Australia confirms its dominance of women’s cricket

Australia confirms its dominance of women’s cricket
At present, a Women’s Ashes series is being played in Australia and an International Cricket Council Women’s U-19 T20 World Cup in Malaysia. (AFP)
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Updated 30 January 2025
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Australia confirms its dominance of women’s cricket

Australia confirms its dominance of women’s cricket
  • In the ongoing Ashes series against England, the Australian players have displayed an unmatched athleticism and indomitable will to win  

Amongst the plethora of men’s cricket tournaments being played around the world, it might seem easy to overlook a number of women’s events also taking place — which are indicative of the latter’s remarkable growth over the last decade.

At present, a Women’s Ashes series is being played in Australia and an International Cricket Council Women’s U-19 T20 World Cup in Malaysia. And Bangladesh’s women are touring the West Indies for a three-match series in both T20Is and One-Day Internationals.

In Australia, the 50-over Women’s National Cricket League resumed after the final of the Women’s Big Bash League on Dec. 1, 2024, which concludes on March 2. In New Zealand, the final of the women’s Super-Smash tournament is scheduled for Feb. 1.

One of New Zealand’s most prominent players and captain, Sophie Devine, will take no further part in that tournament. She is to take an immediate break from the game. This means she will miss the Women’s Premier League 2025 in India, in which she is part of the Royal Challengers Bengaluru.

According to New Zealand Cricket, this is to “prioritize her well-being” after receiving professional advice. The statement added that a “decision on Devine’s playing future will be announced in due course.”

This all sounds a little ominous for Devine, who is now 35. Since October 2024, when she was part of the T20 World Cup winning team, Devine has played in an ODI series against India, in the WBBL for the Perth Scorchers and in an ODI series against Australia in late December.

In her career, she has played almost 300 international games. The amount of cricket now played by top players, albeit well rewarded, takes its toll, both mentally and physically.

Such a toll is being felt very keenly by England’s women’s cricketers in Australia. The Ashes series consists of three ODIs, three T20 matches and a single Test match. A points-based system is used to determine the winning team. Two points are awarded for an ODI and T20I win, one point each for a tie or no result.

Victory in a Test match earns four points, with two each in a draw. The England team has suffered the chastening experience of being beaten in all three ODIs and in all three T20Is. This provides Australia with 12 points and, going into the Test match which started on Jan. 30, were in determined mood to complete a clean sweep.

This would be historic. England won the first series under the points-based system in August 2013 and then defended that position in Australia in early 2014. However, Australia regained the trophy in England in 2015 and, since then, have not let hold in five consecutive series.

The series in 2017/18 and 2023 were drawn at eight points each, Australia retaining the Ashes as holders. A clean sweep in 2025 would be an embarrassment for England.

It will place increased pressure on both the coach, Jon Lewis and the captain, Heather Knight, who has led England 199 times in international matches. There has been a focus on why England’s performances have been so disappointing. One suggestion came from a recent former England player, Alex Hartley, now working as a commentator and pundit.

After England’s surprise elimination in the Women’s T20 World Cup last October, she questioned the physical fitness of some team members. In Australia, she has reiterated this theme. It has been clear throughout the series that the Australian players are super-fit, display an unmatched athleticism and an indomitable will to win.

Hartley’s comments have brought her into conflict with some of her former teammates, who have shunned her, even refusing to be interviewed. Although there have been denials that fitness is an issue, a siege mentality appears to have developed within the squad.

This does not augur well for an improved performance in the Test match. It also brings into sharp focus the boundaries between what constitutes acceptable criticism from former teammates. Hartley wants England to do better and justifies her criticism as a push for them to achieve improvement.

It will require a big push to catch up with the Australians. The current coach of the Australian under-19 women’s team is in no doubt that the current senior squad have pushed performance and athleticism to new heights. In the U-19 Women’s World Cup, Australia have reached the semifinals, along with South Africa, whom they will play on Jan. 31, England and India. All four teams deserve their places but, in a possible pointer for the future, the Nigerian team came within a point of reaching the semifinals.

On this evidence alone, there is proof that the women’s game is growing both in geographical reach and playing numbers. This is one of the achievements of which the ICC is proud. A prime mover behind this has been its CEO, Geoff Allardice.

This week it was announced that Allardice would be stepping down after four years in the post, to “pursue new challenges.” His departure, in the early days of Jay Shah’s tenure as chair, follows those of the heads of the anti-corruption unit, events and the general manager of marketing and communication.

