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This is how the women of Gippsland are growing cricket in country Victoria

    Jackie Newman had never planned on being a cricketer.

    Administrator? Sure. Supporter? Absolutely. But when her local association in Gippsland’s south gave women the opportunity to play in a local competition for the first time, she immediately put her hand up and worked to bring everyone she knew along for the ride.

    Every woman in her phone got a call or text. Jackie asked clients from her finance business, promoted the competition on local Facebook community pages, and even recruited a group of players from the local netball club.

    “I’m more of an organiser,” Jackie said.

    “I signed up so that other women my age would feel more comfortable.”

    Opportunities for women to play cricket in Victoria have exploded in recent years, returning to the previous heights of the 1980s when the Victorian Women’s Cricket Association (VWCA) boasted over 130 teams across Melbourne.

    However, the decades that followed saw numbers more than halve before the VWCA (previously responsible for all cricket played by women) integrated with Cricket Victoria.

    Jackie bowls.
    Jackie took to bowling in her first season of playing cricket.(Supplied: Jackie Newman)

    This saw exponential growth of local associations adding women’s divisions and increasing participation, particularly in metropolitan leagues.

    Now, this momentum is also gathering in regional areas like Gippsland, where opportunities have previously been scarce.

    Getting women at the wicket in regional Victoria

    The Leongatha & District Cricket Association (LDCA) is one of six cricket associations in the country region of Gippsland in Victoria’s east.

    Both the region and association have a proud history of women and girls in cricket, but the LDCA were seeing women drop out of the sport, even after playing at representative level.



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