Latest news with #BigBash


News18
2 days ago
- Sport
- News18
Top Allrounder Hayley Matthews To Miss Women's Big Bash League
Last Updated: Melbourne Renegades' Hayley Matthews will miss WBBL season 11 due to a shoulder injury as she is set to undergo surgery. Melbourne Renegades allrounder Hayley Matthews will miss the Women's Big Bash League season 11 due to a shoulder injury, the club announced on Thursday. Matthews, pre-signed by the Renegades ahead of the WBBL Overseas Player Draft, was set for her fourth season in red. However, a shoulder injury sustained during the West Indies' recent ODI series has postponed her WBBL plans. The world's top-ranked T20I all-rounder must withdraw to undergo shoulder surgery. Despite this, she will meet her national commitments, including captaining the West Indies and playing for her Barbados Royals in the Caribbean Premier League, before her surgery later this year. Matthews would have occupied one of the Renegades' picks at Thursday's Big Bash drafts. However, the club now has all three overseas slots to fill during the event. 'We are clearly disappointed Hayley won't be with us this season. She's been instrumental during her time with the Renegades, not just with her performances but with her leadership and professionalism," General Manager James Rosengarten said. 'There's a very close relationship between the Renegades and Hayley, and we know it will continue next year and beyond. Hayley loves this club, and we share in her disappointment at not being available for this year's tournament." Matthews' absence is a blow for the club, given her significant role in the Renegades' remarkable resurgence last season. The team recovered from a bottom-placed finish in WBBL 9 to win their maiden title at the MCG. She had a career-best campaign in WBBL 10, scoring 324 runs at a strike rate of 130.6 and taking 14 wickets, earning her a spot in the WBBL 10 Team of the Tournament. With IANS inputs First Published: June 19, 2025, 12:30 IST


West Australian
2 days ago
- Sport
- West Australian
WBBL Draft: Perth Scorchers draft England batting all-rounder Paige Scholfield and South African Chloe Tryon
Perth Scorchers have ticked all-rounders off their shopping list at the Women's Big Bash League draft, landing English international Paige Scholfield and South African gun Chloe Tryon. The Scorchers will bring 29-year-old Scholfield down under for the first time, selecting the batting all-rounder with pick 12 in the draft on Thursday afternoon. Scholfield has played five times for England's national team. Perth did make a play for English legend Heather Knight and inaugural Scorcher Deandre Dottin, but the Thunder and Renegades used their retention picks to wave them off. South African international and Big Bash veteran Chloe Tryon was then drafted with pick 28. Former Scorchers player Amy Jones was selected by Melbourne Stars and Perth did not retain her. WATCH THE BIG BASH LEAGUE AND WOMEN'S BIG BASH LEAGUE DRAFTS ON 7PLUS Perth will be the 31-year-old power-hitter's fourth WBBL home after she spent two separate stints with Hobart — including last season — either side of seasons with Adelaide and Sydney Sixers. Tryon has scored 869 runs from her 57 WBBL matches at an average of 20.69. She also adds a handy left-arm orthodox option, which will complement star wrist-spinner Alana King and likely off-spinner Lilly Mills in the attack. Scholfield bowls right-arm medium-pace, which will add depth to a thin Scorchers pace-bowling unit. Scholfield went to university with coach Becky Grundy. Before the draft, Hurricanes revealed they had signed England captain and former Scorcher Nat Sciver-Brunt on a pre-signing deal.


Perth Now
2 days ago
- Sport
- Perth Now
Scorchers land international all-rounders in WBBL draft
Perth Scorchers have ticked all-rounders off their shopping list at the Women's Big Bash League draft, landing English international Paige Scholfield and South African gun Chloe Tryon. The Scorchers will bring 29-year-old Scholfield down under for the first time, selecting the batting all-rounder with pick 12 in the draft on Thursday afternoon. Scholfield has played five times for England's national team. Perth did make a play for English legend Heather Knight and inaugural Scorcher Deandre Dottin, but the Thunder and Renegades used their retention picks to wave them off. South African international and Big Bash veteran Chloe Tryon was then drafted with pick 28. Former Scorchers player Amy Jones was selected by Melbourne Stars and Perth did not retain her. WATCH THE BIG BASH LEAGUE AND WOMEN'S BIG BASH LEAGUE DRAFTS ON 7PLUS Perth will be the 31-year-old power-hitter's fourth WBBL home after she spent two separate stints with Hobart — including last season — either side of seasons with Adelaide and Sydney Sixers. Tryon has scored 869 runs from her 57 WBBL matches at an average of 20.69. She also adds a handy left-arm orthodox option, which will complement star wrist-spinner Alana King and likely off-spinner Lilly Mills in the attack. Paige Scholfield is now a Scorcher. Credit: Harry Trump / Getty Images Scholfield bowls right-arm medium-pace, which will add depth to a thin Scorchers pace-bowling unit. Scholfield went to university with coach Becky Grundy. Before the draft, Hurricanes revealed they had signed England captain and former Scorcher Nat Sciver-Brunt on a pre-signing deal.


