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Female Cricket:

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  • Mcallums
    replied
    WOW...

    I am also interested in women cricket. I am playing with all my friends at weekend.. And i love to play cricket..

    Leave a comment:


  • Gamma
    replied
    the robots getting more and more sophisticated! maybe someone using the site as testing ground for new and improved robots!

    Leave a comment:


  • Hath
    replied
    Hi Karl,
    Wish Ashli will live her dreams and wish her best of luck in the world of cricket.
    Could you share more of her pics or some video will be a treat for us.
    Thanks in advance.

    Leave a comment:


  • shawn5
    replied
    Great article about women cricket,..
    England takes this step to encourage women cricket ,...

    Leave a comment:


  • Sickko
    replied
    Go to your room Peter R

    Leave a comment:


  • Peter R
    replied
    dem wear box?

    i hear they call it a "man hole cover"

    Leave a comment:


  • Sickko
    replied
    My mother was a serious West Indies cricket fan and I spent many days listening to games with her on the family radio, now she is a serious Boston Red Sox fan

    Leave a comment:


  • Muadib
    replied
    Maybe West Indies Cricket can rise again !

    Ah wondah if dem have a chest guard ?

    Leave a comment:


  • Peter R
    replied
    I heard that for test matches at the QPO in T&T, 55% (on average) of spectators are women... casual observation seems to confirm that. I would say at ODIs it's even higher. There is a stand that is also referred to as the "ladies' members' stand" ... something about that name just doesn't sound right

    Leave a comment:


  • Gamma
    replied
    wow!! she is a serious cricketer!

    the most diehard cricket fans i have encountered are women! starting with my own grandmother...

    Leave a comment:


  • Karl
    started a topic Female Cricket:

    Female Cricket:

    Ashli dreams of making it big
    …Thirteen-year-old female cricketer eyes the big time
    BY PAUL A REID Observer West writer
    Thursday, January 27, 2011

    SAV-LA-MAR, Westmoreland — SUCCESS breeds success and following in the footsteps of Jamaica's Stephanie Taylor and Shanel Daley on the West Indies women's cricket team, another potential star is quietly biding her time to shine.

    Thirteen-year-old Mannings School first-former Ashli Grant has been keeping a close watch on the success of Taylor, the number two-ranked female batter in the world.


    GRANT... I am fast, I bowl fast



    GRANT... I am fast, I bowl fast


    1/1

    The 5' 9" player, who is a teammate of Taylor on the Westmoreland women's team, has been writing her own story and is confident that soon she will be among the top players in the island.

    A bowling all-rounder she has best figures of four wickets for 11 runs including a hat-trick while representing Enfield Primary in a game against Holly Hill Primary.

    She was also a member of the Enfield team that won the all-island primary schools title in 2009. When asked if she bowled at slow medium pace, she firmly but politely said: "No, I am fast; I bowl fast."

    A student with an 8.7 (out of 10.0) average who is on the most recent honour roll at Mannings, Grant told the Observer West she does not play any other sport, "just cricket, because I love the game".

    Asked about netball, she just shrugged and said, "It is not enjoyable enough like cricket".

    Her love of the male-dominated sport came from her father Oliver, her first and only coach who heads the sports department at Knockalva Technical and who is also a student at GC Foster Sports College.

    The Grants, who appeared to have a close bond, are facing a new hurdle as Mannings does not have a female cricket team and they were not certain if she would be allowed to play on the school's team alongside boys.

    A check with the Inter-secondary Schools Sports Association (ISSA) organisers of sports in high schools confirmed however, that she would be able to represent the school at the Under-16 level.

    George Forbes, competitions co-ordinator at ISSA, told the Observer West: "Up to age 16, girls are allowed to play high- school cricket."

    So for the next three years, Ashli -- who names Sri Lankan Chaminda Vaas as her cricketing hero -- has her eyes set on honing her skills to a high level with the national and regional senior women's team being her longer-term goals.


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