The English allrounder, selected ICC's Women's Cricketer of the Year for the second consecutive year, on her purple patch and how to cope with the ups and downs of international sports
A diplomat's kid born in Japan, Nat Sciver-Brunt played cricket only sporadically during her growing-up years, and her love for the game blossomed much later when she moved back to England, and only because it helped her hang out with her friends. The sport, though, loved her right back—a Surrey County coach spotted her at school, and then, right after university, she was drafted into the international team in the 2013 series against Pakistan. She won the Player of the Match award in only her second ODI, taking three wickets for 28 runs. In 2013, she became the first-ever English cricketer to take a T20I hat-trick.
While she has been a key allrounder for England in international cricket, Sciver-Brunt flourished particularly in the last two years: In 2023, she was selected as ICC Women's Cricketer of the Year for the second time on the trot, and was also part of the ICC's ODI and T20 teams of the year. The 31-year-old recently sat down for a chat with Forbes India and broke down her rise and rise in international cricket. Edited excerpts:
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