# Cricket Australia

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Cricket organisation in Australia

Cricket Australia Sport Cricket Jurisdiction Australia Abbreviation CA Founded 1905; 121 years ago (1905), incorporated 1982 Affiliation International Cricket Council Affiliation date 1909; 117 years ago (1909) Regional affiliation East Asia-Pacific Affiliation date 1996; 30 years ago (1996) Headquarters Jolimont, Melbourne, Australia Chairman Mike Baird CEO Todd Greenberg Operating income -$11.3 million (2025 loss)[1] Sponsor Principal Partner: Westpac Platinum Partners: NRMA Insurance, KFC, Toyota Gold Partners: Woolworths, Asics, Bet365, Qantas, Liquorland, Aussie Broadband, HCLTech Silver Partners: Gatorade, Marsh, Kookaburra, Nu-Pure[2] Official website www.cricket.com.au

**Cricket Australia** (**CA**) is a company which operates some professional and amateur [cricket](/source/Cricket) competitions and teams in Australia. It had its origins in the 'Australian Board of Control for International Cricket', formed in 1905. The company was incorporated in 1982, with members' [liability limited by guarantee](/source/Company_limited_by_guarantee).[3]

It operates its men's [Australia national cricket team](/source/Australia_national_cricket_team), [Australia women's national cricket team](/source/Australia_women's_national_cricket_team) and [Australia national under-19 cricket team](/source/Australia_national_under-19_cricket_team), [Australia A cricket team](/source/Australia_A_cricket_team), along with other national-level teams (such as Indigenous, disability or over-age teams) in conjunction with the relevant organisations. It also organises and hosts [Test matches](/source/Test_cricket), [One-Day Internationals](/source/One-Day_International) and [Twenty20 Internationals](/source/Twenty20_Internationals) in association with other national cricket organisations, and schedules home international fixtures.

It deals with the [Australian Cricketers' Association](/source/Australian_Cricketers'_Association) regarding player's rights, pay and work agreements and welfare requirements.

## Membership and governance

Cricket Australia has six member organisations:

- [New South Wales](/source/New_South_Wales) – [Cricket NSW](/source/Cricket_NSW)

- [Queensland](/source/Queensland) – [Queensland Cricket](/source/Queensland_Cricket)

- [South Australia](/source/South_Australia) – [South Australian Cricket Association](/source/South_Australian_Cricket_Association)

- [Tasmania](/source/Tasmania) – [Cricket Tasmania](/source/Cricket_Tasmania)

- [Victoria](/source/Victoria_(Australia)) – [Cricket Victoria](/source/Cricket_Victoria)

- [Western Australia](/source/Western_Australia) – [Western Australian Cricket](/source/Western_Australian_Cricket_Association)

[Cricket ACT](/source/Cricket_ACT) and [Northern Territory Cricket](/source/Northern_Territory_Cricket) are non-member associations, although the ACT participates in Cricket Australia tournaments such as the [Women's National Cricket League](/source/Women's_National_Cricket_League) and the [Futures League](/source/Futures_League), and previously briefly also competed in [the domestic limited-overs competition](/source/Australian_domestic_limited-overs_cricket_tournament).

It is governed by nine independent directors.[4] The chief executive officer reports to the board of directors.

## National teams

**Men's Test team**: [Australia](/source/Australia_national_cricket_team) played in the first-ever Test match against England in 1877 and has since become one of the most successful teams in Test cricket history. Australia has been a full member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) since its inception in 1909. As of April 2025, the Men's Test team is captained by [Pat Cummins](/source/Pat_Cummins).[5]

**Men's white-ball team**: Australia played their first One-Day International in 1971 and has since won multiple ICC tournaments, including five World Cups. As of April 2025, [Pat Cummins](/source/Pat_Cummins) leads the ODI side, while [Mitchell Marsh](/source/Mitchell_Marsh) captains the T20I team.[6]

**Women's team**: [Australia](/source/Australia_women's_national_cricket_team) played their first Women's Test match against England in 1934. They have won multiple Women's World Cups and T20 World Cups. As of April 2025, the team is captained by [Alyssa Healy](/source/Alyssa_Healy).[7][*[circular reference](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability#Wikipedia_and_sources_that_mirror_or_use_it)*]

