We have been specific and clear with how we want to play in UAE: Sophie Devine
"With a change in venue, it’s important for us that we make the best of those conditions," Devine wrote in a recent column.
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New Zealand skipper Sophie Devine reckons that T20 format has led to significant growth of women's cricket as a sport. With the 2024 T20 World Cup approaching soon, she opened up on her team's strategy and mindset going into the mega tournament. As written for ICC:
The ICC Women’s T20 World Cup has been a great vehicle in getting the public behind the women’s game and the upcoming tournament is another great opportunity to showcase our sport.
Winning the trophy is certainly our goal. We want to be competitive in all the games that we play and have the ability to adapt to the conditions.
We have been specific and clear with how we want to play and what we think is going to work in those conditions. We reflected and reviewed how we’d played and what we’d worked on previously and have had a real eye on what the conditions are like.
Also Read: ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024: The Venues
There’s been a real focus on spin bowling, which I’m sure everyone is going to focus on, but for us it’s about strike rate and scoring shot percentages. With the bat, we’re wanting to be really busy at the crease, we know that the conditions might be tough, so every run is going to be valuable. On the flip side, with the ball we want to be as accurate as possible. Staying on stumps and making opposition players play the most difficult shots; this has been a key focus for us.
We played there a while back in 2017, a series against Pakistan in Sharjah, so it’s going back a fair while. There hasn’t been too much cricket in the UAE so it will be a real challenge for all the teams around how they adapt, but we are excited to play there.
Obviously, the weather and the heat are going to be a real factor, but that was always going to be the case whether we were in Bangladesh or UAE.
One of my favourite past T20 World Cup moments was also in the subcontinent, in India in 2016 when we beat the Aussies. We had a fair bit of travel to get to the place we were playing but we just got on with it and had them in some early trouble before managing to get away with a pretty awesome win against a side that was flying pretty high. That’s certainly up there for me.
Also Read: Women’s T20 World Cup 2024: How teams qualified
We will play Australia in the pool stage again this time around in what is a challenging pool. When you’ve got India and Australia, as well as Sri Lanka, it’s going to be a pretty tough pool to progress through, but we certainly love our chances coming up against those sorts of teams.
In one-off games and in World Cup cricket, everyone starts on zero, so we are really looking forward to the opportunity to play against world-class teams that will all be vying to be there come the end of the World Cup.
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