Under Shah’s watch, women’s cricket is set to reach new levels. These will be driven not just by ICC tournaments but by national boards. They need to attract and develop higher quality talent to the game, all in competition with other sports.

Australia is helped by having a stable domestic structure, whereas that in England and Wales has changed three times since 2015. Attracting talent is also driven by salary levels.

Significantly, within the last 10 years, the cricket boards in Australia and England introduced professional central contracts for women. In Australia’s case, a new five-year deal has increased salaries by two-thirds.

The top international players now have the opportunity to boost their incomes through domestic and franchise tournaments, plus endorsements.

One can understand the frustrations of commentators — such as Hartley who are aware of the similar rewards for top women players in both England and Australia — watching the latter being so dominating.


Jacks helps Mumbai beat Hyderabad in IPL

Jacks helps Mumbai beat Hyderabad in IPL
Updated 12 min 13 sec ago
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Jacks helps Mumbai beat Hyderabad in IPL

Jacks helps Mumbai beat Hyderabad in IPL
  • England all-rounder Will Jacks shone with both bat and ball, picking up two wickets to help restrict Hyderabad to 162 for five
  • Suryakumar Yadav hit 26 and the final touches were added by Pandya and Tilak Varma, who hit an unbeaten 21, as Mumbai won with 11 balls to spare

MUMBAI: The Mumbai Indians batters and bowlers starred in a comfortable four-wicket victory over Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Indian Premier League on Thursday.
England all-rounder Will Jacks shone with both bat and ball, picking up two wickets to help restrict Hyderabad to 162 for five and then hitting a 26-ball 36 to help bolster his team’s chase.
Five-time champions Mumbai won the toss and bowled on a sluggish pitch at Wankhede Stadium.
Decent knocks from openers Rohit Sharma and Ryan Rickleton helped set up the chase, while skipper Hardik Pandya smacked a quick 21 runs off nine balls toward the end to seal the game.
The match helps restore a bit of Mumbai’s mojo, pushing them into a crowded mid table. They have three victories in seven matches.
Pandya said the way his team bowled was “very smart and spot on.”
“We stuck to simple, basic plans,” the Mumbai skipper said, adding that once the pressure to get boundaries eased in the second innings, they “pushed the pedal at the end.”
Hyderabad openers Abhishek Sharma and Travis Head kicked off the first innings with a 59-run partnership before Sharma, who hit 40 runs off 28 balls, departed in the eighth over.
The team then struggled for momentum with Kishan (2) and Head (28) falling to leave Hyderabad at 83-3 at the end of the 12th over.
Disciplined bowling from Jasprit Bumrah and Jacks continued to restrict Hyderabad’s batsmen but a valiant late-innings knock from Heinrich Klaasen (37) infused a glimmer of hope.
Young Aniket Verma then smacked a quick 18 runs off eight balls.
In reply, Mumbai’s openers made a solid start as Sharma hit 26 and Rickleton 31. They were 70-2 at the end of the 10th over.
Jacks helped anchor the chase with his 26-ball 36 before departing in the 15th over. Suryakumar Yadav hit 26 and the final touches were added by Pandya and Tilak Varma, who hit an unbeaten 21, as Mumbai won with 11 balls to spare.
Hyderabad captain Pat Cummins admitted that it was not the “easiest” wicket.
“Got to play well away from home to make the finals, unfortunately not clicked yet.”


Cricket’s 21st century growing pains

Cricket’s 21st century growing pains
Updated 17 April 2025
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Cricket’s 21st century growing pains

Cricket’s 21st century growing pains
  • Sport conflicted by multiple formats, and T20 franchise cricket threatens to eclipse Test series

A central tenet of the International Cricket Council in recent years has been to achieve growth in cricket.

A part of the ICC’s vision is to create opportunities for more people and nations to enjoy the sport. This may be the single unifying factor for all its members in an otherwise skewed governance regime, dominated by India, Australia and England.

However, growth is in the eye of the beholder. It could mean increased revenues, participation, watching or viewing, matches played, or more franchise leagues. Uncontrolled growth can lead to an inefficient use of resources, something already evident in an overcrowded international calendar.

It was concerning, therefore, to read reports emanating from an ICC board meeting held in Harare, Zimbabwe, from April 10 to 13, that the idea of officially recognizing the T10 cricket format was raised.

Although it is understood that the topic was not part of the official meeting agenda and did not receive much interest and support, it could be regarded as the first step in a process to achieve recognition.

The most prominent T10 tournament is the Abu Dhabi T10, first held in December 2017. Since then, T10 competitions have been held in the West Indies, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, Nepal and the US.