**Under-19s team**: [Men's U-19](/source/Australia_national_under-19_cricket_team) and [Women's U-19](/source/Australia_women's_national_under-19_cricket_team) teams regularly compete in the ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cups. The most recent captains (2024) are [Hugh Weibgen](/source/Hugh_Weibgen) for the men's team[8] and [Meg Lanning](/source/Meg_Lanning) has joined as a mentor for the women's team.[9]

**Reserves (A team)**: The [Australia A](/source/Australia_A_cricket_team) is the second-tier men's team, focusing on developing players and providing them with exposure through tours and warm-up matches. The team plays in various formats to prepare players for the senior team.[10]

**Disability teams**: Cricket Australia is committed to creating inclusive environments for people with disabilities. The teams administered by Cricket Australia include:

- [Blind](/source/Australia_national_blind_cricket_team)

These teams participate in various national and international competitions, promoting the growth of cricket among players with disabilities.[11]

## Domestic teams

Each of Cricket Australia's state member organisations select a team to participate in its domestic cricket tournaments every season.

State Men's side Team name Women's side Team name New South Wales New South Wales Men's Cricket Team Blues New South Wales Women's Cricket Team Queensland Queensland Men's Cricket Team Bulls Queensland Women's Cricket Team Fire South Australia South Australia Men's Cricket Team Southern Redbacks South Australia Women's Cricket Team Scorpions Tasmania Tasmania Men's Cricket Team Tigers Tasmania Women's Cricket Team Roar Victoria Victoria Men's Cricket Team Bushrangers Victoria Women's Cricket Team Western Australia Western Australia Men's Cricket Team Warriors Western Australia Women's Cricket Team Territory Men's side Women's side Australian Capital Territory Australian Capital Territory Men's Cricket Team Comets Australian Capital Territory Women's Cricket Team Meteors Northern Territory Northern Territory Men's Division Northern Territory Women's Division

## Domestic tournaments

Tournament Format Teams Notes Sheffield Shield First-Class 6 state teams Premier men's first-class competition in Australia. One-Day Cup (Dean Jones Trophy) List A (50 overs) 6 state teams Renamed in honor of Dean Jones; South Australia clinched the title. Women's National Cricket League (WNCL) 50 overs 6 state teams + ACT Premier women's 50-over competition; New South Wales were the champions. KFC Big Bash League (BBL) T20 8 city-based franchises Australia's premier men's T20 league. Weber Women's Big Bash League (WBBL) T20 8 city-based franchises Under-19 Male National Championships 50 overs State teams Developmental tournament for U-19 male cricketers. Under-19 Female National Championships 50 overs State teams Developmental tournament for U-19 female cricketers.

## History

Early tours by cricket teams from Australia to England were organised and funded by private groups or by the players themselves. Similarly, invitations to English teams were made by private promoters or by individual clubs, such as the [Melbourne Cricket Club](/source/Melbourne_Cricket_Club).[*[citation needed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed)*] These early tours were lucrative for the players and promoters and cricket administrators looked to find ways to channel some of this money to the state associations and major clubs.

In 1892, the Australasian Cricket Council, composed of representatives from the New South Wales, South Australian and Victorian cricket associations, was formed but disbanded in 1898. Its one lasting action was to establish the [Sheffield Shield](/source/Sheffield_Shield), the first-class cricket competition between the Australian colonies.[12]

In January 1905, formal discussions began in Sydney for the formation of a body to take control of tours from players. A draft constitution was discussed by members of the New South Wales, Victoria, South Australian and Queensland associations.[13] In 1905, the "Australian Board of Control for International Cricket" was formed[14] and held its first meeting at [Wesley College](/source/Wesley_College%2C_Melbourne) in [Melbourne](/source/Melbourne) on 6 May 1905. The foundation members were the [New South Wales Cricket Association](/source/New_South_Wales_Cricket_Association) and the [Victorian Cricket Association](/source/Victorian_Cricket_Association). South Australia's delegates refused to join the board because the board structure denied the players any representation. The [Queensland Cricket Association](/source/Queensland_Cricket_Association) was represented as an observer only.[14] The Queensland cricket association decided to formally join the board with one delegate member the following year. In 1906, the board's constitution was amended so that New South Wales, South Australia and Victoria would each have three permanent representatives and Queensland one representative. In 1907, Tasmania was permitted to send a single representative. Western Australia did likewise in 1913. Changes to this structure were made in 1914 and 1974 respectively when Queensland and Western Australia increased their representation to two each.[*[citation needed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citation_needed)*]

