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Steffie Soogrim Logo
Steffie Soogrim Jersy
Steffie Soogrim
Team flagCAR24 yrs
batting styleleft-arm orthodox spin Bowler

Steffie Soogrim Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Steffie Soogrim Recent Form

Batting

TT-W vs LWI-W, T201 (1) *
TT-W vs GY-W, T200 (2)
TT-W vs WWI-W, T206 (8)
TT-W vs BAR-W, T200 (2)
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Bowling

TT-W vs LWI-W, T200-15
TT-W vs GY-W, T201-13
TT-W vs WWI-W, T202-13
TT-W vs JAM-W, T204-2
TT-W vs BAR-W, T203-15
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Steffie Soogrim Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
CPL1000000.000.0000----
T2054700653.852.3300----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
CPL1000.000.000000.00----
T2055103.085.804/22011.30----

Career Debut Information

CPL Debut
Guyana Amazon Warriors Women v Trinbago Knight Riders Women Warner Park, Basseterre, St Kitts, 2-9-2022
T20 Debut Barbados Women v Trinidad and Tobago Women Arnos Vale Stadium, Kingstown, St Vincent , 2-5-2025

Teams played for

West Indies Women

About Steffie Soogrim

NameSteffie Soogrim
GenderFemale
Birth21 Jul 2001
NationalityCaribbean
RoleBowler
Batsleft handed . lower order
Bowlsleft-arm orthodox spin . Spinner

The sound of ball on bat carries differently in the Caribbean: sharp, echoing, almost like a drumbeat. In a small ground in Trinidad, where children chase boundaries barefoot and cricket blends seamlessly with everyday rhythm, Steffie Soogrim’s journey began. She was not the loudest presence, not the one who celebrated every wicket with exuberance. Instead, she had the quiet focus of someone who saw cricket not just as a pastime but as a calling. From those early matches on school fields, she was marked as a bowler with both rhythm and resolve, traits that would eventually propel her to the doorstep of international cricket.... continue reading

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Player Bio

The sound of ball on bat carries differently in the Caribbean: sharp, echoing, almost like a drumbeat. In a small ground in Trinidad, where children chase boundaries barefoot and cricket blends seamlessly with everyday rhythm, Steffie Soogrim’s journey began. She was not the loudest presence, not the one who celebrated every wicket with exuberance. Instead, she had the quiet focus of someone who saw cricket not just as a pastime but as a calling. From those early matches on school fields, she was marked as a bowler with both rhythm and resolve, traits that would eventually propel her to the doorstep of international cricket.

Born in July 2001, Soogrim belongs to a generation of West Indian women cricketers who have had to carve out their identities in a sport still building its structures for female athletes. What makes her story compelling is not just her talent, but her persistence. In Trinidad and Tobago, opportunities for young women in cricket have grown but remain competitive. To emerge from that system takes both performance and patience, qualities she has displayed in abundance.

Her early career was defined by consistency. Representing Trinidad and Tobago Women at the domestic level, Soogrim quickly became known as a dependable left-arm spinner who could apply the brakes on scoring, a rare and valuable skill in the frenetic format of T20 cricket. She wasn’t just about the economy; she could also strike. In regional tournaments, she delivered spells that suffocated batting line-ups, often finishing with figures like 2 for 15 or 3 for 20, the kind of numbers that don’t just win games but build reputations.

The 2023 Women’s Caribbean Premier League (WCPL) marked a turning point in her visibility. Selected for the Trinbago Knight Riders Women, Soogrim suddenly found herself sharing a dressing room with international names, Stafanie Taylor, Deandra Dottin, and Hayley Matthews. For a young bowler, this was both intimidating and invigorating. Her performance justified the faith: in the group stages, she bowled with discipline, picking up wickets at crucial intervals. One particular spell, where she dismissed an established international batter with a beautifully flighted delivery, remains a highlight of her early career.

Left-arm orthodox bowlers thrive on guile, and Steffie’s trajectory indicates she is learning that craft steadily. She tosses the ball up bravely, encourages batters to drive, and then uses drift to force errors. Coaches in Trinidad have praised her work ethic, noting that she is the first to arrive at practice and the last to leave.

Her personality off the pitch mirrors her bowling: thoughtful, deliberate, and grounded. In interviews, she has spoken about the responsibility she feels representing not only her team but young women in her community who aspire to play cricket. “If one girl sees me and thinks she can play too, then I’ve already done something worthwhile,” she remarked during a regional press interaction. That sentiment underlines her awareness that her career is not just about wickets, but about representation.

Soogrim’s selection for the West Indies A Women’s squad in 2023 further validated her rise. Wearing the maroon, even at the A-team level, is a significant step; it signals that selectors see her as part of the future. In matches against touring sides, she bowled with composure, even when targeted by aggressive batters. Those experiences, far more than the numbers alone, hardened her resolve. She learned what it takes to succeed beyond regional cricket: resilience, adaptability, and the courage to be hit and still come back with flight and spin.

Her game still has layers to build. Analysts note that while her control is excellent, she needs to develop more variations, the quicker ones, the arm ball disguised better, and subtle changes of pace. These are the tools that will enable her to transition from being effective domestically to being a threat internationally.

The Caribbean has always produced cricketers with flair, but Soogrim represents another archetype, discipline. Her bowling is not about extravagant spin or unplayable deliveries, but about building pressure, forcing mistakes, and creating impact quietly. It is the kind of style that wins tournaments, even if it doesn’t always dominate highlight reels.

Her journey is also emblematic of the broader growth of women’s cricket in the region. With tournaments like the WCPL providing platforms and role models, players like Soogrim are no longer isolated talents but part of a rising wave. Every over she bowls, every wicket she takes, is part of a larger narrative, one where West Indies women’s cricket is striving to match its men’s legacy with a new generation of stars.

Looking ahead, the path is clear. If she continues to hone her craft, strengthen her batting to add depth, and embraces the challenges of international competition, Steffie Soogrim could become a mainstay in the West Indies side. More than that, she could embody the kind of cricketer the region needs: grounded, dependable, and quietly transformative.

For now, she remains a bowler to watch, a young woman carrying both her dreams and those of others who see in her the possibility of a future in cricket. Every ball she delivers is more than an attempt at a wicket; it is a step in the unfolding story of her own becoming.

(As of August 2025)