Last year, a planned T10 league in Scotland was cancelled because it did not receive ICC sanction. Meanwhile, in Melbourne, five academy teams are currently playing a T10 competition promoted by Cricket Victoria.

So far, T10 cricket has not been played by full members in either men’s or women’s cricket at national level. If the format were to be recognized performance data would be included in a player’s official statistics.

Cricket is already a sport conflicted by multiple official formats. T20 franchise cricket threatens to eclipse Test cricket. In recognition of this, the ICC is considering splitting the 12 Test-playing members into two discrete divisions for Test series.

The issue of promotion and relegation is a stumbling block, as neither of Australia, England or India wish to forego series against each other. Smaller countries fear marginalization.

The multiple format factor was also a talking point over cricket’s inclusion in the 2028 Olympics. There was some support for the T10 format on the basis that it would be appealing to fans and allow more matches in a day in a single stadium. Its duration of 90 minutes puts it on a par with football.

However, it has been determined that six men’s and six women’s teams will compete in the T20 format. Ninety athlete quotas have been allocated for each gender, allowing squads of 15 players.

If the US qualifies automatically as host nation, the criteria for selecting the other five countries are awaited with interest. A long-awaited showcase of cricket’s diversity and global reach may end up being exclusive.

There can be little doubt that cricket’s inclusion was largely motivated by the desire to cater to South Asian audiences and provide the International Olympic Committee with opportunities to secure handsome broadcast deals.

Talk of switching the venue to New York from Los Angeles because it is 9.5 hours behind India compared with 12.5 has been quashed by the announcement that the Fairgrounds in Paloma, 50 km from Los Angeles, will be the venue. A temporary, purpose-built structure will be constructed on a 500-acre complex.

Both T10 cricket and the sport’s inclusion in the Olympics represent major opportunities for the ICC to pursue its growth mantra. Whilst Olympics participation is firmly underway, formal recognition of T10 appears some way off.

A particular concern is that adding another format alongside the three current international ones risks a dilution of interest in and the value of those formats. A glance at the introduction of The Hundred in England and Wales confirms that risk.

Another criticism of T10 is that bowlers have a limited role, since they can only bowl two overs. Teams batting second also appear to have an advantage, winning 70 percent of the time.

If T10 is not going to be officially recognized in the immediate future, growth will need to be generated through existing channels. There is a limit to how much the 96 ICC associate members can achieve. Together, they receive a mere 11 percent of the ICC’s annual revenue distribution, approximately $67.5 million, an average of $700,000.

As many of them can attest, the establishment of structures to develop local talent requires additional funding from alternative sources, which are hard to acquire. This is not a way to grow the game in those countries, either in terms of increased participation or international competitiveness.

Much has been made by the ICC of the growth in audience numbers for the 2025 Champions Trophy. It estimates that the total watch time was approximately 250 billion minutes, including 137 billion minutes on Star Sports and 110 billion minutes on JioHotstar.

The final between India and New Zealand saw peak concurrent viewership reach 122 million on TV and 61 million on JioHotstar, a new benchmark for digital views in cricket. The overall figures were almost a quarter higher than those for the ICC Men’s World Cup in 2023.

These growth outcomes are fueled by India, through its corporates and its people. The burning question is whether this dominance can have a cascade effect for the game in general. Applications of digital technology for spectators have been prominently developed in India.

Streaming platforms provide more ways to watch cricket. Social media has allowed fans to connect with teams and players in real time. Virtual reality technology promises to change the way in which they can watch and interact with cricket. Each of these channels is helping cricket to grow and reach more people around the world.

Cricket’s future is being determined by its ability to adapt to the digital age and to recognize that its audience now prefers shorter formats. Its future also depends upon the ability of its custodians to blend old traditions and formats with the new and emerging ones.

Without healthy domestic structures, which include longer formats, there is a danger that the top players, those coveted by the franchise leagues, will not be produced to the same standard. There is a counter argument that young players now grow up in T20 cricket and do not need to experience any other format to succeed.

In Harare, the ICC batted away discussion of T10 cricket to focus on suggestions to improve the longer formats. How long it can hold that line in the dash for growth is uncertain.


