Phoenix hoping to rise on back of Bears' blueprint
Ellyse Perry keen to get started under new head coach Ali Maiden, who steered Bears Women to Blast runners-up spot
Alan Gardner
06-Aug-2025 • 3 hrs ago
Ellyse Perry is back for her third season in Birmingham • ECB/Getty Images
Ellyse Perry says Birmingham Phoenix will be approaching the new women's Hundred season with "very much a clean slate" as they look to make significant improvement on last year's seventh-place finish and reach the knockouts for the first time since the competition began in 2021.
Perry is back for a third campaign in Phoenix orange, and second as captain, but there have been extensive changes throughout the set-up at Edgbaston, with a new head coach - Ali Maiden replacing Ben Sawyer - and significant turnover among the playing group.
Perry's Australia compatriots, Megan Schutt and Georgia Voll - the latter a £65,000 (US$86,350) signing in March's draft after her stellar rise - will help fill the overseas slots, with former Phoenix captain Sophie Devine having moved to Southern Brave, while the core of the squad that Maiden, who was on the coaching staff of title-winners London Spirit last year, has assembled features an increased number of the players that he works with in his joint role in charge of Bears Women.
Stir in another international recruit in Emma Lamb, who arrives from Manchester Originals having returned to England colours in recent weeks, and with Sterre Kalis, the Netherlands batter who was a key cog of the Bears side that reached the final of the women's T20 Blast last month, leading the social side of things and Phoenix will hope to begin their season on Friday against Trent Rockets in buoyant mood.
"I've chatted to Ali for the last six months or so, since he has come into the role, and he's obviously also taken on Warwickshire over the summer, and I think it was really clear the way that they wanted to play, especially in the Vitality Blast," Perry said at a KP Snacks event in Charlton Park, helping to celebrate their achievement of installing 100 all-weather, grassroots community cricket pitches across England and Wales.
"It's a really positive brand of cricket, which I know is spoken about all the time in the shorter format, but I think he's got a real emphasis on athleticism, and creating opportunities with bat and ball through that. So that's really exciting for us. He's obviously had some really great success with Warwickshire in the first season of the new competition, and he just brings some great energy and enthusiasm to the group. I know the girls are really excited to play under him."
Perry led both the batting and bowling averages in 2024 but lacked support, notably in run-scoring, with Kalis, Devine and Amy Jones the only other Phoenix players to aggregate more than 100. Although the team finished second from bottom, their tally of three wins was three more than the season before, when they came last in the group.
Perry said that recruitment for the upcoming campaign had focused on building "some really strong batting depth, which is something we've spoken about a lot in terms of being able to take the game on earlier, probably something that we struggled with last year".
"When you build depth, it gives you a little bit more leeway to do that [bat aggressively] and confidence and sort of buy in from the entire group, knowing that we've got a lot of weaponry in the cupboard to do that right throughout. So yeah, it will definitely be a focus for us, and I think we've got the blend to do that."
Joining Kalis in the squad are fellow Bears, Em Arlott, Hannah Baker, Phoebe Brett, Bethan Ellis and Miller Taylor. Alongside confidence built from the team's Blast form, as they narrowly lost out to Surrey in the final, Perry said the group would benefit from Maiden's "clarity" in the way he wants to play.
"Ali is quite distinct and prescriptive about how he wants us to play in some respects, which is a really nice thing with when you see that be effective. And, yeah, I thought the Bears played some really great cricket across the Vitality Blast, and got some girls in some really good form. But equally someone like Emma Lamb's had a great summer so far. It's just nice to have that real clarity and confidence in the way that you want to play and know that it can be effective.
"I guess every season in a franchise competition is really very much a clean slate. You look at how much changes across the board, whether that's personnel or, in particular in women's cricket, the depth of the competition and just and how close teams are now becoming in terms of lists.
"So we've got a really fresh team this year, new staff, right across the board. So I think it's probably just a really great opportunity to lay a new foundation, play a style of cricket that we're really keen on playing. In terms of results, the things that you can control are really just the effort that you put in and how you want to play. The rest of it is kind of a bit of madness in franchise cricket, and to see how that pans out."
Perry was able to observe Maiden's Bears at reasonably close quarters, having spent the last month playing for Hampshire; she made 58 off 44 balls before falling to Phoenix team-mate Baker when the Hawks were beaten at Utilita Bowl. The switch to lining up alongside those same players is one that regulars on the franchise circuit such as Perry are used to.
"In this day and age, that's not really a foreign concept. You play against and with team-mates all the time across various competitions. I had an absolutely amazing time at Hampshire. Was a really great experience, and a wonderful group of people. And just really lovely to be able to make new friends.
"In terms of the Phoenix girls, we've got a pretty fresh group, not too many players from last year. So there's quite an air of excitement around the group, some nerves, but in a good way, and just lots of energy, which is really cool. I know some of the girls from various instances, and then there's some girls I don't know as well. So it'll be really cool to bring all that together."
KP Snacks, the Official Team Partner of the Hundred, are celebrating the installation of 100 new community cricket pitches across England and Wales. To find out more and search for your nearest pitch, visit: www.everyonein.co.uk/pitchfinder
Alan Gardner is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo. @alanroderick