednesday, Knights coach Adam O'Brien said Ponga was a "product" of Newcastle's collective battles this season. "It's unrealistic and unfair to put a heap of pressure on Kalyn when we've had the amount of injuries and suspensions, and lack of go-forward and lack of experience," O'Brien said. "He is a product of having to go through that. "And I think he is not on his own, there's some other guys there ... you can see [in] the games ... when we've had that on deck, we've played quite well and there hasn't been as much noise. "The moment they're absent, people seem to forget that they're absent and then all the pressure comes back on Kalyn." O'Brien confirmed Ponga would start against Manly at McDonald Jones Stadium on Thursday night but had struggled with an ankle problem. He has also dealt with a rib issue. He said the skipper, 27, felt the weight of expectation and was desperate to try to turn Newcastle's season around. "He realises the position as much as anyone else that we're in, and he understands the importance of getting out there and fighting hard together," O'Brien said. "He is excited to get out there and help." Newcastle are third last, or 15th, ahead of hosting seventh-placed Manly, who are coming off a 34-6 win over Brisbane last week. Much like recent seasons when Newcastle's form and ladder position has dipped, O'Brien's future has come into the spotlight this year, and on Wednesday the club's former recruitment officer - and player - Alex McKinnon suggested if the coach was moved on, the club should look at former Roosters, NSW and Australian skipper Boyd Cordner. "Let me be very clear, I don't think Newcastle should part ways with Adam O'Brien, I've been one of his biggest supporters from day one," McKinnon wrote in his semi-regular Fox Sports column. "But the NRL is becoming an increasingly fickle business and as they say, it's a lot easier to sack the coach than half the players. "So if the Knights do call it a day on Adam's six-year tenure, I have the perfect replacement - albeit a little left field. "I think the three things Newcastle needs when it comes to hiring a coach are a big name, a proven winner and if possible somebody from the area." McKinnon stopped short of suggesting club legends Andrew and Matthew Johns, but said Cordner was developing into an elite coach in his lower-grade role at the Roosters and an assistant for the Blues. "To coach the Knights you need a presence and Boyd certainly has that. He's hugely respected in Newcastle where he's still got plenty of family and friends. "He won premierships, Origin series, World Cups; everywhere Boyd went, he won. "With the greatest of respect to Josh Hannay or Matt King or Ben Gardner, who appear to be next in line for a NRL head coach role, Knights supporters need a name they can really identify with and throw their support behind." With Newcastle potentially just a loss away from falling to dead last, O'Brien, who is in his sixth season at the Knights, said the spotlight and pressure was part and parcel of the game. "There's always pressure. I'm no different to the players," O'Brien said. "We hear all the outside noise. "But like I said to the playing group, how we behave, how we act and how we look after each other in this period, it absolutely includes me. "I can't worry about it. I've just got to focus to do my part to help them get out of this. "We're all in it together." Knights legend Robbie O'Davis has called for Queensland to bench Kalyn Ponga for Origin II and criticised the Newcastle skipper's club form, labelling him "not the best fullback". O'Davis' comments on a fan podcast come as another ex-Knight tossed up Boyd Cordner as a potential replacement for Knights coach Adam O'Brien should he be sacked. Ponga, who has missed Newcastle's past two games due to Origin and injury, is yet to score a try in 10 NRL games this season and struggled to make an impact in Queensland's 18-6 loss to NSW last week. A two-time premiership winner with the Knights and former Queensland fullback, O'Davis said Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, who played centre in Origin I, could be a better option for the Maroons. "I'd put an in-form player like Hammer back at fullback," O'Davis said, speaking on The Knighted podcast. "KP is going to end up being the best player we've ever seen, the way he moves laterally ... He moves forward and laterally at the same speed, and no one has ever seen that before ... He is just a freakish talent. "[But] he has never been taught, I think, to play fullback. "He stands 60 yards back on play one ... He runs out of the defensive line on plays four and five to try and make a tackle on the kicker when he is supposed to be back there catching it. "Just little stuff like that. He jumps with the wrong knee in