
Coppack swaps law for full-time Essex cricket deal
According to the Marylebone Cricket Club website, there are 42 different laws of cricket, external, most of them divided into multiple sub-sections, plus an appendix.One player who would feel right at home immersed in such fine legal details is seam bowler Kate Coppack, who will be part of the Essex women's squad this summer.Coppack, who helped Sunrisers win last summer's Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy under the old regional format, is an employment lawyer by profession.But at the age of 30, she is temporarily turning away from the world of litigation and affidavits, having signed a professional contract at Chelmsford as the women's county game enters a new era."When I was growing up, it [turning pro] wasn't an option at all," Coppack told BBC Look East."Even when I was at uni, it wouldn't have been an option for me to be a professional cricketer - law was always the career path and cricket was playing on the weekends, seeing how high I could go amateurly."But when the game became professional, there were added incentives, the standard got better and I really enjoyed working hard at my game and seeing where it could go. It was kind of a natural progression to try to get a fully professional contract while I still can."
Essex are among eight women's county sides granted fully-professional tier one status by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) - although Nottinghamshire will continue to use their old regional name, The Blaze - and will take part in their own T20 Blast and 50-over One-Day Cup competitions this summer.Coppack played for Sunrisers on a 'paid-by-game' basis and took 4-27 as they beat South East Stars in a rain-affected RHFT final last September, for which she was named player of the match.But she now has the chance to concentrate fully on cricket this summer, as her legal career takes a back seat."In terms of how much studying I did, and training, in total it was seven years - five years of studying, then two years in practice," she said. "It's a long road to become a lawyer and I didn't stop it lightly. I did think about it for a while."I will miss it, I love the firm I was working with, the team I was working with, but it's good I can now focus on cricket."I will miss that intellectual stimulation and I am going to try and do a bit of work while playing cricket. In the winter, there'll obviously be a lot more opportunity for that, there's quite a bit of downtime when I can do some legal work still so that's the best of both worlds really."
Apart from last summer's final, Coppack has a couple of other more notable achievements on her cricketing CV.When she was 13, she became the first girl to play for the first XI at King's School in Chester and also made six appearances as a guest for Peru at the 2018 South American Women's Cricket Championship.But now, following a training camp in Abu Dhabi, everything is geared towards Essex's One-Day Cup opener away to Durham on Wednesday, 23 April."We always had a few full-time professionals (for Sunrisers), but now some of those girls who were juggling careers with playing part-time are now full-time which is great for them," said Essex team director Andy Tennant."It gives them the chance to fulfil their potential and I know they'll be even more excited than the full-time pros. We're just looking forward to having a whole collective that we've got every day of the week to train."Eventually, the women's game will have to stand on its own two feet. This is the next step for the domestic game for us to start getting more bums on seats here at Chelmsford and earning our corn, if you like, on top of the ECB investment that's already come into the game."Tennant hopes the Sunrisers' improvement in 2024, which brought their first major trophy, can be continued by Essex, who have signed several other members of their squad, apart from Coppack."We just want to be competitive in all formats - we'll focus on doing what we do well and hopefully at some point, somebody will give us some silverware," he added.All-rounder Eva Gray believes the fact that members of the squad have taken "different routes" to reach this point is a strength."We have people that weren't full-time until about a week ago but also people that have been full-time for five or six years," she said."The whole way through the Sunrisers era, we were all pretty understanding of different scenarios and people's commitments. Now, for us to pull together as one big full-time squad is really key. We're looking forward to seeing the progress we can make."For Coppack, as one of the oldest members of the squad, it remains to be seen how many years she wishes to commit to the professional game.But she added: "There's plenty of time to be a lawyer, we'll enjoy cricket for now."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Anderson stars but Northants stay unbeaten in Blast
