Heather Knight leaves ECB sanction in the past as England gear up for World Cup opener

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Heather Knight, the captain of England's women's cricket team, is fully focused on leading her team into the Women's T20 World Cup. She has made it clear that she has already faced disciplinary measures for a historic "blackface" photograph that surfaced on social media recently, and that the issue has been addressed.

Knight, 33, was last week reprimanded and given a suspended £1000 fine by the Cricket Discipline Commission, after a compromising fancy-dress photograph surfaced on Facebook, dating back to a party in 2012, when she was 21. While it was accepted by the Cricket Regulator that there was "no racist intent in her conduct", Knight said in a statement that she was "truly sorry" and had "long regretted it".

Now, speaking on the eve of England's T20 World Cup opener, against Bangladesh in Sharjah on Saturday, Knight turned the focus squarely to the task at hand for her team, as they seek to improve on their semi-final finish at the last event in South Africa two years ago, and land their first ICC global title since 2017.

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"It was obviously something that has been ongoing the last couple of months and it is something, as far as I am concerned, that has been addressed, and something that was a long time ago, so it hasn't been in my mind at all," Knight said.

"The line has already been drawn, in my opinion, so I am really excited, obviously, for what is to come. We have got super supportive group, there is no doubt about that, so yeah, I'm pretty happy to get cracking with the cricket."

England came through an unbeaten home summer, winning 13 out of 14 matches against New Zealand and Pakistan, with only a washout at Taunton denying them a clean sweep. In addition to Bangladesh, they will play against Scotland, West Indies and South Africa in the World Cup group stage, with their two likeliest rivals for the title, Australia and India, awaiting them in the other half of the draw.

"Australia are going to be favourites, for sure," Knight said of the defending champions, who have won six of the last seven stagings of the T20 World Cup, dating back to 2010. "Obviously, their success in this event has been huge, but we feel in a really good place. We've been playing some brilliant cricket, and while the first goal is to get out of the group stages, we're pretty confident in what we bring. We believe we can beat anyone on our best day."

Much of England's summer was spent honing a side that could compete in spinning conditions, with Bangladesh having been the World Cup's original host country. The event has since moved to the UAE for security reasons, but Knight is confident that England's spin contingent - led by the ICC's No.1-ranked bowler in white-ball cricket, Sophie Ecclestone - will thrive at a tournament that, to judge by the tournament's opening fixtures, already appears to favour slow bowling.

"We feel very prepared for what we've got to come, and now it's just about executing it and being really smart about how we do things in-game," Knight said. "We've obviously got the quality spin attack. It's been our big strength, particularly through those middle overs, how we really squeeze teams and try and rush them in that middle period."

England opted to overlook the extra pace of Lauren Filer for this tournament, instead relying on Lauren Bell as a sole specialist seamer, backed up by a trio of seam-bowling allrounders in Nat Sciver-Brunt, Freya Kemp and Dani Gibson. Charlie Dean and Sarah Glenn also offer batting depth as spinning allrounders, meaning that England - on paper, at least - have an enviably versatile squad.

"We've got really good options, which is the nice thing," Knight said. "The depth that we've got allows us to play based on the conditions that we face, and the team that we're playing against.

"It's not going to be easy picking the team, but we're pretty set on the little tweaks that we might need to make to get the most out of the conditions and teams that we're playing against.

"There are going to be times where we are going to have to graft a little bit, the boundaries are big and there might be times when we get on slow wickets where we are going to have to adapt to what is in front of us and be really smart with how we go about things."

Both Kemp and Sciver-Brunt were managed back to bowling fitness during the summer, after coming through back and knee issues respectively. But Knight was adamant that each was in the right place to deliver a full all-round role for the cause.

"The allrounders are the fittest in the team, because of the role they have to do," she said. "Freya, in particular, she's super impressive with how she's come back from that [second] stress fracture, and the work that she's put in to be in a place to perform, it's been brilliant."