England wicketkeeper
Sarah Taylor on making the grade in the men's game
“There
were probably about a million emotions,” she tells The Independent as she looks
back on her remarkable achievement. “It was exciting. It was so nerve-racking.
It was probably one of the toughest things I’ve ever done on a cricket field,
but I can walk away and say I somehow enjoyed every moment of it, including the
media hype.”
While
she did not bat in the first two-day game, Taylor took two smart catches behind
the stumps. In the next match, batting at No 8, she was out for a second-ball
duck. “I snicked off behind,” she admits. “I got a pretty decent ball. It’s OK,
I’ve not lost any sleep over it.”
Despite
the bigger ball and spending most of her time as wicketkeeper standing back
rather than up, the 26-year-old found men’s cricket to be more like the women’s
game than she had imagined. “The main difference was a couple of the words said
– but that might just be Australians.”
When
other commitments allow, Taylor intends to continue playing men’s cricket. “It
definitely helped me and my game, more mentally than anything. If you put your
mind to something you can do it you should always give it a go, even if you
fail. I’ll try and play for them as much as I possibly can in the future.”
Taylor
is ultimately playing men’s cricket to make herself a better player in women’s
international cricket, but she thinks a female will soon decide to devote
herself entirely to the men’s game.
“I
see no reason why a woman couldn’t say, ‘I want to play men’s cricket’ and keep
going with it. I hope it does push the boundaries.
“I’m
too far into my career now to start changing but there will be some girls who
will try and keep going in the male game. I do hope it happens it’ll be good
for women and good for the game. If you’re trained to play against the guys,
you never know what you can do.”
But
Taylor has enough in the women’s game to occupy her thoughts. After the
disappointment of England losing the multi-format Ashes series 10-6 in the
summer she contributed a disappointing 135 runs in seven innings Taylor
confronted “a lot of sarcastic comments” when she started playing Australian
domestic cricket in October.
She
is now playing in the inaugural Women’s Big Bash, a female T20 tournament
featuring the eight sides who play in the men’s Big Bash. “You’ve got to look
to Cricket Australia and say well done to them for pushing this. The excitement
here has been amazing,” she says, looking forward to the English equivalent – a
six-team Super League which will be launched next year.
Women pioneers: Taking it
to the men
Billie Jean King
(tennis): Beat Bobby Riggs in the “Battle of the Sexes” contest
in 1973.
Danica Patrick
(motorsport): The only woman to win a race in the US
IndyCar series.
Ann Meyers (basketball):
First woman to join an NBA team, the Indiana Pacers, in 1979 – but never played
a game.
Babe Zaharias (golf):
First woman to play on the men’s pro tour, missing the cut at the 1938 Los
Angeles Open.
Arran Brindle (cricket):
The England player scored the first century by a woman in men’s
semi-professional cricket, making 128 for Louth in 2011.
“We’re
going to learn as much as we can from this as players and try and perform in
the Super League next year. If we can generate the same hype back home in
England, which I’m pretty sure we can do, I’d like to think the crowds would be
even better.”
Taylor’s
next England commitments come in February, on the tour of South Africa. It will
be the first assignment for new head coach Mark Robinson, who Taylor knows well
after coaching his daughter.
“He
was so involved and so keen to help out. I think because of his daughter his
love for the women’s game has grown and he’s paid so much attention to it. It’s
exciting times under him,” she says. “I don’t think he’ll have to do anything
different from coaching men.”
Robinson
will encounter a side still adjusting to becoming professional cricketers in
May last year. Perhaps the most significant change that professionalism has
brought is extra scrutiny.
“There’s
more responsibility on us being professional and we need to accept the
criticism that comes with that.” When England’s women underperform, Taylor wants
them to be treated identically to the men. “We should be assessed in exactly
the same way. We shouldn’t be any different.”
There
was no shortage of criticism after the women’s Ashes Test in the summer: not
only did England lose, but many suggested that women should cease playing Test
matches altogether and focus on T20s and ODIs instead. Taylor does not agree.
“Test matches are my favourite format. We love playing Test cricket we get to
wear whites playing for England, we get to spend four days playing a game that
we love together.”
But
England’s women will not get to do so next summer, as only ODIs and T20s have
been scheduled against Pakistan. “There’s always disappointment. You want Test
matches against everyone but you have to be realistic.”
Such
frustration is outweighed by excitement at the direction women’s cricket is
taking. A further positive sign is that Colin Graves, the England and Wales
Cricket Board chairman, recently announced that the board had withdrawn its
previous opposition to cricket joining the Olympic Games, moving the sport
further towards inclusion in the 2024 Games and the additional funding this
would open up to the women’s game around the world. “That would be amazing,”
she says. “I’d love to say I went to an Olympics. It would be pretty great and
build the women’s game a lot.”
In
the meantime, England’s women, as one of only two professional cricket nations,
approach the World T20 in India in March with the feeling that winning a global
event, which they have not done since 2009, is overdue.
“This
group of players should be lifting trophies,” she says. “It was a shame about
the Ashes loss in the summer. The perfect bounce back would be an ICC Trophy. I
don’t see any reason why we should go to India thinking of anything less.”
Neither
Taylor nor the women’s game are in the business of lowering their sights.

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