England pace bowler Brydon Carse has been ruled out of The Hundred 2025 following a conversation with the national medical team. He has now been replaced by Northern Superchargers with Mitchell Stanley, a talented young pace bowler from Lancashire. Carse was an integral part of the just-concluded Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy series against India. He bowled 155 overs across four Tests before being rested for the last game against The Oval. He is being left out of The Hundred with the purpose of managing his workload, particularly as a busy schedule is ahead of him featuring a white-ball series against South Africa and tours of Ireland and New Zealand. Also Read | Can The Hundred Rival the IPL? London Spirit Investors Say Yes Heavy Workload and Injury Concerns Carse has been troubled with injury issues for quite a while. At the beginning of 2025, he hurt his foot during England's white-ball tour of India and was out for the Champions Trophy as a result. In June, he confirmed that the state of his toe was so poor that he even considered having it amputated as a result of infection from cuts on his second toe from bowling. Despite of all these, Carse returned strongly in the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, taking nine wickets. His control and pace were England's strengths throughout the series, and he bowled long spells despite nursing his injury. Carse said: "After a long sequence of matches against India and after consultation with medical staff, I am unfortunately unable to play for Northern Superchargers in The Hundred this summer. I hope to observe from the sidelines and to captain the team again in the future." England is playing it safe with both Jofra Archer and Carse. Archer, too, skipped the last Test to pace himself following a four-year hiatus. England wants their key pacers to stay fit for the Ashes later this year. Carse's T20 figures hold promise but also potential for improvement. He has claimed 27 wickets in 51 T20 Blast matches and five wickets in 13 The Hundred matches. He also competed in the SA20, claiming five wickets from eight innings.