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Alyssa Healy

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Australian cricketer (born 1990)

Alyssa Healy
Healy with theSydney Sixers in 2016
Personal information
Full name
Alyssa Jean Healy
Born (1990-03-24)24 March 1990 (age 35)
Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia
NicknameMidge
BattingRight-handed
RoleWicket-keeper-batter
RelationsIan Healy (uncle)
Ken Healy (uncle)
Mitchell Starc (husband)
Brandon Starc (brother-in-law)
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 162)22 January 2011 v England
Last Test30 January 2025 v England
ODI debut (cap 116)10 February 2010 v New Zealand
Last ODI30 October 2025 v India
ODI shirt no.77
T20I debut (cap 29)21 February 2010 v New Zealand
Last T20I11 October 2024 v Pakistan
T20I shirt no.77
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2007/08–presentNew South Wales(squad no. 77)
2012Yorkshire
2015/16–presentSydney Sixers(squad no. 77)
2018Trailblazers
2019Yorkshire Diamonds
2022–presentNorthern Superchargers
2023–presentUP Warriorz
Career statistics
CompetitionWTestWODIWT20IWLA
Matches10123162235
Runs scored4893,5633,0546,876
Batting average30.5635.9825.2436.18
100s/50s0/37/181/1712/39
Top score99170148*170
Catches/stumpings22/285/3865/63182/69
Source:CricketArchive,31 October 2025

Alyssa Jean Healy (born 24 March 1990) is an Australiancricketer who plays for and captains theAustralian women's national team. She also plays forNew South Wales in domestic cricket, as well as theSydney Sixers in theWBBL and captains theUP Warriorz inWomen's Premier League in India. She made her international debut in February 2010.[1][2]

A right-handedbatter andwicket-keeper, she is the daughter of Greg Healy, who was part of theQueensland squad, while her uncleIan Healy was Australia'sTest wicket-keeper and held the world record for the most Test dismissals. Another uncle, Greg and Ian's brotherKen Healy, also played cricket for Queensland. Healy first came to prominence in late 2006 when she became the first girl to play among boys in the private schools' competition inNew South Wales. She moved up the state age group ranks and made her debut for the senior New South Wales team in the 2007–08 season. She played most of her first two seasons as a specialist batter due to the presence ofLeonie Coleman—also a wicket-keeper for Australia—in the state side. Coleman left New South Wales at the start of the 2009–10 season and Healy took up the glovework on a full-time basis for her state. During the same season, she recorded her highest score of 89not out atfaster than a run a ball, and made the most dismissals of any wicket-keeper in theWomen's National Cricket League.

Following the injury to Australian captain and wicket-keeperJodie Fields, Healy was given her international debut in the2010 Rose Bowl series againstNew Zealand. She played in the first fiveOne Day Internationals (ODIs) and fiveTwenty20 Internationals (T20Is), but was dropped for the last three ODIs during the New Zealand leg of the series. Healy played in every match of the2010 World Twenty20 as Australia won the tournament after an unbeaten campaign. Healy was part of Australia's squad for the2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 tournament in the West Indies, and finished as the tournament's leading runs scorer with 225 runs and won player of the tournament.

In December 2018, theInternational Cricket Council (ICC) named her the T20I Player of the Year.[3] In September 2019, during Australia's seriesagainst Sri Lanka, Healy played in her 100th WT20I match.[4] In the same series, Healy set a new record for thehighest individual score in a Women's T20I match, with 148not out.[5] In January 2020, she was named in Australia's squad for the2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup in Australia. Healy finished second highest runs scorer in the tournament with 236 runs. In thefinal, she scored a quickfire 75 off 39 balls against India to help Australia win their fifth title and won player of the match. In September 2020, in the second WT20I matchagainst New Zealand, Healy took her92nd dismissal as a wicket-keeper.[6] As a result, she went pastMS Dhoni's record of 91 dismissals, to set a new record of most dismissals as a wicket-keeper, male or female, in Twenty20 International cricket.[7]

Early years

[edit]

Born on theGold Coast, Queensland, Healy is the daughter of Greg, who was a member of theQueensland squad, while Greg's younger brotherIan was Australia'sTest wicket-keeper from the late 1980s until 1999 and was the world record holder for the most Test dismissals.[1] Another uncle,Ken, played for Queensland.[2] Despite the family heritage, and watching her uncle represent Australia, she said that she did not become interested in cricket until she moved from Queensland toSydney as a child and was coaxed into taking up the sport by a friend.[8] She attended high school atMLC School and laterBarker College.

