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Women's Cricket England take action ahead of Pakistan series

A NEW era for England will get under way in Kuala Lumpur next month, with the players taking it on themselves to kick-start the process.

Heather Knight’s side will take on Pakistan in three one-day internationals and three Twenty20s between December 9-20, with Ali Maiden overseeing a 15-strong squad in an interim capacity.

World Cup-winning head coach Mark Robinson paid the price for a dreadful Ashes series when he departed in August and his replacement, Australian Lisa Keightley, will not begin her reign until the new year, following her commitments in the Big Bash League.

Keightley, who has previously headed up the England Academy and the Australia national side, will be travelling to Malaysia to meet, greet and assess a group that includes Worcestershire leg-spinner Sarah Glenn for the first time, as well as recent debutant Mady Villiers and the returning Freya Davies.

The new boss will no doubt have ideas of her own about how to re-energise a squad that has under-delivered in 2019, but Lancashire seamer Kate Cross has revealed that job is already under way after a team get-together.

“It started about eight weeks ago,” she said. “We met up as a team and talked about what we wanted to achieve and how we wanted to achieve it.

“We were at the stage where we didn’t have a head coach and I think the idea came from Heather. Whoever came in, whether it was for Kuala Lumpur or afterwards, we wanted to start that process of moving things forward.

“It felt like there was a change of tone in the room. With that group of players in the room, I don’t know how many caps and [how much] experience there was, but it was incredible.

“We said as a group that we didn’t achieve what we should have in the Ashes. We shouldn’t have lost all those games (England drew the only Ashes Test but lost five out of six white-ball matches) because we’re not a bad team. We talked about things ‘at our best, at our worst, what does our foundation look like?’ We as players had to lead that — people like Katherine Brunt, who’s been around as long as I can remember, Heather as captain, a lot of girls who’ve won the World Cup.

“It was important for us to take more ownership and be more responsible for what we do on the pitch.

“The Ashes was really difficult for us and something had to change. It was a blessing and a curse. We had to highlight the changes that really change a group of players because we know how much we have to improve.”

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