In 1973, the board changed its name to the Australian Cricket Board (ACB)

The board was incorporated on 29 September 1982. In 2003, it changed its name to Cricket Australia.[3]

In 2001, it established its National Indigenous Cricket Advisory Committee (NICAC) which, in 2002, established a strategic plan, "Two Cultures: Australia's New Cricket Tradition".[15] [Ngadjuri](/source/Ngadjuri) man [Vince Copley](/source/Vince_Copley) was the inaugural co-chair of the committee.[16]

## Finances

This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (November 2025)

CA reported cumulative financial losses since 2019. Despite record attendances and record revenue from sponsorship and television rights, it reported a $11.3 million loss for 2024/25, leaving the organisation in debt. Its management has been criticised for over-spending, especially on their own salaries, benefits and travel.[17]

## Competitions

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As well as responsibility for Australian international sides, Cricket Australia organises interstate cricket in Australia, including the premier competitions in each of the major forms of the game. These are the [Sheffield Shield](/source/Sheffield_Shield) in [first-class cricket](/source/First-class_cricket) (men's competition only), the [One-Day Cup](/source/Australian_domestic_limited-overs_cricket_tournament) (men) and the [Women's National Cricket League](/source/Women's_National_Cricket_League), which are the [domestic one-day competitions](/source/List_A_cricket), and the [KFC Big Bash League](/source/Big_Bash_League) and the [Weber Women's Big Bash League](/source/Women's_Big_Bash_League), which are the domestic [Twenty20](/source/Twenty20) competitions (contested by franchises not state representative teams).

Cricket Australia's current and former competitions:

- [Sheffield Shield](/source/Sheffield_Shield) (first-class, various forms, 1892/93-present)

- [One-Day Cup](/source/Australian_domestic_limited-overs_cricket_tournament) (limited-overs, various forms, 1969/70-present)

- [KFC Twenty20 Big Bash](/source/KFC_Twenty20_Big_Bash) (T20, 2005/06-2010/11, replaced by KFC BBL)

- [KFC Big Bash League](/source/Big_Bash_League) (T20, 2011/12-present)

- [Toyota Second XI](/source/Second_XI_(Australian_cricket_competition)) (red-ball, various forms, 1999/2000-2008/09, 2019/20-present, 2009/10-2018/19 as Futures League)

- [Australian Women's Cricket Championships](/source/Australian_Women's_Cricket_Championships) (first-class and limited-overs, various forms, 1930/31-1995/96, replaced by WNCL)

- [Women's National Cricket League](/source/Women's_National_Cricket_League) (limited-overs, various forms, 1996/97-present)

- [Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup](/source/Australian_Women's_Twenty20_Cup) (T20, various forms, 2007-2014/15, replaced by WBBL)

- [Weber Women's Big Bash League](/source/Women's_Big_Bash_League) (T20, 2015/16-present, 2015/16-2020/21 as rebel WBBL)

Cricket Australia also runs (among others) the Under 19 and Under 17 Male Championships, the Under 18 and Under 15 Female National Championships, the [National Indigenous Cricket Championships](/source/National_Indigenous_Cricket_Championships) and the National Cricket Inclusion Championships.

## Honours

Cricket Australia also provides awards for various categories of players, including:

- Male: Test Player of the Year, One-Day Player of the Year, Bradman Young Player of the Year, Domestic Player of the Year, and the [Allan Border Medal](/source/Allan_Border_Medal) for the overall best Australian men's cricketer of the year.