Her selection at the age of 16 in late 2006 aswicket-keeper forBarker CollegeFirst XI, the first time a girl had been picked to play among boys in the elite private schools' cricket competition inNew South Wales, drew press commentary from various sources. This came about after an anonymous person, believed to be a former male student, circulated an email entitled "Save Barker Cricket Now" in the school community attacking the selection as a "disgrace" and calling for gender segregation of the cricket team.[9] The sportsmaster of Barker College condemned the anonymous writer as "gutless" and maintained that Healy's selection was based on merit.[9] Ian Healy andAlex Blackwell, a cricketer for the Australian women's team and former Barker student, also defended the selection and criticised the email author. The emailer was also criticised, and Alyssa Healy commended, by social commentators in newspapers.[9][10][11][12] In 2010, she reflected "I'd do it all again...I really enjoyed playing school cricket with the boys and it definitely helped lift my skills and tighten my technique."[13] Both she and Australian teammateEllyse Perry have publicly advocated girls playing against boys.[13]

In January 2007, Healy was selected in the New South Wales team to play in the Under-19 interstate competition. Opening the batting in all three matches and keeping in only the second of these, she scored 47, 73 and 41 in her first three matches, and took onecatch.[14] She went on to end with 345runs at abatting average of 57.50, topping the run-scorers list and was named the best under-17 player at the tournament.[15] The following month, she was selected in the Australia Youth team, composed of under-23 cricketers, to play against New Zealand A, the only player selected before making their senior domestic debut.[15] She scored 10 not out, 41 and 63 in three matches, and made one stumping.[14] Though she top-scored amongst the Australians in the final match with 63 from 84 balls, it was not enough to prevent a 22-run defeat.[16] She played as a wicket-keeper batting in the middle-order in the first match, and opened in the last two matches, playing purely as a batter. The series ended 1–1 after the second match was tied.[14]

Senior domestic debut

[edit]

At the start of the 2007–08 season, she made her senior debut for theNew South Wales Breakers in theAustralian domestic one-day league. She was used as a specialist batter in thetop-order, asLeonie Coleman, a wicket-keeper in the Australian squad, also played for New South Wales. She made her debut againstSouth Australia and was unsuccessful to begin with, scoring only 24 runs in her first fiveinnings. After one month at senior level, she broke through with a match-winning performance in her sixth senior game. AfterQueensland had made 170, Healy came in with the score at 5/99 after 32overs, with 18 overs remaining. She raised therun rate, scoring 41 not out from 50 balls, with eightfours, shepherding thetail-enders and guiding her state to a two-wicket win with 17 balls to spare.[14][17]

New South Wales reached the final and were awarded the title because they placed first in the qualifying matches after rain washed out the deciding game.[14][18] Healy ended the season with 78 runs at 11.14.[14] She also played in twoTwenty20 interstate matches. She scored two and made astumping in the first match, and neither batted nor kept wicket in the latter. New South Wales prevailed in both.[14]

At the end of the season, she was selected for the Under-23 Australian team to play a series against the seniorEngland and Australian teams. She scored 45, 1 and 41 not out in three matches. In the third match, she combined for a second-wicketpartnership of 52 withElyse Villani, hitting six boundaries in 62 balls and guiding her team to an eight-wicket win over the Australian team.[14][19] Playing as a specialist batter, she also took three catches.[14] The new 2008–09 season started the same way, with the Under-23 national team playing against Australia andIndia. The first match, against India, was washed out and Healy made aduck [zero] and 9 in the other matches. Playing as a batter, she did not take a catch.[14]

Healy again played as a batter, with Coleman ensconced behind the stumps. In the first four matches of the new domestic season, she batted only once, scoring nine. In these matches she was placed in the lower-order and did not bowl. She was dropped after these four matches.[14]

