Fran Wilson, a Somerset batter and former World Cup winner, has announced that she is retiring from the game and will lead Gloucestershire Women’s coaching staff.
The 33-year-old returned to Somerset in 2025 for a second spell as the women’s team transitioned to a professional, and he led the charge with 574 runs in 28 games.
She previously played for the club between 2006 and 2014, and she registered more than 2,500 runs in List A and T20 games.
Before she retired from international cricket in 2021, Wilson participated in the England team that won the 2017 World Cup 64 times across three different formats.
Wilson told the Somerset website, “I’ve made the decision that this 2025 season was my last and that I’ll be hanging up my bat for good this time.”
“What a journey it’s been, one that has taken me to various locations around the world along with England and, more recently, back to the West Country.”
As a young player, it was beyond my wildest dreams to have a locker in the CACG’s changing room.
The English and Wales Cricket Board granted Gloucestershire one of 10 clubs Tier 2 status in 2025.
They finished last in the South group, winning just one game out of eight games this year in the Vitality Blast 2 and placing fifth overall in the One-Day Cup women’s league 2 standings with five victories out of nine games.
Wilson stated that the objective is to foster “sustainable success” so that the club can advance to Tier 1 status.
The “next step” in Wilson’s journey.

Wilson made her England debut in 2010, aged 19, but she didn’t become a regular until 2016 when she joined the international squad.
She participated in eight of England’s nine games, including the final against India, during her 50-over World Cup triumph in 2017.
She also played for the 2020 T20 World Cup squad that advanced to the semi-finals.
Wilson has represented Sunrisers, Kent, Gloucestershire, and the United States in four of The Hundred’s four seasons domestically, and he has twice won the Kia Super League title with Western Storm.
Wilson left a “lasting impression” on the women’s cricket match, according to Somerset cricket director Andy Hurry.
He continued, “Here is an amazing opportunity to draw from all that experience as she moves on her journey.”
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- Gloucestershire
- Women’s Cricket Team of England
- County cricket
- Somerset
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