- Female: the Belinda Clark Award for the best Australian women's cricketer of the year, the Betty Wilson Young Player of the Year, and the Domestic Player of the Year

Cricket Australia also honours players for exceptional service to the game of cricket in Australia by annually adding former players of great distinction to the [Australian Cricket Hall of Fame](/source/Australian_Cricket_Hall_of_Fame).

## Principals / Chairman of Cricket Australia

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### Chairmen

- [Richard Teece](/source/Richard_Teece): 1892–1893

- Richard Best: 1893–1895

- [Mostyn Evan](/source/Mostyn_Evan): 1895–1896; 1910–1911

- John Gibson: 1896–1897

- [Will Whitridge](/source/William_Oswald_Whitridge): 1897–1900

- [Lawrence Adamson](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lawrence_Adamson&action=edit&redlink=1): 1905–1906

- Ernie Bean: 1906–1907; 1912–1913

- George Barbour: 1907–1908

- George Foxton: 1908–1910

- [Charles Eady](/source/Charles_Eady): 1911

- William McElhone: 1911–1912

- James Allen: 1913–1914

- [Harry Blinman](/source/Harry_Blinman): 1914–1919

- Harold Bushby: 1919; 1925–1926

- Harry Gregory: 1919–1920; 1922–1923; 1926–1927

- Harry Rush: 1920–1922

- [Jack Hutcheon](/source/Jack_Hutcheon): 1923–1924

- [Bernard Scrymgour](/source/Bernard_Scrymgour): 1924–1925

- [Aubrey Oxlade](/source/Aubrey_Oxlade): 1927–1930; 1933–1936; 1945–1948; 1951–1952

- Allen Robertson: 1930–1933; 1936–1945; 1948–1951

- [Roy Middleton](/source/Roy_Middleton): 1952–1955

- Frank Cush: 1955–1957

- Bill Dowling: 1957–1960

- Sir [Donald Bradman](/source/Donald_Bradman): 1960–1963; 1969–1972

- Ewart Macmillan: 1963–1966

- Bob Parish: 1966–1969; 1975–1978

- [Tim Caldwell](/source/Tim_Caldwell_(cricketer)): 1972–1975

- [Phil Ridings](/source/Phil_Ridings): 1980–1983

- Fred Bennett: 1983–1986

- Malcolm Gray: 1986–1989

- [Colin Egar](/source/Colin_Egar): 1989–1992

- Alan Crompton: 1992–1995

- Denis Rogers: 1995–2001

- Robert Merriman: 2001–2005

- Creagh O'Connor: 2005–2008

- Jack Clarke: 2008–2011

- [Wally Edwards](/source/Wally_Edwards): 2011–2015

- David Peever: 2015–2018

- Earl Eddings: 2018–2021

- Richard Freudenstein: 2021–2022 (interim)

- Lachlan Henderson: 2022–2023

- [Mike Baird](/source/Mike_Baird): 2023–present

### Secretaries & Chief Executive Officers

- John Portus: 1892–1896

- John Creswell: 1896–1900

- William McElhone: 1905–1910

- Colin Sinclair: 1910–1911

- Sydney Smith: 1911–1927

- [William Jeanes](/source/William_Jeanes): 1927–1954

- [Jack Ledward](/source/Jack_Ledward): 1954–1960

- Alan Barnes: 1960–1980

- David Richards: 1980–1993

- Graham Halbish: 1993–1997

- [Malcolm Speed](/source/Malcolm_Speed): 1997–2001

- [James Sutherland](/source/James_Sutherland_(cricketer)): 2001–2018

- [Kevin Roberts](/source/Kevin_Roberts_(cricketer)): 2018–2020

- Nick Hockley: 2020–2025

- [Todd Greenberg](/source/Todd_Greenberg): 2025–present

### National Selection Panel

For a list of national selectors, see [Australian cricket selectors](/source/Australian_cricket_selectors).

The National Selection Panel is the part of Cricket Australia responsible for team selections for each of the Australian national sides in every form of cricket.

The current three-man panel for the Australian men's sides is: [George Bailey](/source/George_Bailey_(cricketer%2C_born_1982)) (chairman), [Andrew McDonald](/source/Andrew_McDonald_(cricketer)) (head coach) and [Tony Dodemaide](/source/Tony_Dodemaide).[18]

The current four-person panel for the Australia women's sides is: [Shawn Flegler](/source/Shawn_Flegler) (chairman), [Matthew Mott](/source/Matthew_Mott) (head coach), [Avril Fahey](/source/Avril_Fahey) and [Julie Hayes](/source/Julie_Hayes).

