Heyhoe-Flint, first global star of women's cricket, dies at 77 

Heyhoe-Flint represented England 45 times in tests and one-day internationals. She won the 1973 World Cup.
In this Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2010 file photo, former cricketer from England Rachael Heyhoe Flint, center, flanked by West Indies Joel Garner, left, and Courtney Walsh. | AP
In this Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2010 file photo, former cricketer from England Rachael Heyhoe Flint, center, flanked by West Indies Joel Garner, left, and Courtney Walsh. | AP
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LONDON: Rachael Heyhoe-Flint, who became a figurehead for women's cricket after captaining England to World Cup glory, has died. She was 77.

Heyhoe-Flint's death was announced Wednesday by the Marylebone Cricket Club.

During an international career lasting almost 20 years, Heyhoe-Flint represented England 45 times in tests and one-day internationals. She won the 1973 World Cup

MCC President Matthew Fleming says Heyhoe-Flint was "the first global superstar in the women's game and her overall contribution to MCC, cricket and sport in general was immense."

Heyhoe-Flint was one of the MCC's first female members and was the first woman elected on to the club's full committee in 2004. The MCC are the guardians of the laws of cricket.

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