Editorial
January 15, 2026 — 5.00am
January 15, 2026 — 5.00am
In the summer of 2006, 16-year-old Alyssa Healy was selected as wicketkeeper for the Barker College First XI – the first girl to play in the NSW Combined Associated Schools cricket competition.
Rallying to preserve the past, a Barker old boy launched an email campaign against her inclusion as “disgraceful”. But the Herald’s Stay In Touch columnist David Dale reported the college’s sports master, Matthew Macoustra, was fully supportive of the niece of a former Australian wicketkeeper, saying she had earned her place in the team. The master also took a brave stand against a “spineless, gutless person” that spoke eloquently about those who preferred the past to the future.
Alyssa Healy on Tuesday, the day she announced her retirement. Credit: Kate Geraghty
And what a future Healy’s has proved to be.
Just four years after her Barker debut, Healy began a truly stellar international career that coincided with a new era in which cricket was opened up for women in ways never before imaginable.
Healy belonged to the first group of women offered contracts by Cricket Australia. And she certainly seized the day, becoming one of the original players to become a household name in Australia. Over the years, the women received significant pay rises, and in 2017 they were included in the same revenue-sharing model as men, in a historic memorandum of understanding.
Alyssa Healy as a junior at Carlingford Waratah cricket club, where she remains patron.
Off the field, Healy’s achievements and fame have seen her become an in-demand media commentator with a popular podcast, further proof how much the game has changed over the years for women.
Now 35, and Australian captain, Healy has announced her retirement from cricket in March. Our premier wicketkeeper/batter makes her swansong in the home series against India in February-March.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese lauded Healy after she announced her retirement. “Alyssa Healy is a legend,” he said. “She has had such an incredible career playing for Australia and leading Australia. The rise of women’s cricket, which has in parallel seen a rise of other women’s sports, is a great thing.”
Healy made her national team debut in 2010 and was named captain in 2023. She earned a Commonwealth Games gold medal in 2022 and led Australia to a clean sweep win over England in the 2025 Ashes.
She’s twice been named ICC women’s T20I cricketer of the year, and also won the Belinda Clark Award in 2019 as Australia’s best female international cricketer. Domestically, she was a founding Sydney Sixers team member and has compiled more than 3000 runs across 11 seasons in the women’s Big Bash League, lifting the trophy twice.
Alyssa Healy bats during the World Cup semi-final against India in October 2025.Credit: Getty Images
Remarkably, considering her standing as an all-time great of Australian cricket, Healy’s early career at the crease was often tentative and her batting only truly took off in late 2017, after going full-time professional with NSW and once she became a full-time opener in the limited-overs sides.
But as a wicketkeeper, she has 269 dismissals – the highest tally in international cricket (men’s or women’s).
Records aside, Healy’s true achievement is her role as the trailblazer who helped drive the women’s game into the big time.
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