England’s Sciver-Brunt aiming to end title drought at T20 World Cup 2026 England has underachieved since winning the 2017 Women’s World Cup, and it is determined to put that right when it hosts the Twenty20 edition on home soil in June, captain Nat Sciver-Brunt said.
The 33-year-old replaced Heather Knight as all-format captain in April last year, and the T20 World Cup will be her second major International Cricket Council (ICC) event as captain and her first at home.
Sciver-Brunt led the team at the 50-over World Cup last year in India and Sri Lanka, where it was knocked out in the semifinals by South Africa.
“We would have liked to have won a lot more than we have done and we’d obviously like that to change this summer,” she told BBC Sport on Monday.
“A win could change what women’s cricket looks like in this country. Just the carrot of that is enough to motivate anyone, really. It certainly could change what this team is about. We didn’t really do it after 2017, but being a consistently good team is something that everyone tries to do. I’m hoping we can be a consistently good team and we’d love to start off with a T20 World Cup win.”
England is drawn in Group B alongside defending champion New Zealand, West Indies, Sri Lanka, Ireland and Scotland. It opens its campaign in the 12-team tournament against Sri Lanka on June 12.
Published on Apr 28, 2026
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England has underachieved since winning the 2017 Women’s World Cup, and it is determined to put that right when it hosts the Twenty20 edition on home soil in June, captain Nat Sciver-Brunt said.
The 33-year-old replaced Heather Knight as all-format captain in April last year, and the T20 World Cup will be her second major International Cricket Council (ICC) event as captain and her first at home.
Sciver-Brunt led the team at the 50-over World Cup last year in India and Sri Lanka, where it was knocked out in the semifinals by South Africa.
“We would have liked to have won a lot more than we have done and we’d obviously like that to change this summer,” she told BBC Sport on Monday.
“A win could change what women’s cricket looks like in this country. Just the carrot of that is enough to motivate anyone, really. It certainly could change what this team is about. We didn’t really do it after 2017, but being a consistently good team is something that everyone tries to do. I’m hoping we can be a consistently good team and we’d love to start off with a T20 World Cup win.”
England is drawn in Group B alongside defending champion New Zealand, West Indies, Sri Lanka, Ireland and Scotland. It opens its campaign in the 12-team tournament against Sri Lanka on June 12.
Published on Apr 28, 2026


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