

Australia’s women internationals could miss significant portions of the domestic Women’s National Cricket League in the 2026-27 season due to the fixture congestion in their international schedule for the year. The fixtures for the WNCL were released by Cricket Australia on Wednesday, July 15, but a sizeable number of internationals could miss the 50-over domestic competition.
In the 2025-26 season, players such as Ellyse Perry, Annabel Sutherland, Sophie Molineux, Alana King and Tahlia McGrath played matches for their NWCL teams despite international commitments, but others, including Beth Mooney, Georgia Voll, Phoebe Litchfield and Ashleigh Gardner, did not feature for their state teams.
There are expected to be fewer international stars featuring in the 2026-27 season, as the start overlaps with series against Bangladesh and New Zealand in October, before members of the team depart to India for the WPL in January 2027. The inaugural Women’s Champions Trophy follows in February, which will be followed by a home ODI series against New Zealand in March. Australia A also have a multi-format tour of India which overlaps with the start of the WNCL on September 29.
CA’s head of scheduling, Peter Roach, expressed the unfortunate nature of the circumstances, stating that the Women’s team’s scheduling resembles the men’s team’s fortunes of being able to participate in limited domestic cricket due to international commitments.
“We see that first [round] as being an opportunity. We won’t have the same international players playing the A tour as we do the international series, so that’ll be certainly one. The others are challenged. Whilst technically there’s maybe a day here and there, you look around round five and WPL finals, if their teams didn’t make the finals there’s an opportunity, but then they launch into a world event. As the years go by, it’s becoming a little bit more like the men, where finding opportunities for them to compete in domestic cricket, where it used to be the norm and used to be unusual for them not to be playing, now it’s probably the opposite that teams expect Australia’s best XI team not to be playing,” CA’s head of scheduling Peter Roach said, as per Cricinfo.
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