For many decades, Women and girls\' cricket has been under-represented, under-financed, undervalued and lacking in true organisation.
Packed with practical advice, the book has original contributions from some of the most influential players, administrators, coaches and broadcasters in the world, including: Charlotte Edwards, Alyssa Healy, Heather Knight, Kate Cross, Ebony Rainford-Brent, Henry Moeran, Nat Sciver, Isa Guha, Lisa Sthalekar, Mel Jones, Lisa Keightley, Alex Hartley, Clare Connor, Ali Mitchell, Charles Dagnall, Katherine Brunt, Amy Jones and more..
Lydia Greenway has written a full guide on coaching, administration, formats, techniques, EDI and more.
This book is the answer.
What is needed now, is to build on these successes, to provide resources and information for clubs, schools and coaches to start, to grow and to coach their own programmes.
We\'ve seen full houses at Lords and the MCG, we\'ve seen the success of the Hundred, the Women\'s Big Bash, the prospect of a Women\'s IPL and most importantly, thousands of new players across the world benefitting from everything cricket has to offer.
Recent years have seen an explosion of female participation, broadcast coverage, new teams, new clubs, new competitions and an undeniable sense that Women and girls\' cricket is establishing itself as the most significant growth area of the game.
Despite this, many thousands of female players over the years have fought against the barriers, developed their skills and fallen in love with this incredible sport.
For many decades, Women and girls\' cricket has been under-represented, under-financed, undervalued and lacking in true organisation