January 27, 2023
1 min read

Nat Sciver named women’s ODI cricketer of year

Nat beat competition Australia wicketkeeper-batter Alyssa Healy, South Africa pacer Shabnim Ismail and New Zealand’s leg-spin all-rounder Amelia Kerr to win the award…reports Asian Lite News

England’s seam-bowling all-rounder Nat Sciver was named as ICC women’s ODI cricketer of the year for 2022. She becomes the second cricketer from England to have won the coveted award after wicketkeeper-batter Sarah Taylor won the honour in 2014.

Nat beat competition Australia wicketkeeper-batter Alyssa Healy, South Africa pacer Shabnim Ismail and New Zealand’s leg-spin all-rounder Amelia Kerr to win the award.

She had a 2022 to remember, amassing 833 runs at an average of 59.90 and at a strike-rate of 91.43, including smashing five half-centuries and two centuries to put further accolades on an already impressive playing resume.

The majority of those big scores came during the Women’s ODI World Cup, with Nat helping herself to a team-best 436 runs, including a career-best 148 not out off 121 balls in the final against Australia coming in a losing cause.

Nat walked in with England in a spot of bother at 38/2 and remained there until the end, unsettling the bowlers with her eye-catchy strokes. The all-rounder hit 15 fours and a six in her knock that could have led her side to World Cup glory if not for losing partners at the other end.

She finished third in the overall run charts for the tournament, behind Alyssa and Rachael Haynes, but recorded a better average than Australia duo.

If her exploits during the World Cup weren’t enough, Nat returned from a short break to manage her mental health in December to help England record a 3-0 series sweep over the West Indies in the Caribbean.

During that series she scored knocks of 90 and 85 to unsurprisingly finish as the leading run-scorer for the series with an eye-catching 180 runs at an average of 60. Nat will be next seen in the Women’s T20 World Cup, to be held in South Africa from February 10-26, which will mark her return as England’s vice-captain.

ALSO READ: India whitewash Black Caps in ODI series

Previous Story

Ben Stokes wins ICC Test cricketer of the year award

Next Story

Sheikh Nahyan attends Indian embassy’s R-Day ceremony

Latest from Sport

NZ tour important for us: Capt. Charith

Sri Lanka white-ball captain Charith Asalanka admitted that it was disappointing to miss out on a Champions Trophy berth but said that the upcoming tour of New Zealand is of utmost priority

Spin Wizard Ashwin Calls Time 

Ashwin ends his career with 537 wickets at average of 24 in 106 Tests and becoming India’s second leading wicket-taker after legendary leg-spinner Anil Kumble…reports Asian Lite News    Veteran off-spinner Ravichandran

Chhetri Does It Again 

Chhetri inspired the Blues to clinch all three points in this edition of the Southern Rivalry as he scored thrice and at 40 years and 126 days, became the oldest hat-trick scorer

Boxing Champ To Fuel Muslim Aid 

Muslim Aid Expands UK Initiatives for 2024 with Focus on Knife Crime, Homelessness, and Refugee Support. It Teams Up with Inspired Capital Sports and Champion Boxer Hamza Uddin to Strengthen Its Efforts 

Rohit in Middle, Rahul Leads Off 

Rohit noted that Rahul, who scored 26 off 74 balls and looked comfortable as an opener in Perth, and Jaiswal, gave him confidence to keep them as openers for the pink-ball game
Go toTop

Don't Miss

India, UK hold talks on Cyber Capacity Building

The first meeting of JWG on Capacity Building was held

PM disappointed with COP 26 outcome

The high-profile COP 26 conference began here on October 31