Glasgow Times
4 days ago
- Sport
- Glasgow Times
England's record wicket-taker James Anderson enters Big Bash draft
Earlier this month, seamer Anderson, 42, played his first T20 match for 11 years and took three wickets as Lancashire beat Durham in their Vitality Blast North Group fixture at Chester-le-Street. Anderson – who retired from Test cricket last summer having taken 704 wickets, the most successful pace bowler in the format – turns 43 at the end of July. JIMMY!!! 🐐@jimmy9 gets the breakthrough at Chester-Le-Street as Clark lofts to Green! A first Lancashire T20 wicket for Jimmy since 2014! 🌹👏 20-1 (2.5) ⚡ #StrikeTogether — Lancashire Lightning (@lancscricket) June 1, 2025 He went unsold in the auction for the 2025 Indian Premier League during November and was not picked up in the Hundred draft during March. If selected in Thursday's Big Bash draft by one of the eight clubs, Anderson would be the oldest overseas player to feature in the Australian tournament and the second oldest of all time behind Brad Hogg. England paceman Jofra Archer has also put himself into the draft, along with Sam Curran. Zak Crawley and Liam Livingstone have a nominated availability of between four and six games over the course of the tournament, which runs from December 21 through to the end of January 2026. 🚨 Every nomination is IN 🚨 Check out the 600+ overseas players who have nominated for Thursday's Big Bash Drafts right now on the Big Bash App! #BBL15 — KFC Big Bash League (@BBL) June 17, 2025 Pakistan's T20 talents Mohammad Rizwan and Shaheen Afridi are also up for auction. New Zealander Kane Williamson, though, is only available for a maximum of three Big Bash games. 'The quality of the pool certainly vindicates our decision to bring this year's draft forward to allow clubs to get a fast start on locking in overseas stars so they have certainty before they use the other mechanisms to build their teams,' Cricket Australia's executive general manager Alistair Dobson said on

Rhyl Journal
4 days ago
- Sport
- Rhyl Journal
England's record wicket-taker James Anderson enters Big Bash draft
Earlier this month, seamer Anderson, 42, played his first T20 match for 11 years and took three wickets as Lancashire beat Durham in their Vitality Blast North Group fixture at Chester-le-Street. Anderson – who retired from Test cricket last summer having taken 704 wickets, the most successful pace bowler in the format – turns 43 at the end of July. JIMMY!!! 🐐@jimmy9 gets the breakthrough at Chester-Le-Street as Clark lofts to Green! A first Lancashire T20 wicket for Jimmy since 2014! 🌹👏 20-1 (2.5) ⚡ #StrikeTogether — Lancashire Lightning (@lancscricket) June 1, 2025 He went unsold in the auction for the 2025 Indian Premier League during November and was not picked up in the Hundred draft during March. If selected in Thursday's Big Bash draft by one of the eight clubs, Anderson would be the oldest overseas player to feature in the Australian tournament and the second oldest of all time behind Brad Hogg. England paceman Jofra Archer has also put himself into the draft, along with Sam Curran. Zak Crawley and Liam Livingstone have a nominated availability of between four and six games over the course of the tournament, which runs from December 21 through to the end of January 2026. 🚨 Every nomination is IN 🚨 Check out the 600+ overseas players who have nominated for Thursday's Big Bash Drafts right now on the Big Bash App! #BBL15 — KFC Big Bash League (@BBL) June 17, 2025 Pakistan's T20 talents Mohammad Rizwan and Shaheen Afridi are also up for auction. New Zealander Kane Williamson, though, is only available for a maximum of three Big Bash games. 'The quality of the pool certainly vindicates our decision to bring this year's draft forward to allow clubs to get a fast start on locking in overseas stars so they have certainty before they use the other mechanisms to build their teams,' Cricket Australia's executive general manager Alistair Dobson said on