James Anderson delivered a second three-wicket haul of his T20 Blast return for Lancashire but it was not enough to stop Northants Steelbacks making it five wins from five to tighten their grip on the top of North veteran seamer's 3-31 at a blustery Old Trafford backed up his 3-17 against Durham at the 42-year-old's sterling efforts could not prevent the Steelbacks totalling 180-6 before restricting Lancashire to 156-9 in Livingstone's return to Lightning colours following his IPL victory with Royal Challengers Bangalore saw him take 2-35 and add 18 with the bat as Northants always had the game under their Scrimshaw was the pick of their bowlers with an impressive scorecards North Group – Malan fireworks & Ali hat-trick Yorkshire climbed off the bottom of the North Group table after posting a first victory of their T20 Blast campaign, beating Leicestershire Foxes by a thumping margin of 106 Malan (88 from 48 balls) and Will Luxton (62 from 34) put on 132 for the second wicket and, despite a mini-collapse which saw five wickets go for 31 runs, Yorkshire posted a towering total of 213-7 in their 20 England batter Malan passed 10,000 T20 runs in the Foxes were never really in the hunt with spin doing the damage, Jafer Chohan taking 4-27 and Dom Bess moved Yorkshire into seventh place in the table with their first win at the fourth attempt. Derbyshire remain without a win after Bears inflicted a fourth defeat, winning by 58 runs at Edgbaston with Hassan Ali taking 6-23 including a hat-trick.A half-century from New Zealand opener Tom Latham (58 from 42 balls) helped put Bears in a commanding position at the halfway mark after posting Hudson-Prentice marked his Derbyshire return with a wicket after signing a four-match loan deal from Sussex and Pat Brown was the pick with the ball for the visitors with both ended on the losing side as a chase of 200 proved beyond them after a disastrous start which saw them 1-2 after the first seven deliveries and they were bowled out for seamer Ali dismissed Ross Whiteley, Alex Thomson and Ben Aitchison in the 16th over for his hat-trick to claim Bears' best-ever bowling figures in the T20 Blast. South Group – Spitfires overpower Hampshire Hawks England opener Zak Crawley starred as Hampshire Hawks had their winning streak brought to an abrupt halt at the hands of Kent Spitfires who chased down a target of 178 to win by eight Rogers (3-33) gave Kent a lightning start with the ball helping to reduce Hampshire to 29-3 but Joe Weatherley's 63 from 46 balls and contributions lower down the order from Dewald Brevis (24), James Fuller (27) and Benny Howell (23) helped the visitors to after Daniel Bell-Drummond (61) and Kent skipper Crawley (75 not out from 43 balls) shared a superb 110 run partnership for the second wicket, those defences were never for Hampshire was not enough to dislodge them from the top of the south group table after four rounds of action with James Vince's side on 12 points. Tom Helm continued his remarkably consistent Blast campaign as Middlesex finally got their South Group campaign off the ground with a six wicket win over Essex at Middlesex seamer posted 4-32 from his four overs as the home side were restricted to 156-9, Simon Harmer's 28-ball 41 lifting them after a disappointing batting contribution followed up his 3-29 and 3-29 in his previous two games against Kent and result was never in much doubt after Middlesex skipper Stephen Eskinazi (72) and Kane Williamson (31) put on 97 for the first victory, their first of the season at the fourth attempt, left Essex still looking for a first win after four attempts and rooted to the bottom of the table. At Hove James Coles continued his outstanding form with the bat and Nathan McAndrew dismantled Glamorgan with the ball as Sussex Sharks downed the Welsh is averaging 98 in the Blast after four innings and his innings of 75 not out was the high point of an excellent display from the hosts with the Alsop also reached a half-century in 27 balls with five sixes as Sussex posted then set about Glamorgan with the ball taking 5-19 in his four overs as Sussex won by 78 was secured with two wickets in two balls for Tymal Mills as the Sussex captain became the fifth player to reach 300 T20 put his side second with three wins from four and level on 12 points with leaders Hampshire and third-placed Somerset. Wednesday fixtures North GroupRiverside: Durham v Derbyshire FalconsNorthampton: Northamptonshire Steelbacks v BearsTrent Bridge: Notts Outlaws v YorkshirePlay starts 18:30 BST


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Michail Antonio releases footage of painstaking recovery journey after surviving horror car crash that left him with a broken leg
Michail Antonio has released footage of his painstaking journey to return to full fitness after surviving a horror car crash that left him with a broken leg. The Hammers front man has not featured since the December accident that required him to be cut from the wreckage of his £260,000 grey Ferrari by fire crews in Essex and airlifted to hospital. After colliding with a tree on his way home from training in Epping Forest, the striker was trapped for more than 45 minutes and feared for his life. Antonio underwent surgery for a broken leg the following day, but has worked hard on a miraculous recovery which has seen him return to training just four months on from the accident. On Sunday, the 35-year-old took to Instagram to share a clip of his journey, titling the video with the caption 'Faith will overcome all challenges'. The Jamaica international showed clips of himself regaining his strength on his leg that was broken in the accident. The touching montage of his rehab concluded with his return to first team training, as well as the heartwarming scenes at the London Stadium when he was introduced to the West Ham fans in March. Antonio is out of contract this summer but West Ham are understood to have offered him a short-term deal while he regains his fitness but it remains to be seen whether he will stay beyond the summer or look for a move elsewhere. Last month, a senior Hammers source told Mail Sport: 'He's looking at what offers he gets.' In a May interview with French outlet L'Equipe, Antonio said: ''The question is whether the club wants to extend my contract. That's my priority, but I'm waiting. Until then, all I can do is focus on my recovery so that, wherever I am next year, I can deliver.' Antonio also stated that he had ambitions of extending his Premier League goal tally, which currently sits at 68. 