England have handed 18-year-old Surrey spinner Tilly Corteen-Coleman the headline call-up in their 15-player squad for the 2026 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup, a selection that says quite a bit about where this team thinks it can go on home soil. Nat Sciver-Brunt will captain the side, Charlie Dean has been named vice-captain, and the squad blends established names with a few players who are stepping onto this stage for the first time.
Corteen-Coleman is the name that jumps off the page. She is uncapped, only 18, and yet England’s selectors have decided she’s ready for a tournament that will open in front of a home crowd on June 12. She is joined by Issy Wong and Lauren Filer as players chosen in a Women’s T20 World Cup squad for the first time, while Danni Wyatt-Hodge is set for her eighth appearance at the event, which tells you a lot about the balance England were chasing.
The timing matters too. England are not easing into a distant tournament here; they will start the competition against Sri Lanka at Edgbaston on June 12, then face Ireland on June 16, Scotland on June 20, West Indies on June 24 and New Zealand on June 27 in Group 2. The semi-finals are scheduled for June 30 and July 2 at The Oval, with the final set for Lord’s on July 5.
There is a bit of history hanging over all of this. England last won the Women’s T20 World Cup in 2009, and that triumph also came on home soil under Charlotte Edwards, who is now back as head coach. The ECB noted that Edwards will have more than 960 caps’ worth of T20 international experience available in the squad, so while the inclusion of Corteen-Coleman feels bold, it is hardly a reckless punt. It looks more like a calculated gamble inside a dressing room that still has serious tournament mileage.
Edwards made it pretty clear that selection was anything but straightforward. She said these were the hardest selection meetings she had been part of because of the strength of the player pool, adding that a World Cup at home is “a special moment for the game in this country.” Sciver-Brunt struck a similar note, saying it was “a huge honour” to lead England into a home tournament and that the squad wants to “win this World Cup again.” Those comments feel important, because they frame this squad not as a transitional one, but as a group expected to contend right now.
One absence stands out. Sarah Glenn was not considered because she is still recovering from a broken finger, removing an experienced leg-spin option from the mix. Meanwhile, Sophia Dunkley, Charlie Dean and Wyatt-Hodge are due to miss the ODI series that precedes the tournament to manage workloads, with the ECB saying Wyatt-Hodge is also preparing for the arrival of her first baby.
Taken together, the squad feels like England trying to hit two targets at once. There is the obvious push for immediate success in a tournament staged across England and Wales from June 12 to July 5, but there is also a sense that this management group wants to accelerate the next wave rather than wait politely for it to arrive. Corteen-Coleman’s inclusion is the clearest sign of that. On paper, she is the risk. In England’s eyes, plainly, she may be the upside.
England Women squad: Nat Sciver-Brunt, Lauren Bell, Alice Capsey, Tilly Corteen-Coleman, Charlie Dean, Sophia Dunkley, Sophie Ecclestone, Lauren Filer, Dani Gibson, Amy Jones, Freya Kemp, Heather Knight, Linsey Smith, Issy Wong, Danni Wyatt-Hodge.