### Board of directors

Cricket Australia is governed by nine directors, who work collectively in the national interest of Australian cricket.

The chief executive officer reports to the board of directors. The current nine board members are:

Name Affiliation Role(s) Term started Lachlan Henderson Western Australia Director 3 September 2018 John Harnden AM South Australia Director 15 April 2016 Paul Green Tasmania Director 25 October 2018 Richard Freudenstein Independent Non-Executive Director 10 June 2019 Mike Baird AO New South Wales Chair 28 February 2021 Vanessa Guthrie AO Independent Non-Executive Director 28 February 2021 Greg Rowell Queensland Director 10 June 2021 Clea Smith Victoria Director 13 October 2022 David Maddocks Independent Non-Executive Director 13 October 2022

Last updated: 13 October 2022[19][20]

## See also

- [Australia portal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Australia)
- [Cricket portal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Cricket)

- [Australian national cricket team](/source/Australian_national_cricket_team)

- [Australia national women's cricket team](/source/Australia_national_women's_cricket_team)

- [Cricket in Australia](/source/Cricket_in_Australia)

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** Barrett, Chris; Hogan, Jesse (14 December 2015). ["Big Bash League prizemoney tripled but players miss out"](https://issuu.com/cricketaustralia.comms/docs/ca_annual_report_fy25_hres?fr=sZDVhODg0ODY1MTk). *[The Sydney Morning Herald](/source/The_Sydney_Morning_Herald)*. Sydney. Retrieved 30 March 2016.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-Cricket_Australia_2-0)** ["Cricket Australia – Commercial Partners"](https://www.cricket.com.au/). Retrieved 3 October 2020.

1. ^ [***a***](#cite_ref-company_search_3-0) [***b***](#cite_ref-company_search_3-1) ["ASIC Free Company Name Search"](https://web.archive.org/web/20141029230500/http://search.asic.gov.au/cgi-bin/gns030c?acn=006_089_130&juris=9&hdtext=ACN&srchsrc=1). Archived from [the original](http://search.asic.gov.au/cgi-bin/gns030c?acn=006_089_130&juris=9&hdtext=ACN&srchsrc=1) on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 25 November 2008.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-4)** ["Our Board"](https://www.cricketaustralia.com.au/about/our-board). *Cricket Australia*. 19 May 2023.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-5)** ["Australia Cricket Team"](https://www.espncricinfo.com/team/australia-2). *ESPNcricinfo*. Retrieved 26 April 2025.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-6)** ["Australia Cricket Team"](https://www.espncricinfo.com/team/australia-2). *ESPNcricinfo*. Retrieved 26 April 2025.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-7)** ["Australia women's national cricket team"](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australia_women%27s_national_cricket_team). *Wikipedia*. Retrieved 26 April 2025.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-8)** ["Australia Under-19s Cricket Team"](https://www.espncricinfo.com/team/australia-under-19s-233). *ESPNcricinfo*. Retrieved 26 April 2025.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-9)** ["Australia bring in legend to earmark future stars on road to U19 Women's T20 World Cup 2027"](https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/australian-bring-in-legend-to-earmark-future-stars-on-road-to-u19-women-s-t20-world-cup-2027). *ICC*. 11 April 2025. Retrieved 26 April 2025.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-10)** ["Australia A Cricket Team"](https://www.espncricinfo.com/team/australia-a-49). *ESPNcricinfo*. Retrieved 26 April 2025.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-11)** ["Cricketers With A Disability"](https://www.cricket.com.au/social-impact-and-sustainability/diversity-and-inclusion/cricketers-with-a-disability). *Cricket Australia*. Retrieved 26 April 2025.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-12)** Pollard, pp. 49–50.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-13)** Pollard, p. 56.

