Key Points

Brisbane Heat have secured Indian batting star Jemimah Rodrigues for another WBBL season using their retention pick. The 24-year-old was instrumental last season, scoring 267 runs at a strike rate of 139. Rodrigues joins West Indian allrounder Chinelle Henry in the Heat's revamped squad. The team aims to go one better after finishing as runners-up in WBBL 2023.

Key Points: Brisbane Heat retain Jemimah Rodrigues in WBBL draft

  • Heat retain Rodrigues with first-round retention pick
  • Indian batter scored 267 runs last WBBL season
  • West Indies' Chinelle Henry joins as third-round pick
  • Squad builds for title push after 2023 runners-up finish
3 min read

Brisbane Heat retain Jemimah Rodrigues in WBBL international players draft

Indian star Jemimah Rodrigues stays with Brisbane Heat for WBBL 11 after stellar 2023 season, aiming for title glory this summer.

"I’m super, super, super excited to be rejoining you all back in Brisbane. – Jemimah Rodrigues"

Melbourne, June 19

Indian batter Jemimah Rodrigues will return to the Women’s Big Bash League (WBBL) for the second season after she was claimed by Brisbane Heat in the first round of the WBBL international players draft on Thursday.

After the Melbourne Stars used their third pick to make a play for the star Indian batter, Heat utilised their retention pick to secure Jemimah for a further season.

"Indian superstar Jemimah Rodrigues will return to the Weber Women’s Big Bash League for the second season in a row as she strives to lift the Brisbane Heat to the title this summer," the Brisbane Heat said in a statement.

The right-hander was a stand-out for the Heat last summer as they won six matches in a row to make the WBBL final for the second time in as many seasons. The 24-year-old was the club’s second-leading scorer for the season, hitting 267 runs at a strike rate of 139.06, with the Heat finishing as runners-up to the Melbourne Renegades.

The top-order batter expressed her delight in returning to the Heat in a message to WBBL fans, saying, "I’m super, super, super excited to be rejoining you all back in Brisbane."

Rodrigues is coming off a career-high last month, hitting her highest One-day International (ODI) score of 123 against Sri Lanka. She and Brisbane Heat captain Jess Jonassen played together for the Delhi Capitals in this year’s Women’s Premier League (WPL) in India where Delhi Capitals went close to snatching the title only to lose to Mumbai Indians in the decider.

The Heat also drafted West Indian allrounder Chinelle Henry with their third-round pick after passing on their second-round pick. The 29-year-old right-hand bat and right-arm medium pacer equalled the record for the fastest fifty in the tournament, scoring an 18-ball half-century. She finished the tournament with a league-leading strike rate of 196.

South African allrounder Nadine de Klerk was drafted in the fourth round, having previously signed a multi-year deal last season to tie her to Brisbane for WBBL 11.

The addition of Rodrigues and Henry takes Brisbane's roster to 11 players, with four players left to announce. One of those four remaining recruits will be a signing that will take place after the T20 Spring Challenge, which will function as a lead-in competition for the WBBL.

WBBL Brisbane Heat squad for WBBL 11 (to date): Jess Jonassen, Nadine de Klerk (South Africa), Chinelle Henry (West Indies), Sianna Ginger, Lucy Hamilton, Nicola Hancock, Grace Harris, Charli Knott, Grace Parsons, Georgia Redmayne, Jemimah Rodrigues (India).

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Jemimah is truly making India proud! Her performance in WPL was outstanding, and now continuing in WBBL shows her global appeal. Hope she smashes more records this season 🔥 #ProudIndian
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Priya M.
As a cricket fan from Mumbai, I've followed Jemimah's journey since her U19 days. Her strike rate of 139 last season was phenomenal! Hope she gets that WBBL trophy this time. Brisbane Heat made a smart retention.
A
Ankit S.
While I'm happy for Jemimah, I wish BCCI would organize more bilateral series for our women's team. Our players shouldn't have to rely only on foreign leagues for exposure. That said, all the best to her!
S
Sneha T.
That 123 against Sri Lanka was pure class! Jemimah's technique against spin is something every young Indian batter should learn. Excited to see her partnership with Jess Jonassen again - their WPL chemistry was amazing 💫
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Vikram J.
Good for her, but I hope she doesn't get overworked. Between WPL, international matches and now WBBL, our players need proper rest too. BCCI should monitor workload management carefully.
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Neha P.
Jemimah's energy is infectious! Loved her interviews last season - such a positive ambassador for Indian cricket. Hope she inspires more girls to take up sports. Brisbane is lucky to have her again! 😊

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