Issy Wong: 'Sometimes you're the bug and sometimes you're the windshield'

The fast bowler is looking forward to showing how much she’s learned since losing her place in the England women’s side

Vishal Dikshit20-Feb-2024Issy Wong was just 20 years old when she became an all-format international cricketer, a feat not many can lay claim to. She is among the fastest bowlers in the women’s circuit, one of the most promising young players in England, and was earmarked as the successor to Katherine Sciver-Brunt.Wong, however, has fallen off England’s plans over the last year, having been dropped from all three formats, but the harshest blow was losing her place in the T20 side. She missed out on last year’s World Cup, where England lost the semi-final to hosts South Africa, but there’s another one coming up in September-October in Bangladesh and with it comes the chance for redemption.With year’s Women’s Premier League, starting February 23, being held in the lead-up to the 2024 T20 World Cup, Wong is hoping to use the tournament in India to make her way back into the England squad by working on the “feedback” she has received from the team management.Wong had a stellar season for champions Mumbai Indians in the inaugural WPL, with 15 wickets in 10 games (including a hat-trick in the Eliminator match). Except, she couldn’t quite replicate the same form in the home summer, managing just one wicket in 30 balls across five games in the Hundred for Birmingham Phoenix and featured in just one T20I in 2023. It’s ironing out those ups and downs that she’s focused on now.”I’m really looking forward to it,” Wong told ESPNcricinfo of the upcoming WPL. “I probably played close to my best cricket last year and I’m looking to build on that and to keep hopefully contributing. That’s what, as players, we want to do. We want to contribute to the success of the team, and I was lucky enough to do that last year. Obviously, probably things didn’t go my way last summer but that’s life, isn’t it, sometimes good things, sometimes [bad] … But otherwise, you say ‘sometimes you’re the bug and sometimes you’re the windshield’. I felt like the windshield in India last year and I was probably the bug in England. It is what it is. You just got to keep driving.

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