Surrey march on as Yorkshire earn first One-Day Cup win

Danni Wyatt-Hodge's highest score in the 2025 One-Day Cup was 44
- Published
England's Danni Wyatt-Hodge fell four runs short of a second successive One-Day Cup century as Surrey beat Durham by three wickets to make it three wins out of three.
Wyatt-Hodge followed her 124 against Warwickshire last weekend with 96 and was caught attempting to hit the winning boundary as they chased down a target of 257 in only 36.4 overs.
Australian Jess Jonassen hit 67 off 57 balls and took 4-18 with her left-arm spin as Yorkshire registered their first success as a tier one county with a 70-run win over The Blaze at Headingley.
In Saturday's third game, Essex collapsed from 125-5 to 157 all out as they lost by five wickets to Warwickshire.
Durham looked in a strong position at the Riverside after Hollie Armitage's superb 111-ball hundred laid the foundation for a good score against Surrey.
She shared a stand of 112 with Mady Villiers (55) for the third wicket and hit 14 fours before being caught at cover off Kalea Moore in the 44th over.
The home side finished on 256-8 and looked in control as England pace bowler Lauren Filer ripped through the Surrey top order with the new ball.
She bowled Paige Scholfield and Alice Davidson-Richards and had Emma Capsey caught behind to leave the visitors in trouble on 62-4 before Wyatt-Hodge and Kira Chathli added 83 in 15 overs.
Filer removed Chathli, for 58, and Jemima Spence on her return but was bowled out by the 31st over with figures of 5-59, and the rest of the attack could not dislodge Wyatt-Hodge as she steered Surrey towards the target.
She struck a six and 13 fours before holing out at long-on from Katie Levick's leg-spin but Moore hit the winning boundary two balls later.
"I've been lucky in I've had two pretty nice wickets to bat on. We've had a lot of T20 prep with England so for me it is just a matter of being mentally fresh, working on my basics and transferring T20 skills into 50-over cricket," Wyatt-Hodge said.
"For me, it is about my balance, being over the ball and using the full face of the bat."

Durham's Lauren Filer has won 35 caps for England across all formats of the game
Having been put in by The Blaze skipper Kirstie Gordon, Yorkshire gave her reason to question the decision as Lauren Winfield-Hill and Jonassen put on 122 for the second wicket.
Winfield-Hill was the first to 50 but her partner's only took 44 balls and was reached with an off-drive for four off Georgia Elwiss.
Both departed in successive overs, Winfield-Hill bowled by Grace Ballinger for 90 off 101 balls and Jonassen lbw to Elwiss as the home side slumped from 191-1 to 199-5 in five overs.
Sterre Kalis, though, revived the innings with three sixes and eight fours in her 61 off only 42 balls as Yorkshire posted a score of 280-9.
England's Tammy Beaumont was lbw to Rachel Slater's inswing for a third-ball duck at the start of The Blaze reply but they were going well as Marie Kelly and Kathryn Bryce put on 126.
But both departed in the same Jonassen over - Bryce caught off a leading edge for 55 and Kelly stumped by Winfield-Hill for 56 - as the left-arm spinner and Claudie Cooper worked their way through the middle order, reducing them to 162-8.
Gordon (24) and Ballinger (29) made useful contributions but the visitors were all out for 210 in the 42nd over.
"We know in the first two games we had underperformed. So to put a more complete performance together here and not only challenge but defeat a really quality side is pleasing," Jonassen said.

Lauren Winfield-Hill's half-century was her second in a row for Yorkshire
At Chelmsford, Essex paid the price for some soft dismissals against Warwickshire as they suffered their third defeat of the competition.
The home side, without injured Jodi Grewcock, only mustered 157 before being bowled out with 10.2 overs of their allocation unused - and it would have been even worse but for skipper Grace Scrivens' 59 off 88 balls, including eight fours.
She eventually gave a return catch to Hannah Baker with the score on 125 and the four remaining wickets fell in the space of seven overs for just 32 runs.
Warwickshire were going well on 66-1 before losing Meg Austin and Davina Perrin (43) in the space of four deliveries, the latter angry with herself after swinging a ball from Sophia Smale to backward square.
But an unbroken stand of 36 between Katie George, who lofted Sophie Munro for four to finish on 42 not out, and Emily Arlott (18) saw them home on 160-5 with more than nine overs to spare.
Sunday fixture
Southport: Lancashire v Somerset
Play starts 10:30 BST
- Published16 August 2025
