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Mainstream BBC Sport 19 hours ago

Hard work and a disco jacket - how England turned fielding woes around

This video can not be played Highlights: Superb England beat South Africa to set up World Cup final against Australia The 'F' word came up again and again in the review into England's Ashes hammering. And after England dropped seven catches on day two of the Test in Melbourne, the whole world knew it. England's fielding had not cost them the series but it was a clear problem. They also put down six chances when exiting the T20 World Cup against West Indies the previous autumn. But Thursday's semi-final victory over South Africa at The Oval, with two fine Sophie Ecclestone catches and a perfect throw for a Danni Wyatt-Hodge run-out, was the clearest example yet of England's improvement. A sparkly disco jacket owned … Nick Wilton (left) played 17 first-class games and 19 List A matches in his career The man tasked with improving England's fielding is long-standing coach Nick Wilton, the former Sussex wicketkeeper now dubbed DJ Wilton. His fielding 'disco nights' have become a feature of this World Cup. With the tunes blaring and while wearing his wife's jacket, Wilton has England's players charging around and taking high catches under the lights. It has lifted England from those miserable days in Melbourne and Dubai. "We do pieces of fielding to each song and he pumps the music up to try and get us all hyped up," vice-captain Charlie Dean said. "I love the way he gets us really passionate about fielding so it is fun every time." This video can not be played Big breakthrough for England as Wolvaardt is caught early There is, of course, more to England's improvement than a coach dressing like an ABBA tribute act. As well as Ecclestone's catches - a leap at mid-on and a nerve-jangler as the ball dropped over her should at short fine leg - and Wyatt-Hodge's run-out, Charlie Dean also pulled off a direct hit dismissal in the win over New Zealand and Wyatt-Hodge took a superb catch in the tournament opener against Sri Lanka. Fitness and fielding were two of coach Charlotte Edwards' priorities when she took over after the Ashes defeat. The former captain, who sprinted on to the field to congratulate her players during the timeout after Ecclestone's first catch, has calmly quietened talk of the issue. In one of her previous roles at Southern Vipers, Edwards used an electric scooter to follow and observe her players during their fitness sessions and one of her first moves after becoming England coach was introducing minimum fitness standards.

Original story by BBC Sport View original source

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