The Cricketer looks at the main talking points from the Women's One Day Cup game between Surrey and Durham at the Kia Oval
When the first ball of the Surrey reply from Lauren Filer ballooned down the legside for four byes, you knew her opening spell would be appointment viewing.
And by the end of it, she had three wickets, with Paige Schofield, Alice Monaghan and Alice Davidson-Richards back in the dressing room.
Everyone will have their favourite dismissal of the three.
Perhaps it was Tahlia Wilson's leap to grab the edge from Capsey, who had hit three fours from her seven deliveries before the one which dismissed her.
But there is nothing like watching a stump be cleanly knocked out of the ground. And when Davidson-Richards cleared her front leg in the fifth over, Filer's extra pace beat her defences and blew away her middle stump.
The only surprise was ADR needing to look back just to check that the stump had indeed been knocked back.
For Filer, it came amid an opening spell during which she conceded 39 in five overs; it was a reminder of the game-changing quality the 25-year-old possesses.

Hollie Armitage's century was in vain (Ben Hoskins/Getty Images for Surrey CCC)
Credit must go to Kira Chathli, who displayed great calm in difficult circumstances on Saturday (April 18).
Coming in with Surrey four down chasing 257, she was on the back foot before a ball had been bowled after her bat failed a gauge test.
More on the implications of that later, but to settle, see off the remainder of Filer's blistering and yet also sometimes wayward opening spell and lead a rebuild was hugely impressive.
It was her first half-century as the Surrey 50-over captain after registering five against Warwickshire and a golden duck against Yorkshire.
While Danni Wyatt-Hodge put on stands worth 50 with Jemima Spence and 59 with Maitlan Brown, it was the fifth-wicket partnership alongside Chathli which did so much to break Durham's resolve.

Surrey survived an early wobble before cruising to victory (Charlie Crowhurst/Getty Images for Surrey CCC)
Surrey securing victory with a run rate above seven an over (Durham's was 5.12) ensured they took the full five points for the second time in the One Day Cup.
How many of them they get to keep, however, remains to be seen.
Chathli's bat failing a gauge test as she walked out to begin her innings in the Surrey chase could yet come back to haunt the Kia Oval club.
After being confiscated by match referee Helen Pack, it will now undergo further testing (including going through other gauges) before the Cricket Regulator or Cricket Discipline Commission have cause to act.
Chathli met with the match referee after the game, skipping post-match media duties as a result, and her club are now braced for the outcome of the investigations to follow.
Recent incidents suggest they will be fortunate to escape with some kind of deduction - suspended or otherwise - but they will be hoping the blade passes subsequent tests.
Indeed, Phil Salt and Lancashire survived further action after tests carried out after the T20 Blast match against Northamptonshire proved inconclusive.
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