She then played six matches for the Second XI in the space of a week, mostly as a top-order batter, sometimes opening and as a wicket-keeper. New South Wales won all the fixtures except for one that was abandoned due to inclement weather.[14] She scored 120 runs at 40.00, took six catches and made three stumpings, and was recalled to the senior team after one week in the second-string outfit.[14] In her first three matches back, Healy was placed in the middle-order and not required to bat or keep wickets.[14] In the last league match, she scored 59 from 55 balls in an 89-run partnership at faster than a run a ball withLisa Sthalekar againstVictoria. New South Wales won by three wickets despite losing Healy and three subsequent batters in the closing phase of the run-chase.[20] In the final against the same team the following week, Healy made 11 from 22 balls before beingrun out, but New South Wales nevertheless won by six wickets with more than 15 overs to spare to claim the title.[21] Healy ended the one-day competition with 79 runs at 26.33.[14] She was named Australia's 30-strong shortlist for the2009 Women's Cricket World Cup, but was not a part of the final squad of 15.[22]

Healy also played in twoTwenty20 matches for her state during the season, scoring 35 from 27 balls against South Australia and 16 from 21 balls against Victoria.[23][24] She was New South Wales' second top-scorer in both matches; the first was won but the second lost.[14]

Full-time wicket-keeper

[edit]
Young woman with a short blonde ponytail wearing a dark blue T-shirt, baseball cap and trackpants with gold stripes. Advertising logos of Adidas and Commonwealth Bank are present on the clothes. She is wearing gloves, standing with bent knees and open hands next to cricket stumps watching carefully for a white ball to catch.
Healy practising a stumping in theAdelaide Oval nets.

After the Women's World Cup held in early 2009, Coleman transferred to play for theAustralian Capital Territory, so Healy became New South Wales' wicket-keeper on a full-time basis for the start of the 2009–10 season. After making scores of 11, 12 and 29 in her first three innings of the one-day season,[14] she struck an unbeaten 89 against Victoria. Coming in upon the fall ofLeah Poulton with the score at 1/9 after three overs, she hit 13 fours in 82 balls, putting on partnerships of 72 with Blackwell and 82 with Sthalekar. New South Wales reached their target of 187 with more than 13 overs to spare and Healy was named the Player of the Match, having earlier taken acatch and made a stumping.[25] Her season was interrupted by her selection in the Australian Under-21 team to play against the New Zealand Emerging Players. In five matches, she scored 50 runs at 10.00, took five catches and made one stumping as Australia won the series 4–1.[14]

In the final of the one-day competition, she scored 23 from 37 balls batting at No. 3 and took two catches as New South Wales defeated Victoria by 59 runs.[26] Healy ended her first full season as a wicket-keeper with 208 runs at 29.71, the second-highest average in her team behind Blackwell. In 11 matches, she also took 11 catches and completed 9 stumpings, effecting more dismissals than any other player.[27]

She made 52 runs at 13.00 in seven T20 matches.[14] Her best score was an unbeaten 20 from 13 balls in an eight-wicket win overTasmania. In the final, Victoria batted first and made 5/127, Healy completing a catch and stumping. In reply, Healy made a duck as New South Wales lost four wickets in the first 13 balls and were all out for 75 to lose by 22 runs.[28]

She holds the record for conceding the most number of byes as wicketkeeper in an innings of aWT20I (9), the joint most by any female wicketkeeper along withTammy Beaumont.[29]

International debut

[edit]
Young woman with a short blonde ponytail wearing a dark blue T-shirt, baseball cap and trackpants with gold stripes. Advertising logos of Adidas and Commonwealth Bank are present on the clothes. She is wearing a green helmet with a grill and pads on her legs, gloves and is holding a bat in her right hand.
Healy in her batting kit in theAdelaide Oval nets.

