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The Hundred 2023: How are the women’s teams shaping up for the new tournament?

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England’s Alice Capsey (left), Sophie Ecclestone (centre) and Nat Sciver-Brunt (right) are expected to play key roles for Oval Invincibles, Manchester Originals and Trent Rockets respectively
Venues: Eight across England and Wales Dates: 1-27 August
Coverage: Ball-by-ball commentary on every game on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra, BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds. Live text updates alongside in-play video clips, contributions from a Hundred super-fan community and all the best stats on the BBC Sport website and app. Sixteen games live on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer. More details

The third season of The Hundred starts on Tuesday with familiar faces returning to their sides and some joining new teams.

BBC Sport asked data analysts CricViz to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the eight teams in the women’s competition.

They have also looked at how each squad may be used throughout a game and the tournament to get you prepared for the four weeks ahead.

Birmingham Phoenix

Phoenix will be hoping to improve on their near misses from previous editions of The Hundred, after finishing third and fourth.

Retaining fit-to-bowl-again Sophie Devine is a huge plus for Phoenix but losing a rejuvenated Ellyse Perry, who would have led from the front with bat and ball and brought top-class international quality, to a knee injury is a huge blow.

Phoenix are yet to announce her replacement but it will be difficult to find a player who could affect a game in the way Perry is capable of.

England players Amy Jones and Issy Wong provide more quality, with the latter likely to be used as a new-ball option in search of wickets to get the Edgbaston crowd fired up.

Jones offers arguably the best gloves in the game and will likely buy Phoenix some wickets other keepers may not get close to.

Erin Burns will provide controlled slower bowling for the Phoenix and, combined with the quality wrist spin of Scotland’s Abtaha Maqsood, will have both bases covered in terms of spin should the Edgbaston wickets offer turn.

London Spirit

England leg-spinner Sarah Glenn has joined London Spirit having taken 10 wickets in the first two years of the competition for Trent Rockets

With the second pick in the draft, Spirit opted to choose hard-hitting Australia all-rounder Grace Harris for her first taste of Hundred cricket.

Harris’ boundary percentage is 18.66 in T20s and she will add some devastating ability to the engine room of Heather Knight, Amelia Kerr and Richa Ghosh, making Spirit’s batting – on paper – one of the more formidable line-ups.

Spirit are boosted by the acquisition of breakout Ashes star Lauren Filer, who will bring some much-needed speed to the bowling. Along with the left-arm threat of American Tara Norris and all-round talent of Danielle Gibson, Filer, who took four wickets in the Ashes Test, will provide good variety to the seam attack.

Arguably, however, Spirit’s strongest aspect of their squad composition is their spin attack, led by England duo Sarah Glenn and Charlie Dean and bolstered by the all-round talents of Kerr.

They have every base covered in this sense with a mixture of wrist and finger spin, and both attacking and defensively minded bowlers. Although not traditionally a happy hunting ground for spinners, should any pitches at Lord’s offer turn, expect Spirit to be very difficult to beat at home.

Manchester Originals

With the third pick in the draft, Manchester Originals opted for elegant South African batter Laura Wolvaardt, whose cover drive is sure to draw admiration at Old Trafford when coupled with the brutal ball-striking of West Indies’ Deandra Dottin.

England Test opener Emma Lamb will be expected to do a lot of the heavy lifting with the bat, as the only other frontline batter with top-level international experience.

The Originals will be strong in the spin bowling department, with the world’s best women’s bowler Ecclestone leading the attack, paired with The Hundred’s leading wicket-taker Amanda-Jade Wellington, who has joined from Southern Brave. Wellington has taken 31 wickets in two years, including a tournament-high 17 in 2022.

Pace bowling remains an issue though. Katie George adds quality to the line-up alongside the emergence of 17-year-old Mahika Gaur who is an exciting prospect on the fast and bouncy pitches in Manchester.

However, with questions over Dottin’s fitness to bowl, Originals may find themselves searching for quality bowling options as the tournament goes on.

Northern Superchargers

Superchargers had elected to go for an all-Australia overseas trio, with stand-in captain Alyssa Healy and all-rounders Heather Graham and Georgia Wareham providing a multitude of high-level skills in all departments.

However Healy and Graham have been forced to pull out through injury and are replaced by Australia batter Phoebe Litchfield and India’s Jemimah Rodrigues.

Litchfield, 20, is an extremely talented prospect but potentially lacks the power, and certainly the experience, of Healy, while Rodrigues does not offer the same all-round game that Grahm would have.