the air ... He is a bloody good player, but he is just not the best fullback. "There are a lot better fullbacks than him." O'Davis, who was part of Newcastle's 1997 and 2001 premierships, and played 223 games for the club and 12 Origins for Queensland, said he felt Ponga was too involved in Newcastle's play-making, rather than operating like a traditional fullback. But he acknowledged Newcastle's injury toll this season, particularly the loss of centre Bradman Best. "He is getting in the habit of getting in front of his halves at club level," the 52-year-old, who also played eight Tests for Australia, said of Ponga. "It's something he does very well at times, he plays our halves out of form a lot of the time ... [but] someone has got to get in his ear and say, 'Kalyn, you're such a good runner, you're the best ball-break runner in the game' ... [but] we're missing Bradman a bit I think ... KP can show him the ball a few times and then make the decision of whether he gives it to him. "Having Kalyn come off the bench [in Origin], he could run out of dummy-half and tear a side apart." Ponga, who is now in his 10th season of first grade, may be yet to cross the try-line in a struggling Knights side, but he is averaging 161 run-metres per game and has notched six try-assists in 2025. Asked about his marquee player's form on Wednesday, Knights coach Adam O'Brien said Ponga was a "product" of Newcastle's collective battles this season. "It's unrealistic and unfair to put a heap of pressure on Kalyn when we've had the amount of injuries and suspensions, and lack of go-forward and lack of experience," O'Brien said. "He is a product of having to go through that. "And I think he is not on his own, there's some other guys there ... you can see [in] the games ... when we've had that on deck, we've played quite well and there hasn't been as much noise. "The moment they're absent, people seem to forget that they're absent and then all the pressure comes back on Kalyn." O'Brien confirmed Ponga would start against Manly at McDonald Jones Stadium on Thursday night but had struggled with an ankle problem. He has also dealt with a rib issue. He said the skipper, 27, felt the weight of expectation and was desperate to try to turn Newcastle's season around. "He realises the position as much as anyone else that we're in, and he understands the importance of getting out there and fighting hard together," O'Brien said. "He is excited to get out there and help." Newcastle are third last, or 15th, ahead of hosting seventh-placed Manly, who are coming off a 34-6 win over Brisbane last week. Much like recent seasons when Newcastle's form and ladder position has dipped, O'Brien's future has come into the spotlight this year, and on Wednesday the club's former recruitment officer - and player - Alex McKinnon suggested if the coach was moved on, the club should look at former Roosters, NSW and Australian skipper Boyd Cordner. "Let me be very clear, I don't think Newcastle should part ways with Adam O'Brien, I've been one of his biggest supporters from day one," McKinnon wrote in his semi-regular Fox Sports column. "But the NRL is becoming an increasingly fickle business and as they say, it's a lot easier to sack the coach than half the players. "So if the Knights do call it a day on Adam's six-year tenure, I have the perfect replacement - albeit a little left field. "I think the three things Newcastle needs when it comes to hiring a coach are a big name, a proven winner and if possible somebody from the area." McKinnon stopped short of suggesting club legends Andrew and Matthew Johns, but said Cordner was developing into an elite coach in his lower-grade role at the Roosters and an assistant for the Blues. "To coach the Knights you need a presence and Boyd certainly has that. He's hugely respected in Newcastle where he's still got plenty of family and friends. "He won premierships, Origin series, World Cups; everywhere Boyd went, he won. "With the greatest of respect to Josh Hannay or Matt King or Ben Gardner, who appear to be next in line for a NRL head coach role, Knights supporters need a name they can really identify with and throw their support behind." With Newcastle potentially just a loss away from falling to dead last, O'Brien, who is in his sixth season at the Knights, said the spotlight and pressure was part and parcel of the game. "There's always pressure. I'm no different to the players," O'Brien said. "We hear all the outside noise. "But like I said to the playing group, how we behave, how we act and how we look after each other in this period, it absolutely includes me. "I can't worry about it. I've just got to focus to do my part to help them get out of this. "We're all in it together."

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