1. ^ [***a***](#cite_ref-page57_14-0) [***b***](#cite_ref-page57_14-1) Pollard, p. 57.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-15)** [Australian Human Rights Commission](/source/Australian_Human_Rights_Commission). "Cricket: Cricket Australia". [*What's the score? A survey of cultural diversity and racism in Australian sport*](https://humanrights.gov.au/sites/default/files/content/racial_discrimination/whats_the_score/pdf/cricket.pdf) (PDF). p. 74.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-16)** Phillips, Sandra (10 January 2022). ["Vince Copley had a vision for a better Australia – and he helped make it happen, with lifelong friend Charles Perkins"](https://theconversation.com/vince-copley-had-a-vision-for-a-better-australia-and-he-helped-make-it-happen-with-lifelong-friend-charles-perkins-192097). *[The Conversation](/source/The_Conversation_(website))*. Retrieved 23 November 2023.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-17)** [https://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricket/in-decline-cricket-australia-attacked-over-bottom-line-20251030-p5n6iy.html](https://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricket/in-decline-cricket-australia-attacked-over-bottom-line-20251030-p5n6iy.html)

1. **[^](#cite_ref-18)** ["Dodemaide takes seat on Australia's selection panel"](https://www.cricket.com.au/news/tony-dodemaide-australia-selector-george-bailey-justin-langer-ashes-england/2021-10-18). *Cricket Australia*. 18 October 2021.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-19)** ["Our Board"](https://www.cricketaustralia.com.au/about/our-board). *Cricket Australia*. 6 November 2019.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-20)** ["CA directors to consider tweak to organisation's code of conduct"](https://www.cricket.com.au/news/cricket-australia-agm-2022-code-of-ethics-rewrite-david-warner-captaincy-clea-smith-director-results/2022-10-13). *cricket.com.au*. 13 October 2022.

## Bibliography

- *Wisden Cricketers Almanack*

- [Pollard, Jack](/source/Jack_Pollard) (1988). *Australian Cricket: The game and the players*. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. [ISBN](/source/ISBN_(identifier)) [0-207-15269-1](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-207-15269-1).

## External links

- [Cricket Australia official website](http://www.cricketaustralia.com.au/)

- [Cricket news, scores and highlights produced by Cricket Australia's digital content team](http://www.cricket.com.au/)

- [Official CA Facebook page](https://www.facebook.com/CricketAustralia)

- [Cricket Feature – Daily Telegraph](http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/index/0,22045,5006069,00.html) [Deprecated link](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Archive.today_guidance) archived 30 December 2012 at [archive.today](/source/Archive.today)

v t e Australia national cricket team Test Status since 1877 Based in Australia Team History List of captains Record by opponent Grounds List of cricket grounds in Australia Main grounds: Melbourne Cricket Ground, Sydney Cricket Ground, The Gabba, Perth Stadium, Adelaide Oval, Bellerive Oval, Manuka Oval Notable matches Second Test, 2000–01 Border–Gavaskar Trophy Second Test, 2007–08 Border–Gavaskar Trophy Fourth Test, 2022–23 Border-Gavaskar Trophy Culture Cricket in Australia Key personnel Governing Body Cricket Australia Coach Andrew McDonald Captains Test & ODI Pat Cummins T20I Mitchell Marsh (interim) Major Titles ICC World Test Championship 2023 ODI World Cup 1987 1999 2003 2007 2015 2023 ICC Champions Trophy 2006 2009 T20I World Cup 2021