The most significant domestic recruitment has been the capture of England seam bowler Kate Cross, who is making a cross-Pennine switch from the Originals to a ground which has traditionally favoured seam bowlers.

England fringe player Alice Davidson-Richards has had a brilliant couple of years – taking 14 wickets and scoring 131 runs in The Hundred – and will be looking to add quality with bat and ball to an inexperienced line-up.

The recent development of Wareham’s power game – she hit 26 off one Lauren Bell over in the Ashes – may give Superchargers an edge and the late-innings momentum they need to make the difference in the closer matches.

Oval Invincibles

Opting for continuity leading into this year’s competition, the Invincibles have re-signed Suzie Bates and skipper Dane van Niekerk in the draft and retained almost all of the squad which delivered back-to-back titles.

The loss of Shabnim Ismail to Welsh Fire will be sorely felt, coupled with the prolonged injury to Tash Farrant. It means extra responsibility will be placed on the shoulders of all-rounder Marizanne Kapp in the pace bowling department. She had a stellar Women’s Premier League (WPL) with the ball – taking nine wickets at just 5.72 runs per over – and shows no sign of slowing down at 33.

Poster child of The Hundred, 18-year-old superstar Alice Capsey, will be key with both bat and ball, having excelled yet again in international cricket and in the WPL for the Jon Batty-led Delhi Capitals. Her aggressive brand of cricket will be an essential part of the Invincibles’ make-up.

England’s Lauren Winfield-Hill is enjoying a white-ball renaissance at the back end of her career and will look to set a strong platform for her team at the top of the order.

The Invincibles will be the side to beat yet again as they look to build the tournament’s first dynasty.

Southern Brave

Southern Brave re-signed Danni Wyatt in the draft after the opener scored 385 runs in the first two years of the competition

Southern Brave have once again recruited Indian superstar, left-handed batter Smriti Mandhana, to lead their batting line-up. She is joined by Danni Wyatt who is at the peak of her powers after a spellbinding Ashes series scoring 272 runs.

The pair will be well complemented by the lower-order power of Chloe Tryon and the skill of Maia Bouchier who will make the back-to-back runners-up strong contenders with bat in hand.

With the ball, Brave will be looking to the new-ball swing of the soon-to-retire Anya Shrubsole and heir apparent Lauren Bell to make early inroads and rip the heart out of opposition batting orders.

Expect to see Maitlan Brown and Georgia Adams applying pressure through the middle overs and exploiting the long boundaries of the Ageas Bowl.

Trent Rockets

Trent Rockets have arguably the in-form batter in the world in Nat Sciver-Brunt – the England all-rounder has taken her game to another level this year for her country and also Mumbai Indians in the WPL.

Harmanpreet Kaur captained champions Mumbai and should slot in alongside Sciver-Brunt in the middle of the order, with Lizelle Lee and Bryony Smith charged with getting the Rockets off to a quick start.

Nat Sciver-Brunt will also be vital for the Rockets with the ball alongside Katherine Sciver-Brunt and leg-spinner Alana King, who returns to the side after taking a hat-trick in Rockets colours at Old Trafford last season.

Left-arm spinner Kirstie Gordon and right-arm quick Grace Potts were mid-priced picks for the Rockets and could be valuable in complementing the star trio of bowlers at the Rockets in 2023.

Welsh Fire

Tammy Beaumont will again lead Welsh Fire

Fire opted for Sophia Dunkley with the first pick during the draft in March. The England opener had plenty of success opening the batting for Southern Brave – scoring 437 runs in two seasons – but will have to adapt to the challenge of batting at the often bowler-friendly Sophia Gardens.

Fellow England opener Tammy Beaumont joins Dunkley, Hayley Matthews and Laura Harris to provide a power-packed batting line-up that should perform better after struggling last year.

The fastest bowler in the world and two-time Hundred winner Shabnim Ismail moves across from Oval Invincibles to bring some heat to the Fire bowling.

Left-arm spinner Alex Hartley and off-spinner Hayley Matthews are both capable of bowling at the top of the innings, and at the death, and bring added flexibility to the Fire attack.

The likes of Freya Davies, Georgia Elwiss and Emily Windsor all provide valuable skills alongside the Fire’s big names.

Predict your final table

Now it is your turn to have your say. Pick how you think the women’s group-stage tables will finish and share them on social media using #BBCCricketexternal-link.



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