'I'd like to push the record forward so that Jarrod Bowen doesn't catch me,' Antonio said of his Hammers team-mate, who is currently on 54 goals. Antonio also shed light on the support that West Ham gave him in the aftermath of the crash, revealing that the Premier League side had paid for a private room at a hotel for him to continue his convalescence with medial support and privacy. 'West Ham were incredible for me from the very beginning, and even today, they are there for me every day,' Antonio added. But while a potential move away from the club remains in play with his deal drawing to a close, recovery continues to prove a challenging prospect. 'The sessions are very tough,' the forward continued. 'After each one, my leg is dead for a few hours! 'I do a lot of strength and power work to get my body back to normal. I'm still struggling because my brain is constantly telling my leg, "You can't do it."' But, he added: 'It's getting better every day, every week.' In April, West Ham's record Premier League goal-scorer revisited the car's remains at a scrapyard, which put the horror incident into perspective. 'It gave me a weird feeling in my stomach,' Antonio told BBC One programme Morning Live. 'It just made me realise how close I was to dying. I had seen the pictures, but it was 10 times worse in person. The car was an absolute mess. It was difficult for me. 'All I know is that I hit a tree - I don't know how I hit a tree - and that the police came and when they found me in the car, I was in between the two seats. 'From the crash, I've been more of an emotional man. I was avoiding going back because I was slightly embarrassed by the crash and the accident. Obviously I've almost died in the car crash.'


BBC News
4 hours ago
- BBC News
Surrey dominate Durham, Thunder beat Bears
Surrey continue to set the pace in the women's T20 Blast as punishing batting by England's Danni Wyatt-Hodge ushered them to a comfortable nine-wicket win over Durham at The restricting the visitors to 141-5, they made it four wins out of four by reaching 143-1 with 43 balls to spare, Wyatt-Hodge hitting the winning boundary to finish with 74 not out from just 36 Sunday's other game, Lancashire Thunder picked up only their second win in five matches as Tara Norris made an unbeaten 33 and took 3-25 to help them beat Bears by five a target of 163, the home side needed 14 off the final over at Edgbaston, but could only muster eight, with Natasha Wraith finishing on 57 not out from 36 deliveries, the highest score of the match. Match scorecards The game against Surrey began badly for Durham, who saw both openers bowled inside the first five overs - Suzie Bates and Mady Villiers both dismissed by Ryana 29-3, Hollie Armitage led a revival, adding 40 with Bess Heath (27) and 38 with Mia Rogers, and although she went to 50 off 49 balls in the last over and Katherine Fraser hit the final ball of the innings for six, their score did not look it proved as Wyatt-Hodge and Bryony Smith matched each other shot for shot in bringing up a 50 partnership in the fourth launched Katie Levick over mid-wicket for a maximum, the first of two sixes in her innings to go with 11 fours, but the stand came to an end on 94 when Smith was caught in the deep off Phoebe Turner for 44 from 28 Kira Chathli opened her account with a six and made an unbeaten 19 from 13 before Wyatt-Hodge ended the game by cutting Bates to the point boundary. Bears come up short despite Wraith knock Emma Lamb was back in the Lancashire side against the Bears following England duty but it was not a happy return as she was bowled through the gate for five by Issy Wong in the first struggled to 31-4, batting in a steady drizzle, before a 69-run partnership between Ailsa Lister and Australian Alana King which ended when the former was lbw for 36 as she tried to sweep Hannah made 21 before hitting Millie Taylor (2-25) to deep mid-wicket but Norris lofted a six over mid-off as she steered Thunder to made a positive start in reply as Davina Perrin made a rapid 34 before being bowled by one from Grace Johnson which kept Pavely contributed 27 but they were losing momentum at 101-6 in the 14th over when Wong was bowled by Norris as she tried to make room to force the ball through the off though, kept them in the game, clearing the ropes and hitting four fours as she reached 50 from just 29 balls, but wickets continued to fall at the other end and she lost the strike midway through the last over as Thunder squeezed home. "We have had a couple of tough ones in the last couple of games, so to get a win on the board is brilliant and we are right back in the mixer," Lancashire skipper Ellie Threlkeld said. Wednesday fixtures Riverside: Durham v Bears (14:30 BST)The Oval: Surrey v The Blaze (18:30 BST)