Starc stars as Delhi beat Rajasthan in IPL’s Super Over thriller

Starc stars as Delhi beat Rajasthan in IPL’s Super Over thriller
Updated 16 April 2025
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Starc stars as Delhi beat Rajasthan in IPL’s Super Over thriller

Starc stars as Delhi beat Rajasthan in IPL’s Super Over thriller
  • Left-arm quick Starc kept Rajasthan down to 188-4 in response to Delhi’s 188-5 and then returned to bowl another disciplined over
  • Needing 12 to win, KL Rahul started with a double and then hit a boundary before Tristan Stubbs finished off with a six

NEW DELHI: Delhi Capitals edged out Rajasthan Royals in IPL’s first Super Over of the season after pace bowler Mitchell Starc defended nine off the last over to end the match tied on Wednesday.
Left-arm quick Starc kept Rajasthan down to 188-4 in response to Delhi’s 188-5 and then returned to bowl another disciplined over at the Feroz Shah Kotla ground.
Rajasthan managed just 11 runs from their Super Over after Shimron Hetmyer and Riyan Parag hit a boundary each but both got run out on ball four and five and the innings ended with those two wickets.
Needing 12 to win, KL Rahul started with a double and then hit a boundary before Tristan Stubbs finished off with a six on the fourth ball from Sandeep Sharma.
Delhi, led by Axar Patel, got back to winning ways and returned to take top spot in the 10-team table with five victories and just one defeat on six matches.
Rajasthan, who have been chasing the IPL title since their inaugural triumph in 2008 under late Australian hero Shane Warne, slumped to their fifth loss in seven matches.
Opener Yashasvi Jaiswal and Nitish Rana hit 51 each to set up Rajasthan’s chase of 189, but wickets at regular intervals kept Delhi in the hunt.
Australia’s Starc dismissed Rana in the 18th over before Dhruv Jurel hit back in his 26 and the left-handed Hetmyer made 15 not out.
Starc’s 20th over was on target as it was just singles and twos in the six balls and with two needed to win on the last delivery Jurel was run out while attempting a second run and the teams prepared for one-over eliminator.
Earlier Rajasthan raced to 50 in five overs with Jaiswal on fire and skipper Sanju Samson switched gears but retired hurt after his 19-ball 31 as he felt some pain in his ribs.
Left-handed Jaiswal raised his third fifty of the season before being dismissed by left-arm wrist spinner Kuldeep Yadav but Rana kept up the batting surge.
Rana survived a reprieve on 20 when Stubbs dropped the batter on the ropes for the ball to go for six and the batter made the most of it but the batting effort was not enough.
Delhi rode on Abhishek Porel’s 49 and 34 each from Patel and Stubbs.
In-form Rahul made 38 and put on 63 runs with the left-handed Porel.
Later Axar put on 41 runs off 19 balls with South African Stubbs as the two hit the ball to all parts of the ground much to the delight of the home crowd as Delhi managed 77 runs from the last five overs.


Chahal stars as Punjab defend IPL’s lowest total of 111 in ‘best win’

Chahal stars as Punjab defend IPL’s lowest total of 111 in ‘best win’
Updated 15 April 2025
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Chahal stars as Punjab defend IPL’s lowest total of 111 in ‘best win’

Chahal stars as Punjab defend IPL’s lowest total of 111 in ‘best win’
  • Kolkata looked to be cruising at 62-2 before Chahal cut through the chase with his leg-spin, and the side collapsed to 95 all out in 15.1 overs
  • Punjab were earlier bowled out for 111 in 15.3 overs but Chahal and company turned the match on its head

