- Charlotte Edwards
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Charlotte Edwards Personal information Full name Charlotte Marie Edwards Born 17 December 1979
Huntingdon, EnglandBatting style Right-handed Bowling style Right-arm leg spin Role Batsman International information Test debut (cap 123) 12 July 1996 v New Zealand women Last Test 18 February 2008 v Australia women ODI debut (cap 73) 15 August 1997 v South Africa women Last ODI 22 March 2009 v New Zealand women ODI shirt no. 23 Domestic team information Years Team 2000–present Kent Women 2000–2003 Northern Districts Women 1994–1999 East Anglia Women Career statistics Competition Tests ODI T20I Matches 19 145 35 Runs scored 1,522 4,300 966 Batting average 49.09 36.75 32.20 100s/50s 4/8 4/35 0/4 Top score 117 173* 76* Balls bowled 1,112 1,591 282 Wickets 12 54 9 Bowling average 47.50 20.98 33.44 5 wickets in innings 0 0 0 10 wickets in match 0 n/a n/a Best bowling 2/28 4/30 3/21 Catches/stumpings 9/– 32/– 9/– Source: Cricinfo, 19 May 2011 Charlotte Marie Edwards MBE (born 17 December 1979 at Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire) is an English cricketer and current captain of the England women's team.[1]
At the time when she made her England debut in 1995, she became the youngest player ever to play for England, (later bettered by team-mate Holly Colvin).
In 1997, she smashed 12 centuries, including one off 118 balls against the touring South Africans. The day before her 18th birthday, she scored a then-record ODI score of 173 not out in a World Cup match against Ireland. In 1998-99, she scored her maiden Test hundred against India, but, while still scoring runs, fell below expectations. In 2000, she was sidelined by a serious cruciate ligament injury sustained while playing hockey, and causing her to miss most of the 2001 season.
In 2005, she stepped up from her role as England vice-captain to take full charge of the side when Clare Connor was injured, and was appointed full-time when Connor retired in March 2006. She plays her county cricket for Kent, whom she captains.
She played her 100th One-Day International on tour in Australia, and led her team to victory in the one-off Test match at Bowral to retain the Ashes, scoring 94 in England's first innings, and hitting the winning runs in the second.
She won the ICC Woman's player of the year 2008 at the ICC awards ceremony at Dubai. She led the England team in the 2009 World Cup in Australia, scoring a half century and taking a career best 4 for 37 in the Super Six victory over New Zealand, before captaining the side to a 4-wicket victory over the same opposition in the World Cup Final in Sydney.
Edwards was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2009 Birthday Honours.[2]
She led England to victory at Lord's in the final of the World Twenty/20 championship in June 2009. She scored 139 runs in the tournament, the third highest total, and took 4 wickets at 14.5 apiece, before recording an unbeaten half century in the second innings to help England retain the Ashes with a draw in the one-off Ashes test at New Road in Worcester.
On 17 November 2010, she won her 142nd One Day International cap when she captained England against Sri Lanka.[3] This appearance gave her the record number of ODI appearances, beating Australian Karen Rolton's 141. She took a career best 4 for 30 in the game. Clare Connor, the England and Wales Cricket Board's Head of Women's Cricket, praised Edwards' achievement, calling her as "a credit to women's cricket globally, a superb role model for girls who aspire to play for their country".
She scored her first Ashes century in England's one-off Test against Australia at Bankstown Oval on 22 January 2010, finishing unbeaten on 114 out of England's first innings of 207 all out.
Notes
Batsmen with 3,000 or more runs in Women's ODI cricket Brittin • 3 Cassar • 4 Connor • 5 Daniels • 6 Edwards • 7 Leng • 8 Metcalfe • 9 Newton • 10 Nicholson • 11 Plimmer • 12 Redfern • 13 Reynard • 14 Taylor
• 2England squad – 2000 Women's Cricket World Cup England squad – 2005 Women's Cricket World Cup England squad – 2009 Women's Cricket World Cup (3rd title) Categories:- English women cricketers
- England women Test cricketers
- England women One Day International cricketers
- England women Twenty20 International cricketers
- Northern Districts Spirit cricketers
- 1979 births
- Living people
- Members of the Order of the British Empire
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