Issy Wong ready to face Australia Women in Ashes series

Issy Wong

On the strength of a strong WPL, the fast bowler is eager for his maiden Ashes competition.

Issy Wong Play Out
Issy Wong is preparing for her first Ashes summer.

Issy Wong is confident in England’s ability to challenge the Australia Women’s team in the golden era.

Issy Wong has joined the fray, arguing that with Australia Women’s multi-format series starting next month, it’s an excellent time to take on Australia Women. In a time-honored tradition before the men’s Ashes, England has fired the first shots or attempted to.

Wong earned her debut in each of the three forms during South Africa’s tour of England last summer, and she is hoping to play for England when they begin their Ashes campaign with a five-day Test at Trent Bridge starting on June 22.

Issy Wong remarked, “I believe that now is a decent time to play them, just softly.” Unquestionably, they rank among the most outstanding athletic teams in history, regardless of the sport or gender. Their track record over the past ten years is outright scandalous.

“I think that right now is a good opportunity to play them, you know, just lightly… you’ve had Rach Haynes retire, [Meg] Lanning step away, obviously coming back in ridiculous form, but there’s a lot of new faces in that group who are unbelievably talented but haven’t necessarily played the biggest part for them over the last couple of years,” said the author. It is an excellent opportunity to confront them and challenge them to prove that they are still as good as they were five years ago, even though they are the most incredible team in history. Now is a fantastic moment to play.

 

She continued, laughing, “I’ve never played them, though. “I’ve seen them on TV often, and they look great.”

Wong did not play for England in the T20 World Cup team that lost to South Africa in the semifinals before Australia won the tournament for the third time in a straight, led by Lanning, who returned to the team after missing five months of the previous season. However, Wong made a comeback for the first WPL, winning the championship with the Mumbai Indians and finishing third in wicket-taking with 15 at 14.00, including a hat-trick in the semifinal match against the UP Warriorz.

 

The Changing Landscape of Cricket: Issy Wong’s Take on the Increase in Franchise Content

She has played against some of her potential Ashes opponents in India, contributing to her reasoning about the Australians. She also believes that having played with and against them in the WBBL and the Hundred, where she will once again represent Birmingham Phoenix when the 2023 edition begins in August, has helped to demystify them a little.

Although I haven’t played them, I don’t think of them as “the Australians,” Wong said. Beth Mooney and Alyssa Healy will bat. First, Meg Lanning will bat third, and then, in that middle order, you’ll find [Tahlia] McGrath, [Phoenix teammate Ellyse] Perry, and [Grace] Harris. After all, they are people who do both good and bad things. You’ve played against these individuals so frequently that you’ve gotten to know them and perhaps even learned about their games.

Because more people are competing against one another internationally, the changing landscape and the increase in franchise content will level the playing field there.”Oh, don’t you think it’s going to make international cricket less good if David Warner and Jonny Bairstow are best friends because they open the batting for Sunrisers Hyderabad,” some people ask. That is ridiculous because it will improve the competition significantly. These men are competing against people they are familiar with, and those are the finest matches because each player has to modify their strategy and approach things slightly differently. When two players regularly compete against one another, they work each other out, and this is how the game is played.

Ashes
Issy Wong ejected Alyssa Healy from the WPL elimination match, and she celebrated.

Taking Control of What You Can: Wong’s Mindset on Playing in the Ashes

Wong’s remarks come just one week after Stuart Broad claimed that Australia’s 4-0 win over England Men in their disastrous 2021–22 Ashes tour didn’t count as “a real Ashes,” calling the Covid–19 restrictions it was played under a “void series,” and six weeks after Ollie Robinson predicted that the team that has since reinvented itself under Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes could “give Australia a good hiding” this time around. However, they are no less brave when facing an Australia Women’s team that has only lost one game to India in a Super Over since 2022, holds the ODI World Cup, and hasn’t dropped an Ashes series since 2013–14.

 

Issy Wong answered, “In my opinion, yeah,” when asked if she thought it was a brilliant idea for her to participate in the Ashes series against the Australians. Additionally, this is an ideal time for me to start up front for Liverpool. Does Jurgen Klopp hold the same view? No. You have control over certain things, while you don’t have control over others. My personality means I’ll always be a game, but I need to exert control over the variables within my power. If I’m up for it, I can decide for myself. I’m game for it. However, you never know.

Issy Wong received her maiden England call-up in the June 2017 Test match stalemate at Taunton against South Africa. She took three wickets overall, including two in two overs on the penultimate day, which was hampered by rain. She also participated in the South African white-ball tour before participating in all of England’s games at the Commonwealth Games, where the hosts disappointedly finished fourth.

She missed the most recent WBBL due to a minor back issue. ECB worries about workload management before suffering a quadriceps ailment that prevented her from traveling with England to the Caribbean and losing the opportunity to formally request selection for the T20 World Cup in front of new coach Jon Lewis. Issy Wong concurred that the WPL did, if not in the manner one might anticipate, give someone a platform to argue a point following her omission.

Unfortunately for me, I wasn’t in their plans this time when they chose their squad, Issy Wong added. “I probably sulked for a half-hour, or if not sulked, felt sorry for myself and licked my wounds before I had to get up and go to training. I can’t change it much right now, but I had a few weeks at home before the WPL to put in some solid work, advance a little in my training, and then fly to India.

 

“I was eager to demonstrate my improvement, not because I should have played but because if I had chosen the squad, my 14 closest friends and I would have done the same because that’s exactly how I would prefer the team. But it did a great job of demonstrating my progress over the previous four months and, hopefully, my prospects for improvement.

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