Eighteen months in the past, Trent Bridge, the 2023 Ladies’s Ashes Check, England unleashed a uncooked, pace-bowling gem on Australia. It simply wasn’t who we anticipated it to be.
Issy Wong had burst onto the scene at 20 years previous when making her England debut throughout all three codecs the yr prior, and solely three months earlier she’d taken a shocking hat-trick within the inaugural Ladies’s Premier League in India to see Mumbai Indians into the ultimate.
Wong was swiftly turning into the face of the Ashes, her picture plastered throughout virtually each promoting marketing campaign relative to the 2023 sequence, just for her to be neglected for choice within the Check match in favour of the comparatively unheralded Lauren Filer.
And it is the not too long ago turned 24-year-old who now carries the burden of an expectant England on her shoulders as they gear up for an Ashes sequence Down Underneath, beginning January 11, hopeful of a primary sequence win over the previous enemy for 11 years.
“It’s definitely going to be our hardest challenge,” Filer instructed Sky Sports activities. “Australia are a really, superb facet but it surely’s nearly taking it head on and utilizing all that we have executed during the last couple of months – in all probability ever for the reason that final Ashes, to be trustworthy.
“It obviously nerve-racking, but I think we’re in a really good place and, actually, the nerves are good nerves, it’s not ‘we’re not ready’ nerves. We’re just excited to get out there and play.”
The final time Filer took on the Aussies, her very first supply in worldwide cricket on that sunny June 2023 day in Nottingham noticed the debutant’s further burst of tempo rapping Elyse Perry on the pads – however, crucially, by way of an inside edge that meant the lbw resolution was overturned on evaluation.
Filer would go on to take four-for within the match, together with Perry twice – bowling each her and Tahlia McGrath in back-to-back overs as a part of a fiery second-innings burst – as she confirmed each the talent and the temperament to succeed on the elite stage.
England have managed Filer’s profession rigorously since, nonetheless, with Wong maybe serving as a cautionary story – struggles with the latter’s run-up which have been painfully evident throughout her solely look that 2023 summer season, in a T20 in opposition to Sri Lanka, limiting her to only three white-ball appearances since, all coming in opposition to Eire.
Filer did not function once more over the rest of that 2023 multi-format Ashes, regardless of having so rattled Australia within the Check match. It was clear that England have been enjoying the lengthy sport.
And the quick bowler has needed to stay affected person since. She has performed in 12 of England’s 18 ODIs performed since Australia’s go to 18 months in the past and simply seven of their 28 T20 internationals, together with being neglected for choice within the 2024 Ladies’s T20 World Cup, on the admittedly spin-friendly surfaces of the United Arab Emirates.
However throughout England’s current sequence win in South Africa, Filer was extra of a mainstay of the assault, exploiting the kind of faster and bouncier tracks that will also be anticipated in Australia.
Her 3-32 within the second ODI win in Durban was the fourth occasion wherein the speedster has taken three-for over her 12 caps within the 50-over format – the stumps of Tazmin Brits, Sune Luus and Nonkululeko Mlaba all dismantled to devastating impact in a efficiency that was solely overshadowed by a Charlie Dean hat-trick.
Such a show was removed from a fluke both, with eight of Filer’s 20 ODI wickets – at a median of simply 17.65 – having been ‘bowled’, her added tempo which constantly tops the 70mph mark usually speeding opposition batters and beating their defences.
“With the role I play, I know that I’m not going to necessarily get it right every ball because I’m trying to bowl as fast as I can,” Filer mentioned.
“I think having the backing from [head coach Jon] Lewis and [captain] Heather [Knight] means it’s actually a really healthy place to be in… because maybe before I played for England I didn’t necessarily feel like that.
“Plus, I really feel just like the pitches over right here [Australia] go well with me fairly effectively. I am trying ahead to the sequence, hopefully get on the pitch and have some enjoyable.”
Filer additional stepped up on the tour of South Africa in December, filling in for the injured Kate Cross as a part of a devastating new-ball partnership with Lauren Bell as England beat the Proteas by 286 runs within the series-ending Check match.
Bell was rightly named Participant of the Match for her gorgeous figures of 8-76 again in Bloemfontein, however Filer’s 3-65 shouldn’t be neglected and, on one other day, it may effectively be her incomes the richer rewards.
And who’s to say her day will not come within the Ashes? Filer’s removed from the unknown she was again in the summertime of 2023, however she continues to be simply as able to hanging worry into that Australian top-order – not that she’s underestimating England’s esteemed opponents.
“They’re a very very good side, they have been for many years now,” Filer mentioned.
“It’s in their home country and obviously everyone around us is going to want us to lose. Looking back on the home Ashes a couple of years ago, I know how much the crowd made me want to do well, so I know how they can sort of affect everything.
“However I believe for us, it is all about specializing in what we do as a workforce. South Africa was actually good prep for that as effectively, we performed some very superb cricket over there.
“I think we’re in a good place. It’s definitely going to be a challenging few weeks, but as long as we keep pushing ourselves, that’s the key.”
The face of this yr’s Ashes? You would possibly simply be taking a look at her.
Ladies’s Ashes 2025 schedule
All dates and instances UK and Eire
- First ODI: 11.30pm, Saturday January 11 – North Sydney Oval
- Second ODI: 11.05pm, Monday January 13 – Junction Oval, Melbourne
- Third ODI: 11.05pm, Thursday January 16 – Ninja Stadium, Hobart
- First T20I: 8.40am, Monday January 20 – Sydney Cricket Floor
- Second T20I: 8.40am, Thursday January 23 – Manuka Oval, Canberra
- Third T20I: 8.10am, Saturday January 25 – Adelaide Oval
- Check: 3.30am, Thursday Jan 30-Sunday Feb 2 – MCG, Melbourne