Lanning fires up at England star's scorching WBBL move

Australian captain Meg Lanning has fired up at England star Nat Sciver-Brunt's decision to avoid the WBBL draft, allowing her to land at the Perth Scorchers.

Sciver-Brunt last played in the WBBL in 2020-21 with Lanning's Melbourne Stars, after she previously appeared for the Scorchers from 2017-19.

The world's No.1 ranked ODI batter also played for the Stars during the first two WBBL seasons from 2015-17.

Had the 31-year-old made herself available for the competition draft in September instead of pulling out with a knee injury, the Stars would have been able to pick her as a retention selection.

But Sciver-Brunt is poised to play for the Scorchers in the upcoming tournament after her England teammate Danni Wyatt pulled out because of fatigue.

Australian captain Meg Lanning
Australian captain Meg Lanning is not happy at Nat Sciver-Brunt's decision to avoid the WBBL draft.

Lanning, who will make her WBBL comeback after a lengthy break from cricket for undisclosed medical reasons, is "pretty disappointed" the Stars have lost a key player to a rival in this fashion.

"She's obviously one of the best players in the world and you want the best players playing in the competition," Lanning said on Tuesday."But she sort of made herself unavailable initially.

"All the players of her calibre went through the draft, or the pre-signing, and I guess she didn't nominate for that.

"As a club, as the Stars, I certainly feel like we didn't get the chance to exercise our retention rights that we would have, had she nominated for the draft instead of coming in this way.

"Not only does that impact us this year, but moving forward as well now because Perth have retention rights to her."

Lanning's comments set up an explosive match when the Stars meet the Scorchers in the WBBL, which gets under way on Thursday night.

"It's frustrating because the goalposts seem to shift a little bit and we didn't get a chance to get access to her,'' she said.

Nat Sciver of the Stars in 2020
Nat Sciver walks back to her bowling mark in 2020 during her WBBL stint with the Melbourne Stars.

"It's disappointing, but I guess that's the way it goes, and we look forward to coming up against Perth and playing well against her and the team."

Lanning said she believed the draft concept was "good", but insisted Sciver-Brunt's move to Perth should never have been allowed to happen.

"If there is going to be a draft you probably want to make sure that it happens how you plan it to," she said.

BBL general manager Alistair Dobson this week defended the process that will almost certainly allow Sciver-Brunt to play with the Scorchers despite not nominating for the draft.

Perth are awaiting official clearance before signing the star allrounder, who was crucial in England's surging end to the women's Ashes in July.

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