Healy was selected in the Australian squad for the Rose Bowl series against New Zealand in February 2010 due to an injury to the incumbent wicketkeeper and captainJodie Fields. The selection committee released a statement saying "Alyssa has been identified for higher honours for a number of years and now gets the chance to display her wicket-keeping skills and attacking batting on the international stage".[30] Healy made her ODI debut at theAdelaide Oval and played in all five ODIs in the Australian leg of the series. In her first match, she scored 21 from 11 balls in the death overs, hitting four fours as Australia made 241 before bowling out the visitors for 126 to seal a 115-run win. She took one catch, removingAmy Satterthwaite from the bowling ofRene Farrell.[31] Healy made consecutive ducks in the next two matches, and made four in the final match atJunction Oval. She had only brief opportunities with the bat in the closing stages of the innings. She ended the series with 25 runs at 6.25 and a strike rate of 100.00, five catches and a stumping.[14][32]

She then played in the three T20s held atBellerive Oval inHobart. The first of these matches was a curtain-raiser to the match between theAustralia andWest Indies men teams, and was the first match to be shown live on free-to-air television in Australia. New Zealand batted first and Australianfast bowlerEllyse Perry extracted an outside edge from captainAimee Watkins from the first ball of the match. The ball flew straight to Healy's mid-riff and she dropped it.[33][34] Watkins went on to score 44 from 36 balls as New Zealand made 7/117 and Healy's only dismissal was to catchNicola Browne from Sthalekar'soff spin. Healy came to the crease at 6/107 at the end of the 19th over and had scored three runs from as many balls and found herself on strike for the final ball of the match, bowled by Browne, with Australia needing three runs for the win. The delivery was wide outside off and Healy's expansive shot took the outside edge of the bat and flew towards the vacantfirst slip area. It would have gone for a match-winning four runs but for New Zealand wicket-keeperRachel Priest diving across and catching the ball one-handed in her right glove, handing the tourists a two-run victory.[14][33][34]

Healy had little impact with the bat in the three T20s in Australia and two more at the start of the New Zealand leg of the series, scoring 17 runs at 5.66 and a strike rate of 77.27.[35] Apart from one catch on her debut, she did not make any more dismissals. Australia lost all five matches.[14] She was then omitted for the three ODIs in New Zealand as batterJess Cameron stood in as a makeshift wicket-keeper.[14]

2010 World Twenty20

[edit]

Healy was selected for the2010 World Twenty20 in theWest Indies and played in every match after Fields was again forced out by injury.[36][37][38][39][40][41][42] In the first warm-up match, she took two catches and did not bat as Australia lost to New Zealand by 18 runs.[36] In the last warm-up match, she was again not required to bat and did not make a dismissal as the Australians defeatedPakistan by 82 runs.[42]

Australia were grouped withEngland,South Africa and theWest Indies. In the first match against England, Healy took one catch to dismissDanielle Hazell from the bowling of Sthalekar. In pursuit of 105 for victory, Australia were struggling when Healy came to the crease with the score at 7/63 after 14.2 overs. Three wickets had fallen in the space of 16 balls, during which only three runs had been added,[38] and England had the momentum, and 42 runs were needed from 34 balls for victory. Healy then struck three fours, making 15 from 9 balls before being dismissed byNicki Shaw, ending a stand of 23 from 13 balls with Sthalekar. However,Rene Farrell wasrun out going for the winning run from the third last ball available, leaving the scores tied.[38]

A Super Over eventuated, andLaura Marsh bowled for England. Healy came in at 1/3 afterLeah Poulton fell on the fourth ball. She hit a two from the fifth ball, and was run out byJenny Gunn while attempting to complete a second run on the sixth and final ball of Australia's Super Over, leaving them at 2/6. England also ended with 2/6 after a run out in an attempt to secure the winning run on the final ball. Australia was awarded the match because they had hit moresixes in the match—Jess Cameron scored the solitary six.[38]

Healy batting forNSW Breakers, 2017

In the next match against South Africa, Healy was promoted two positions to No. 7. Coming in upon the fall of Cameron, her partnerSarah Elliott was then run out without further addition to the score. Healy hit one boundary and was then out for 8 from 6 balls at 7/151. Her dismissal was part of a sudden collapse as Australia lost 6/16 including the last four wickets for four runs to be all out for 155 with three balls unused. Healy did not make a dismissal as Australia completed a 22-run win.[39] In the final group match against the West Indies, Healy came in at 6/111 and hit 12 from 8 balls, before being caught from the final ball of the innings as Australia finished on 7/133. She had put on 22 runs in 16 balls with Sthalekar. She caughtDeandra Dottin from the bowling of Perry for a golden duck as Australia won by nine runs to finish the group stage unbeaten at the top of their quartet.[40]