CHANDIGARH: Spinner Yuzvendra Chahal returned figures of 4-28 as Punjab Kings defended IPL’s lowest ever total of 111 to down holders Kolkata Knight Riders by 16 runs in a thriller on Tuesday.
Kolkata looked to be cruising at 62-2 before Chahal cut through the chase with his leg-spin, and the side collapsed to 95 all out in 15.1 overs at Mullanpur, near Chandigarh.
Punjab were earlier bowled out for 111 in 15.3 overs but Chahal and company turned the match on its head to better Chennai Super Kings’ record — they defended 116 against them (formerly Kings XI Punjab) in 2009.
Kolkata’s Andre Russell attempted to pull off the chase from 79-8 when he hit two sixes and a four off Chahal but Punjab held their nerve.
Arshdeep Singh sent back Vaibhav Arora and then fellow left-arm quick Marco Jansen bowled Russell to trigger wild celebrations in Punjab’s home ground.
“I have coached a lot of games in the IPL and that might just be about the best win I ever had,” head coach Ricky Ponting said after the close contest.
Kolkata skipper Ajinkya Rahane and impact substitute Angkrish Raghuvanshi put on 55 runs for the third wicket when Chahal broke through to get the captain back in the pavilion lbw.
Ball tracker suggested the ball was outside the off stump, but Rahane did not take the review.
“Pretty disappointed with the effort,” said Rahane. “I’ll take the blame, played the wrong shot, although it was missing.”
Chahal, with his tail now up, got Raghuvanshi caught out in the next over for 37 and the Punjab were in the game when Glenn Maxwell had Venkatesh Iyer lbw for seven.
Chahal then got two in two — Rinku Singh stumped and Ramandeep Singh out for a golden duck — before Harshit Rana avoided the hat-trick ball.
But the day belonged Chahal and Punjab who moved into the top four of the 10-team table with their fourth win in six matches.
Ponting said Chahal, who was named player of the match, had a fitness test before the game for a shoulder injury he picked in his previous outing.
Earlier, Rana rattled the Punjab top-order after a brisk start by the openers and returned figures of 3-25 from his three overs.
New batting sensation Priyansh Arya and Prabhsimran Singh made the hosts race to 39 in 3.1 overs, before Rana struck to send back the left-handed Arya caught at fine leg for 22.
Rana got one more wicket two balls later when Ramandeep pulled off a stunning catch in the deep to dismiss skipper Shreyas Iyer, for a duck.
Spinner Varun Chakravarthy joined forces in the next over to have Punjab’s England import Josh Inglis bowled for two.
Prabhsimran, who made 30, attempted to hit back with two sixes off Rana but the bowler had the last laugh with Ramandeep once again taking a catch at point.
Chakravarthy and fellow spinner Sunil Narine kept striking regular blows as Punjab’s batting faltered only for their bowlers to ultimately save the day.


Dhoni snaps Chennai’s five-match IPL losing streak

Dhoni snaps Chennai’s five-match IPL losing streak
Updated 14 April 2025
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Dhoni snaps Chennai’s five-match IPL losing streak

Dhoni snaps Chennai’s five-match IPL losing streak
  • Chasing a tricky 167, Chennai rode on an unbeaten stand of 57 between Shivam Dube, who hit 43, and Dhoni to achieve their target
  • Result snapped Chennai’s streak of losses but they still remain bottom of the 10-team table with two wins in seven matches

LUCKNOW: Former India captain M.S. Dhoni rolled back the years with an unbeaten 26 as Chennai Super Kings bounced back from five losses to down Lucknow Super Giants by five wickets in the IPL on Monday.
Chasing a tricky 167, Chennai rode on an unbeaten stand of 57 between Shivam Dube, who hit 43, and Dhoni to achieve their target with three balls to spare at Lucknow’s Ekana Stadium.
The 43-year-old Dhoni, who took over as captain from the injured Ruturaj Gaikwad in their previous defeat, strode in at number seven and smashed four fours and a six in his 11-ball knock to silence suggestions that he had lost his touch as a master finisher.
The left-handed Dube, who came in as an impact substitute for the five-time champions, got the winning boundary in his 37-ball knock.
The result snapped Chennai’s streak of losses but they still remain bottom of the 10-team table with two wins in seven matches.
They started strongly with openers Shaik Rasheed and New Zealand’s Rachin Ravindra, who hit 37, putting together a 52-run partnership inside five overs.
Pace bowler Avesh Khan struck first to cut short Rasheed’s knock on 27 and Lucknow’s ploy to bring in part-time spinner Aiden Markram worked when the South African dismissed the left-handed Ravindra.
Impact substitute Ravi Bishnoi struck with two key blows as he caught and bowled Rahul Tripathi for nine and then had Ravindra Jadeja taken at long-on for seven to dent Chennai’s chase.
But Dube took charge and took Chennai over the line alongside Dhoni who walked in to loud cheers from the Lucknow crowd largely supporting Chennai.
Lucknow suffered their third loss in seven matches but can take consolation from skipper Rishabh Pant’s back-to-form 63 in their 166-7 after being invited to bat first.
Wicketkeeper-batsman Pant, who had scores of 0, 15, 2, 2, 21 in his previous five innings, started cautiously with Lucknow on 23-2.
The swashbuckling left-hander played six dot balls to Afghanistan left-arm wrist spinner Noor Ahmad in the middle of his knock but finished with four fours and fours sixes in his 49-ball stay.
Pant’s innings involved key stands, adding 50 with Mitchell Marsh, who hit 30 on his return after he missed the previous match, and 53 with Abdul Samad, who made 20.
Pant finally fell to Sri Lanka pace bowler Matheesha Pathirana, who took two wickets in the 20th over.
Jadeja stood out with figures of 2-24 in his three overs of left-arm spin.