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Heather Knight

Team flagENG34 yrs
batting styleright handed Batter
#39 Batter in ODI
#88 All Rounder in ODI
#17 Batter in T20I
#72 All Rounder in T20I

Professional Details

RoleBatter
Batsright handed . middle order
Bowlsright-arm off-break . Spinner

Teams played for

England Women Hobart Hurricanes Women Western Storm

Personal Details

NameHeather Knight
GenderFemale
Birth26 Dec 1990
Birth PlacePlymouth
Height170
NationalityEnglish

One of the most promising players for England over the last 10 years, Knight has been the backbone of the England batting line-up. A right-handed middle-order batter, Knight was the highest run-scorer in back-to-back County seasons in 2008 and 2009, and soon made her international debut in 2010. ... continue reading

Player Bio

One of the most promising players for England over the last 10 years, Knight has been the backbone of the England batting line-up. A right-handed middle-order batter, Knight was the highest run-scorer in back-to-back County seasons in 2008 and 2009, and soon made her international debut in 2010. 

She was called up in the England squad as a replacement for injured Sarah Taylor and played in the 5th ODI game of the series against India in 2010. She opened the batting and scored a terrific 49 on a sluggish wicket in Mumbai. A year later, she made her Test match debut in the one-off Test against Australia. 

Knight's standout performance to date was in the 2013 Ashes series against Australia at Wormsley. She scored 157 and batted for almost seven hours to help England secure a draw.

In 2014, she was appointed vice-captain of the national team and promoted to permanent skipper two years later. 

The Plymouth-born led England in the 2017 Women’s World Cup tournament. In the second group stage match against Pakistan, Knight, along with Natalie Sciver, went on to put together a record third-wicket partnership of 213 as England easily defeated Pakistan by 107 runs. 

England won the World Cup by beating India in the finals, and Knight was awarded an OBE in the Queen's 2018 New Year Honours List.

In the 2020 Women’s World T20, Knight scored her maiden T20I century playing against Thailand, and became the first women’s cricketer to score a century in all three game formats.

A legend of this beautiful game, Knight has achieved everything at the international level. She had big shoes to fill as a skipper when Charlotte Edwards retired from international cricket, but Knight has been a revolutionary captain for the English side and continues to perform well to date. 

Knight had already become a name etched in the chronicles of English cricket. But July brought a personal summit that few before her had conquered—crossing the 3,000-run mark in One Day Internationals. With that, she became only the fifth English woman to join that elite club, a quiet but powerful testament to years of resilience, craft, and composure. There was no grand fanfare, just another nudge of the scoreboard and a knowing glance that she was steadily building a legacy.

As England looked to evolve in white-ball cricket, Knight remained its dependable anchor, a strategist in the calm and a fighter in the storm. Her ability to merge pragmatism with flair gave the team a sense of rhythm—often steady, sometimes spectacular, always sincere.

And as a new frontier of the sport emerged, so did another chapter in Knight’s journey. The Hundred, cricket’s bold experiment, launched in 2021 with colours, fireworks, and questions. Knight was drafted by the London Spirit, a fitting name for someone who had so long embodied just that: spirit. She walked into this newer, faster format not as a wide-eyed rookie, but as a grounded leader willing to adapt and inspire.

In 2022, she returned to lead the Spirit again, her presence forming the quiet backbone of a side still finding its identity. While the format demanded urgency and the crowds roared for fireworks, Knight brought calm authority—a reminder that even in the shortest forms, roots matter.

Through those two years, whether it was the classical grind of ODIs or the splash and dash of The Hundred, Knight showed that greatness isn’t always about dramatic peaks. Sometimes, it’s about walking through every format, every season, with purpose—like a steady flame that never flickers, even when the winds of change blow strong.

In March 2023, the landscape of women’s cricket shifted yet again, this time with the drumroll of the inaugural Women’s Premier League in India. Among the marquee names swept into this new whirlwind was Heather Knight, signed by Royal Challengers Bangalore for INR 40 lakhs. It wasn’t just a purchase—it was a statement. A franchise steeped in cricketing glamour chose a player known less for flamboyance and more for steel, subtlety, and leadership.

Knight arrived in the WPL not with the razzmatazz of stardom but with the poise of experience. In a dressing room filled with youthful exuberance and high expectations, she offered balance. With the bat, she played the role of the steady hand, nudging, rotating, and accelerating when needed. Off the field, she became a sounding board, a mentor, the kind of presence that helps a team breathe in the pressure-cooker that is Indian franchise cricket.

After nearly a decade of steering England through triumphs, transitions, and trials, Heather Knight laid down the captaincy in March 2025. It was a moment both inevitable and immense. Nine years. 199 matches. 134 victories. These numbers tell only part of the story—of a leader who led with head and heart, guiding England through a golden World Cup win, rebuilding phases, and the ever-shifting tides of modern women’s cricket.

As Heather Knight steps into the next phase of her cricketing journey, her legacy stands tall, etched in record books and the evolution of England women's cricket. From leading a World Cup triumph to becoming one of the most respected captains in the modern game, Knight's era was defined by calm leadership, tactical shrewdness, and an unwavering commitment to her team.

(As of June 2025)