Australia went on to faceIndia in the semi-final. Healy stumped leading Indian batterMithali Raj from the bowling of Sthalekar and was not required to bat as Australia reached their target of 120 with seven wickets and seven balls to spare.[41] Australia elected to bat first in the final against New Zealand, but the top-order struggled and Healy came to the crease to join Elliott at 5/51 in the 13th over after the fall of two wickets in quick succession. The pair lifted therun rate by adding 21 runs in 18 balls. Healy scored 10 from as many balls, but was then run out attempting a second run after being dropped bySara McGlashan in the outfield. This left the score at 6/72 in the 16th over, and Australia eventually ended on 8/106.[43]

During the middle of the run-chase, Priest was incorrectly given out stumped by Healy after the television umpireAsad Rauf had pressed the wrong button, and he had to retract his decision. Soon after New Zealand were at 5/36 after 11 overs, leaving them with 71 runs to score from the last 54 balls, and Australia were in the ascendancy.[44] However, New Zealand's chances were revived byNicola Browne andSophie Devine, who put on 41 from as many balls. In the 18th over, Healy caught Browne from Perry's bowling, and Australia went on to win by three runs after New Zealand ended on 6/103.[44]

2015–present

[edit]

In June 2015, she was named as one of Australia's touring party for the 2015 Women's Ashes in England.[45]

Healy was named as the wicketkeeper across all forms of the2017 Women's Ashes series in Australia. She was the leading run-scorer in the ODI leg of the series. The entire series ended 8–8 in points, and as the holders, Australia retained the Ashes.[46][47]

In April 2018, she was one of the fourteen players to be awarded a national contract for the 2018–19 season byCricket Australia.[48]

In June 2018, Healy was named as the captain of theNew South Wales Breakers for the 2018–19 season after the retirement of the previous captain,Alex Blackwell. She was named ahead of Australian Women's Vice-CaptainRachael Haynes and Sydney Sixers CaptainEllyse Perry.[49]

In October 2018, she was named in Australia's squad for the2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 tournament in the West Indies.[50][51] Ahead of the tournament, she was named as one of the players to watch.[52] She was the leading run-scorer in the competition, with 225 runs, and was named the player of the tournament.[53]

In November 2018, she was named in theSydney Sixers' squad for the2018–19 Women's Big Bash League season.[54][55] In April 2019,Cricket Australia awarded her with a contract ahead of the 2019–20 season.[56][57] In June 2019, Cricket Australia named her in Australia's team for theirtour to England to contest theWomen's Ashes.[58][59]

She was awarded the Belinda Clarke Medal at theAllan Border Medal ceremony by theCA in 2019.[60] In January 2020, she was named in Australia's squad for the2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup in Australia.[61] In Australia's match againstBangladesh, Healy andBeth Mooney made an opening partnership of 151 runs, the highest partnership for Australia Women for any wicket in a WT20I match.[62] In the final, Healy blasted 75 off 39 balls in a player of the match performance, which saw Australia win their 5th title.[63]

In November 2020, Healy was nominated for the ICC Women's T20I Cricketer of the Decade award.[64][65] On 7 April 2021, in the second WODIagainst New Zealand, Healy played in her 200th international match.[66]

In January 2022, Healy was named in Australia's squad for theirseries against England to contest theWomen's Ashes.[67] Later the same month, she was named in Australia's team for the2022 Women's Cricket World Cup in New Zealand.[68] In April 2022, she was bought by theNorthern Superchargers for the2022 season ofThe Hundred in England.[69] The following month, Healy was named in Australia's team for thecricket tournament at the2022 Commonwealth Games inBirmingham, England.[70]

In December 2023, after the retirement ofMeg Lanning from international cricket, Healy was appointed ascaptain of theAustralia women's national cricket team intest,one day international andTwenty20 International cricket.[71]

She was named captain of the Australia squad for the2024 ICC Women's T20 World Cup[72] and the2025 Women's Ashes series.[73][74]

Records

[edit]