v t e Cricket in Australia Cricket Australia National teams Men Women Men A Men U-19 Women U-19 Indigenous Members (teams) New South Wales (Men, Women) Queensland (Men, Women) South Australia (Men, Women) Tasmania (Men, Women) Victoria (Men, Women) Western Australia (Men, Women) Australian Capital Territory (Men, Women) Northern Territory (Men, Women) Franchise teams Adelaide Strikers (Men, Women) Brisbane Heat (Men, Women) Hobart Hurricanes (Men, Women) Melbourne Renegades (Men, Women) Melbourne Stars (Men, Women) Perth Scorchers (Men, Women) Sydney Sixers (Men, Women) Sydney Thunder (Men, Women) Tournaments First-class Sheffield Shield Second XI Australian Women's Cricket Championships (defunct) One Day One-Day Cup Women's National Cricket League Twenty20 Big Bash League Women's Big Bash League KFC Twenty20 Big Bash (defunct) Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup (defunct) Other Grade cricket Grounds International Adelaide Oval Bellerive Oval The Gabba Manuka Oval Melbourne Cricket Ground Perth Stadium Sydney Cricket Ground Domestic Allan Border Field Drummoyne Oval Junction Oval Karen Rolton Oval North Sydney Oval WACA Ground York Park Others Honours Allan Border Medal Belinda Clark Award Hall of Fame Michael Bevan Medal Lists Captains Test cricket records Test cricketers Test wicket-keepers Women's Test cricketers ODI cricket records ODI cricketers ODI wicket-keepers WODI cricketers T20I cricket records T20I cricketers T20I wicket-keepers WT20I cricketers Other Prime Minister's XI National Performance Squad Australian Cricket Academy Australian Cricketers' Association History of Australian cricket Intercolonial cricket in Australia Boxing Day Test Big Six cricket dispute of 1912 World Series Cricket Underarm bowling incident of 1981 John the bookmaker controversy 2018 Australian ball-tampering scandal The Test: A New Era for Australia's Team New South Wales selection bias

v t e Full Members of the International Cricket Council As of 22 June 2017 Afghanistan Men Women Afghanistan A U-19 Grounds Australia Men Women Australia A U-19 Indigenous Grounds Bangladesh Men Women Bangladesh A U-23 U-19 Grounds England Men Women England Lions U-19 Grounds India Men Women India A U-19 Grounds Ireland Men Women Ireland Wolves U-19 Grounds New Zealand Men Women New Zealand A U-19 Māori Grounds Pakistan Men Women Pakistan A U-19 Grounds South Africa Men Women South Africa A U-19 Grounds Sri Lanka Men Women Sri Lanka A U19 Grounds West Indies Men Women West Indies A U-19 Grounds Zimbabwe Men Women Zimbabwe A U-19 Grounds

v t e Sports governing bodies in Australia (AUS) Summer Olympic sports Aquatics Diving Swimming Water polo Archery Athletics Badminton Baseball Basketball Boxing Canoeing Cycling Equestrian Fencing Field hockey Football Golf Gymnastics Handball Judo Modern pentathlon Rugby 7s Rowing Sailing Shooting Softball Table tennis Taekwondo Tennis Triathlon Volleyball/beach volleyball Weightlifting Wrestling Winter Olympic sports Biathlon Bobsleigh Curling Skating Figure Speed Short track Ice hockey Luge Skeleton Skiing Alpine Cross country Nordic combined Freestyle Jumping Snowboarding Other IOC recognised sports Air sports Aerobatics Aero-modelling Gliding Parachuting Auto racing Bandy Boules Bowling Bridge Chess Cricket Cue sports Dance sport Floorball Karate Korfball Lacrosse Motor racing Motorcycle racing Mountaineering and Climbing Netball Orienteering Pelota Vasca Polo Power Boating Racquetball Roller sports Rugby union Sport climbing Squash Sumo Surfing Tug of war Lifesaving Non-surf Surf Underwater sports Waterski and wakeboard Wushu Paralympics and disabled sports Blind sports Disabled Wintersport Australia Other sports Arm wrestling Australian rules football Backgammon Bowls Broomball Brasilian Jiu Jitsu Croquet Darts Drag racing Draughts Fullbore rifle Gaelic games Greyhound racing Gridiron Harness racing Jujutsu Karting Kendo Mixed martial arts Muaythai Parkour Pickleball Pitch and Putt Polocrosse Powerlifting Professional boxing Radio-controlled racing Thoroughbred horse racing Quidditch Real tennis Rugby league Rodeo Sambo Skateboarding Touch football Woodchopping Multi-sport organisations Australian Olympic Committee Commonwealth Games Australia Confederation of Australian Sport Deaf Sports Australia Paralympics Australia Government bodies National Sports Tribunal Sport Integrity Australia Australian Sports Commission

Authority control databases: People Trove Australian Women's Register

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Cricket Australia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket_Australia) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket_Australia?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
