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Bess Heath Jersy
Bess Heath
Team flagENG23 yrs
batting styleWicketKeeper Batter

Bess Heath Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Bess Heath Recent Form

Batting

NS-W vs SB-W, 100B3 (6)
DUR-W vs SOM-W, LIST A31 (32)
DUR-W vs LAN-W, LIST A6 (7)
DUR-W vs ESS-W, T2024 (18)
DUR-W vs LAN-W, T2043 (23)
DUR-W vs HAM-W, T201 (2)
DUR-W vs ESS-W, T204 (5)
DUR-W vs SOM-W, T2038 (25) *
DUR-W vs TBZ, T2045 (27)
DUR-W vs WAR-W, T2027 (18)
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Bess Heath Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
ODI44590033100.0019.6731----
T20I43600346.152.0000----
BBL24203060151109.2917.00425----
100B33282420157124.109.68287----
LIST A494511710978100.4331.6513315----
T2039398210460129.7024.889711----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
ODI4000.000.000000.00----
T20I4000.000.000000.00----
BBL24000.000.000000.00----
100B33000.000.000000.00----
LIST A49000.000.000000.00----
T2039000.000.000000.00----

Career Debut Information

ODI Debut England Women v Sri Lanka Women Grace Road, Leicester, United Kingdom, 14-9-2023
T20I Debut India Women v England Women Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai, 10-12-2023
BBL Debut
Brisbane Heat Women v Melbourne Stars Women Ray Mitchell Oval, Harrup Park Mackay, 15-10-2022
100B Debut
Northern Superchargers Women v Welsh Fire Women Headingley, Leeds, 24-7-2021
LIST A Debut
Northern Diamonds v Southern Vipers County Ground, Northampton, 25-9-2021
T20 Debut
Northern Diamonds v Sunrisers Roseworth Terrace, Gosforth, 25-8-2021

Teams played for

Northern Diamonds

About Bess Heath

NameBess Heath
GenderFemale
Birth20 Aug 2001
Birth PlaceChesterfield, Derbyshire
Height5 ft 5 in
NationalityEnglish
RoleWicket-keeper
Batsright handed . middle order
Bowlsna .

Some players crash into the spotlight like fireworks. Others, like Bess Heath, arrive more like sunrise, quiet, steady, and entirely impossible to ignore once they’re fully there. With a bat in hand and gloves behind the stumps, she has steadily built a reputation in England’s cricketing circles as a bright, fearless ball-striker with an edge, a player who doesn’t flinch under pressure and doesn’t overthink her game. Still in the early stages of her international career, Heath’s story feels less like a breakthrough and more like a brewing force that’s just getting started.... continue reading

Player Bio

Some players crash into the spotlight like fireworks. Others, like Bess Heath, arrive more like sunrise, quiet, steady, and entirely impossible to ignore once they’re fully there. With a bat in hand and gloves behind the stumps, she has steadily built a reputation in England’s cricketing circles as a bright, fearless ball-striker with an edge, a player who doesn’t flinch under pressure and doesn’t overthink her game. Still in the early stages of her international career, Heath’s story feels less like a breakthrough and more like a brewing force that’s just getting started.

Born on August 20, 2001, in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, Bess Heath was introduced to the game in a family that cherished cricket. From the outset, she stood out as someone who had both the athleticism to be a wicketkeeper and the natural hand-eye coordination to strike the ball cleanly. As a junior cricketer, she was already showcasing her dual potential,  glovework that showed precision beyond her years and a batting style that leaned more toward aggression than caution. She represented Derbyshire in age-group levels before breaking into the county senior team, and it didn’t take long for the wider cricketing world to take notice.

Her early days with Yorkshire Diamonds in the now-defunct Kia Super League were significant. Though she was still raw, the flashes were unmistakable,  a counterattacking fifty here, a sharp stumping there. Heath’s strength lay in her intent. Whether walking in at 20 for 2 or 120 for 2, she played the same way, with clarity, confidence, and that rare modern-day mix of power and range. She wasn’t afraid to clear the infield or take on senior bowlers, and coaches saw in her a long-term white-ball prospect.

But it was with the advent of the regional structure in 2020 that Bess Heath’s game found consistency. Joining the Northern Diamonds, she became a core member of a team that quickly turned into one of the powerhouses of domestic women’s cricket. She was instrumental in several of their deep runs in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy and the Charlotte Edwards Cup, often batting in the middle order and absorbing pressure with maturity beyond her age. In 2021, she scored a rapid-fire 52 off 36 balls in an RHF match that turned the tide,  one of several reminders that her batting wasn’t just about aesthetics; it was built for impact.

By 2022, Heath was on the radar for higher honours. She had sharpened her keeping, improved her fitness, and become one of the best finishers in the regional circuit. Her strike rate hovered above 100 in most formats, a rare feat in a league still developing its explosive middle-order hitters. What set her apart, however, was not just her ability to finish an innings, but her fearlessness against spin,  often the undoing of many young English batters. She swept, reverse-swept, and lofted with authority, breaking down bowling attacks in the middle overs where others tended to stagnate.

Her performances in The Hundred with the Northern Superchargers brought her a broader audience. Batting in the lower middle order, Heath brought tempo and range, often rescuing innings from collapse or providing quick cameos in the final overs.

The England call-up arrived in September 2023, not as a surprise, but as a long-awaited nod to her domestic dominance. She made her international debut in a T20I against Sri Lanka, and while the numbers didn’t explode off the page, what stood out was her body language.

In the 2024 Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy, she finished among the top five run-scorers, with over 350 runs in the season, including two fifties and a blistering 97 that nearly took the team home in a tight chase. Her wicketkeeping, too, has evolved with time. Once known primarily for her batting, she’s now equally respected behind the stumps, with quick hands, clean takes, and a calm presence that anchors the infield.

Her style is distinctly modern. She is not bound by convention, preferring risk over restraint when the situation demands it. And yet, she doesn’t play with recklessness; her aggression is informed, her risks calculated. Coaches and pundits alike have praised her ability to read matchups, especially against spinners, where her decisive footwork and use of angles give her an edge. It’s this brand of smart, aggressive cricket that positions her as a player built for the new era.

There is a groundedness to her rise. No overnight success story, no sudden burst into stardom, just season after season of performance, grit, and sharpening of craft. Bess Heath represents a new generation of English cricketers who’ve come through the grassroots, honed their game through the rigours of domestic formats, and emerged ready, not rushed, for the big stage. The numbers will grow in time. The accolades will follow. But the foundation, already, is rock solid.

(As of August 2025)