Between 21 February and 2 August 2019, Healy held theGuinness World Record for the highest catch of a cricket ball at 82.5m.[75] This was set as part of a campaign to mark one year until the start of the 2020ICC Women's T20 World Cup. However, the record has since been surpassed by Kristan Baumgartner, with 114m.[76] Alyssa Healy holds the world record for the most runs in aWomen's T20 International with 148* (61) atNorth Sydney Oval on 2 October 2019 against Sri Lanka.[5] On 8 March 2020, Healy recorded the fastest 50 (off 30 balls) in the history of ICC event finals across formats before it was broken byHeinrich Klaasen in2024.[77]

International centuries

[edit]
One Day International centuries
RunsMatchOpponentsCityVenueYear
13358 IndiaVadodara, IndiaReliance Stadium2018[78]
12268 West IndiesSaint George,Antigua and BarbudaCoolidge Cricket Ground2019[79]
112*73 Sri LankaBrisbane, AustraliaAllan Border Field2019[80]
12993 West IndiesWellington, New ZealandBasin Reserve2022[81]
17094 EnglandChristchurch, New ZealandHagley Oval2022[82]
142121 IndiaVisakhapatnam, IndiaACA–VDCA Cricket Stadium2025[83]
113*122 BangladeshVisakhapatnam, IndiaACA–VDCA Cricket Stadium2025[84]
T20 International centuries
RunsMatchOpponentsCityVenueYear
148*101 Sri LankaSydney, AustraliaNorth Sydney Oval2019[85]

Honours

[edit]

Team

[edit]

International

[edit]

Domestic/franchise

[edit]

Individual

[edit]

Personal life

[edit]

Healy'snickname is "Midge". She has said that "Dad gave it to me when I was little, it just stuck!"[86]

In 2015, Healy became engaged to fast bowlerMitchell Starc.[87] They were married in April 2016.[88] They met each other when they were 9 as Starc started off as a wicketkeeper.[89] Healy and Starc are only the third married couple to play Test cricket, after the English couple the Prideauxs (Roger andRuth), in the 1950s to 1970, and the Sri Lankan de Alwis couple (Guy andRasanjali), in the 1980s and 1990s.[90] In March 2020, Starc flew home ahead of the final ODI matchagainst South Africa, so he could watch Healy play inthe final of the2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup.[91] Healy's brother-in-law is high jumperBrandon Starc.

Healy has a golfhandicap of seven (as of 1 Oct 2019)[92] and competes against Starc (handicap of ten)[92] for the annual Stealy Cup.[93]

Healy and her husband support theGreater Western Sydney Giants in theAustralian Football League. They were named joint number 1 ticket holders in 2025.[94]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Healy was named inthe Australian squad for the tournament, but did not play a match.

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ab"Alyssa Healy". CricketArchive.Archived from the original on 6 July 2008. Retrieved20 July 2008.
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  4. ^"Healy joins elite company with a ton of T20Is".Cricket Australia. Retrieved30 September 2019.
  5. ^ab"Healy plunders T20I world record with 148*".ESPNcricinfo. 2 October 2019. Retrieved2 October 2019.
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  9. ^abc"Scandals: Not cricket".The Sydney Morning Herald. 28 October 2006.Archived from the original on 13 August 2008. Retrieved20 July 2008.
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  11. ^MacDonald, Emma (29 November 2006)."Why does cricket remain a boys' own world?".The Age. Retrieved20 July 2008.
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  36. ^ab"Australia Women v New Zealand Women". CricketArchive. Retrieved4 June 2010.
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  40. ^ab"West Indies Women v Australia Women". CricketArchive. Retrieved4 June 2010.
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  45. ^"Women's Ashes: Australia include three potential Test debututants". BBC. 1 June 2015. Retrieved3 June 2015.
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  49. ^"Healy to take charge of dominant dynasty". cricket.com.au. Retrieved2 August 2018.
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Further reading

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External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toAlyssa Healy.
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Australia squads
Australia
Sarah Coyte was included in the original squad but withdrew due to illness; she was replaced by Nicola Carey.
Australia
Jess Jonassen was included in the original squad but withdrew due to injury; she was replaced by Renee Chappell.
Australia
Tayla Vlaeminck was included in the original squad but was withdrawn due to injury; she was replaced by Molly Strano.
New South Wales Breakers – current squad
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Batters with 3,000 or moreruns inWomen's ODIcricket
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