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Issy Wong believes the time is right for England win back Women’s Ashes from Australia


England seamer Issy Wong says is raring to win back the Women’s Ashes when they take on Australia later this summer.

The Southern Stars arrive this summer with a truly formidable reputation, having won each of the last four World Cup competitions as well as winning three and drawing one of their last four series against England.

On paper, the deck is stacked in their favour but Wong is happy to crank up the fighting talk.

She is less than a year into an exciting international career but, having played a starring role for champions Mumbai Indians in the recent Women’s Premier League, the 20-year-old is in no mood to take a backward step.

“I think it’s a pretty good time to play them, you know, just quietly,” she said.

“They are undoubtably, in my opinion, one of the greatest sports teams in history – any sport, any gender. Their record over the last 10 years is absolutely outrageous.

“But it feels like that kind of golden era they’ve had is, you know…”

Wong left the rest of the thought unfinished, stopping short of fully tempting fate, but plans to find out if the tourists have it in them to match their own impeccable standards when the pressure is on.

“There’s a lot of new faces in that group that are unbelievably talented but, I guess, haven’t necessarily played the biggest part for them over the last couple of years,” she said.

“I think it’s a really good time to actually go at them and say, ‘right, you are the best team in history, but you’ve a couple of new faces in here. Let’s see if you’re as good as you were five years ago’.”

Despite Wong’s lack of Ashes experience, she needs no help demystifying the opposition.

She shared a Birmingham Phoenix dressing room with Australia’s star all-rounder Ellyse Perry in last year’s Hundred competition, and will do so again in August, and opened the bowling against their skipper Meg Lanning in the WPL final.

The growing franchise circuit has helped close the gap between domestic and international cricket, allowing Wong to view world-beating rivals as individuals rather than untouchables.

“I’ve never played them but I don’t view them as ‘the Australians’. I think you’ve played against these guys so much that you kind of get to know them,” she said.

“They’re humans at the end of the day and humans do good things and humans do bad things. So I think that landscape is changing.

“The franchise stuff is actually going to even out the playing field on an international level because people are playing against each other a lot more.

“Those are the best battles because each person’s having to adapt their game and do things a little bit differently. It’s like chess. You don’t want to watch a Grandmaster play against a six-year-old because it’s just going to be rubbish.

“When you’ve got two people who’ve played against each other a lot, they’re working each other out. And that’s how the game is evolving.

“I think the Ashes is going to be amazing. It’s the two best teams in women’s cricket going up against each other over six weeks in every single format of the game. I don’t think it gets much better than that.”

The Women’s Ashes takes place in June and July, starting with a five-day Test at Trent Bridge before three T20s and three ODIs.



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