Nat Sciver-Brunt to Captain England in T20 World Cup Semi-Final After Injury Recovery
Quick Look
- Nat Sciver-Brunt returns to captain England in their T20 World Cup semi-final against South Africa at the Oval after recovering from a calf injury.
- She missed three group matches, undergoing intensive therapy, and will lead an unbeaten England team against underdog South Africa.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Nat Sciver-Brunt missed England's last three T20 World Cup group matches due to a calf injury recurrence, undergoing intensive recovery to return for the semi-final.
Nat Sciver-Brunt will return to captain England in their T20 World Cup semi-final against South Africa at the Oval after being “put through my recovery paces”.
The 33-year-old missed the last three matches of the group stages after retiring hurt against Ireland with a recurrence of the calf injury she sustained in April.
Since then, England’s medical staff have pulled out all the stops to get her back to fitness, including seven hour-long sessions of magnetic resonance therapy, a technique Sciver-Brunt described as “sitting for an hour and not moving, with my leg in a horseshoe-shaped thing”.
“I’ve been put through my recovery paces, and worked really hard to get myself to this position,” Sciver-Brunt said on Wednesday. “I’m really happy to be sat here.”
Having been tipped to return for Saturday’s nine-wicket defeat of New Zealand, it was decided she would benefit from a longer recovery time given that England had already reached the semi-finals.
Even now there is an element of risk, with a clear sense that the decision has been made partly because this is a high-stakes home semi-final.
Sciver-Brunt batted in the nets on Wednesday but was not involved in any outdoor fielding sessions. “We’ve tested it [my calf] enough to be comfortable,” she said. “Myself and the medical team are really happy with where we’re at. Everything has gone to plan as well as it could do.”
She refused to confirm who would be dropped to make way for her, but the most likely option is a straight swap at No 3 for Sophia Dunkley. Dunkley has hit winning knocks of 57 against Scotland and 49 not out against New Zealand in the competition, but the head coach, Charlotte Edwards is known to favour continuity in the batting order and so unlikely to want to disrupt it for a knockout game. “Lots of different people have stood up,” Sciver-Brunt said. “Someone’s going to be really disappointed tomorrow.”
Given how capably Charlie Dean has deputised for Sciver-Brunt, there had been some suggestion that Sciver-Brunt might return as a pure batter to relieve some of the pressure, but she said this had never been on the cards. “[Dean] is happy to pass it [the captaincy] back – she said she definitely didn’t want to do any more media,” Sciver-Brunt joked.
South Africa go into this semi-final as huge underdogs, facing a team who are unbeaten in this tournament, in front of what is likely to be a capacity crowd barracking for England.
By contrast, the Proteas have struggled with the bat, losing their opener to Australia and limping across the line in close contests against Pakistan and Bangladesh. That said, England have a poor recent record against them in knockouts. South Africa beat the odds back in 2023 at Newlands to knock England out in the semi-final stage.
“Being from Cape Town, that was a really cool day,” the openr Laura Wolvaardt said. “I had all my family and friends in the crowd. Our team hasn’t changed too much since then so we’ve got a lot of people that are able to draw on that experience. This is a team that is able to rise to the big occasions. It should give us confidence knowing that we’ve done it before.”
Sciver-Brunt is treating the match as a clean slate. “It’s different to how we felt in the previous World Cup, or the last two years,” she said. “It feels now that everyone has settled into the way we’re doing things and have really grown in confidence in their abilities. As a team you go through different ups and downs as you go through tournaments, but the vibes are high.”
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Someone will be dropped from the England team to make way for Nat Sciver-Brunt.
Very likely · Within hours
Open Questions
- Who will be dropped from the England team to accommodate Sciver-Brunt's return?






