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Stafanie Taylor set to take her experience to Oxford Cricket Club
Written by Sports Desk. Posted in Windies. | 22 March 2025 | 652 Views
Tags: Cricket, Stafanie Taylor

Former West Indies women’s captain Stafanie Taylor is set to take her wealth of experience to Oxford Cricket Club for the 2025 season, where she will not only feature as a player but also help shape the club’s future by coaching both senior and junior female cricketers.

Taylor, one of the most accomplished all-rounders in the history of the women’s game, is the only player to have scored more than 5,000 runs and taken 150 wickets in women’s One Day Internationals (ODIs).

The Jamaican star is expected to arrive in Oxford in late April, heading straight from Pakistan after competing in the World Cup qualifiers. She will also be part of the West Indies squad for their short tour against England this season.

Oxford Cricket Club expressed excitement over Taylor’s upcoming involvement, offering a "special thank you" to Ross Buchanan for helping make the connection.

Since bursting onto the international scene as a 17-year-old in 2008 with a blistering 49-ball 90 in a T20 match against Ireland, Taylor has become a pillar of West Indies cricket. Her impressive career has been filled with groundbreaking achievements. In 2013, she made history as the first player—male or female—to be ranked number one in both ODI batting and bowling simultaneously.

Her ability to accumulate runs with grace and determination has long been her trademark. At just 19 years old, she became the youngest woman to reach 1,000 ODI runs. The following years saw even more milestones, including a stunning innings of 171 against Sri Lanka during the 2013 World Cup—the third-highest total in women’s ODIs at the time.

Taylor's leadership qualities came to the forefront when she took over from Merissa Aguilleira as West Indies captain in 2015. She made an immediate impact, guiding the team to an ODI series sweep against Pakistan with scores of 27, 49, 98 not out, and 87 not out across four innings.

Her crowning achievement came in 2016 when she led the West Indies to victory in the ICC Women’s World T20, as they defeated three-time champions Australia in a nail-biting final. Taylor’s crucial 59 in that match, along with her contributions throughout the tournament—246 runs and eight wickets—earned her the title of Player of the Tournament.

Beyond the international stage, Taylor has been a globetrotter in franchise cricket. She’s played in Australia’s Women’s Big Bash League (WBBL), where she accumulated over 1,000 runs in 55 innings, and featured for Southern Brave in The Hundred in England.

While cricket has taken her around the world, Taylor’s journey began at home in Jamaica, where she was just 10 years old when she went on her first cricket tour. Though also a talented footballer, cricket ultimately became her true calling.