The 2023 programme of domestic cricket in England will feature an expanded Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy and regular T20 double-headers involving men’s and women’s teams in the Vitality Blast and Charlotte Edwards Cup.
Amid efforts to balance four men’s competitions in an Ashes summer, there will be a round of Championship games before the first Test against Australia, starting at Edgbaston on June 16.
Despite widespread agreement that the 2022 schedule suited few of the interested parties, 2023 will look largely the same.
The Vitality Blast will begin with a men’s double-header at Edgbaston on May 20, as Birmingham host Yorkshire and Derbyshire take on Lancashire. The counties will each play 14 games, with Finals Day also at Edgbaston and the tournament once again concluding in mid-summer on July 15.
An expanded Charlotte Edwards Cup, with the eight regional teams playing each other in seven games – home or away – starts on May 18. Finals Day will be held at New Road on June 10 and, in a sign of increased synergy between the men’s and women’s games following the success of the Hundred, there will be 20 Blast-CEC double-headers held across 17 venues.
The 50-over Rachael Heyhoe Flint competition will begin on April 22 and sees a doubling of fixtures, the eight teams playing home and away for a total of 14 games.
As in previous years, men’s teams will warm up for the One-Day Cup – which will no longer be sponsored by Royal London after the insurer ended its eight-year association* – with fixtures against the National Counties. Outgrounds will be a feature of the fixture list before the final at Trent Bridge on September 16.
1330 GMT – This story was updated to reflect the end of Royal London’s sponsorship