Amy Jones embraces Ashes distraction after personal tragedy

England wicketkeeper prepares for Test match having lost her beloved Mom in March

Valkerie Baynes21-Jun-2023This time last summer Amy Jones was yet to see Australia win Commonwealth Games gold on England’s turf, yet to be thrust into the role of stand-in captain for her country and yet to return from South Africa empty handed as Australia again lifted the trophy, this time at the T20 World Cup. But amid the tricks that time plays during the most significant moments in life, all that seems so long ago.In fact, time stood still when Jones, England’s wicketkeeper-batter with 165 international caps, lost her beloved mother, Helen, in March. It was just over three months before England were set to host the most hyped of Women’s Ashes series, but none of that mattered.”It came as a huge shock,” says Jones, who was on holiday when her younger sister, Emily, called to break the terrible news. “I was in Australia at the time and my brother lives in China, so we were all a bit everywhere. I got back on the quickest flight – it was a very traumatic time and a difficult thing to process.”Helen was just 55 when she passed away suddenly from a brain haemorrhage. She had been living for six years with multiple sclerosis (MS), a disease which can affect the brain and spinal cord and, in turn, mobility. But her condition had stabilised and the fact that it was something else which took her life only added to the devastation felt by Jones’ close-knit family. It was those ties – and Helen’s nurturing of them during her life – that eased the pain somewhat for her family.”Mom was incredibly loving and a very positive person,” Jones tells ESPNcricinfo. “That in itself has helped us all really, just to keep going, knowing it’s what she would have wanted. She taught us a lot of life lessons that have helped in this situation.”We all get on so well. People say it’s a bit weird that we just don’t argue. But that came from Mom. Even as adults, we all just love being back home, being back together and we just talk for hours. We’re a really close family and that’s helped a lot over this time.”Jones also had huge support from her team-mates and close friends. The Sciver-Brunts, Katherine and Nat, for whom Jones was a bridesmaid when they wed last year, and Lauren Winfield-Hill rallied round and encouraged her to join them in doing the 50k in May challenge to raise funds and awareness for MS research and care in Helen’s name and that of Wendy Langston, mother of former England bowler Beth Langston who also had the condition before she died in December 2020.”It was a really nice thing that the girls came to me and suggested and it is something that they said they really wanted to do,” Jones says. “Some more of my family got involved and a few other friends and it was a nice thing to focus on aside from the cricket and to be able to do something in Mom’s name was a really special thing that brought us together.”

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