Herald on Sunday

Devine wish for women

There remains a long way to go but progress in sport for females is worth celebratin­g

- Michael Burgess

When Sophie Devine first made the Wellington women’s representa­tive side, she didn’t know such a team existed.

Growing up in Tawa, her cricket heroes were Black Caps such as Nathan Astle and Stephen Fleming, and firebrand Aussie quick Brett Lee, with his 150km/h deliveries.

Devine was a promising young player — she would set plenty of records at Tawa College and turned out for the boys’ 1st XI — but couldn’t identify any female models.

“I didn’t see many female players — it wasn’t really on TV,” the White Ferns captain tells the Herald on Sunday.

“The first time I saw a female team was at the 2000 World Cup in Christchur­ch. I was like, ‘oh, we have a New Zealand women’s team’.”

It was a similar story when the fourth former was called up for her first-class debut in 2003.

“I didn’t know there was a Wellington women’s team,” says Devine. “It wasn’t until I was picked in the side that I knew. It’s that visibility; if you can’t see it, how do you even know about it?

“Especially for me, because I played boys’ cricket and boys’ rep stuff, I wasn’t in the women’s or girls’ cricket circles. I didn’t know much about it. It has certainly changed a little bit now.”

That change over the past two decades has been significan­t. Devine and her White Ferns teammates are regularly seen on television and have strong profiles in the cricketing community.

There is still some way to go but the progress is worth celebratin­g, especially on Internatio­nal Women’s Day tomorrow. And the fact New Zealand will host three of the biggest World Cups in female sport over the next three years (rugby, cricket and football) is unpreceden­ted.

“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to play in front of home crowds,” says Devine.

“But the bigger picture is we’ve got three Women’s World Cups [here] and it’s across three years. I’ve never heard of that before in one country.

“It’s a special opportunit­y to share,

learn and be involved in women’s sport at a special time.”

The 31-year-old is somewhat envious of today’s teenagers, given the doors opening in female sport.

“It’s definitely on the incline,” says Devine. “Sometimes I wish I was born 10 or 15 years ago because the opportunit­ies that have started to come up now with women’s sport are unbelievab­le.

“I’m very fortunate to be playing in this period but I guess I’m jealous of these younger kids coming through because the opportunit­ies are endless really.”

Devine was first picked for the Ferns in her penultimat­e year of high school, then balanced university studies in Christchur­ch with her sports career. But she realises her fortune, coming to prominence as women’s cricket transition­ed from amateur to full-time — “I’ve never really had a proper job”.

But for the next wave, the sky is the limit, with the opportunit­ies to travel and play profession­ally, something that was a fanciful dream for players of yesteryear, who had to fit full-time employment around sport.

“I struggle to think about them holding down a full-time job while training full-time back then — it blows my mind,” says Devine.

“So much credit and respect go to those players that have come before me, but the opportunit­ies now are for players to invest their lives focusing on their sport, and it’s not just cricket and netball. It’s also rugby, basketball, football . . . there are so many options out there.

“Of course I am going to say ‘everyone come play cricket’, but if we’ve got kids getting out there, staying active and playing multiple sports, that’s really exciting.”

Although money is often the focus, with television deals pumping cash into the game, Devine says the key to the growth of women’s cricket has been the resources wrapped around that financial investment.

“You can throw money at it but you can still be training out on club grounds and not have the coaching support you need,” says Devine.

“We’ve been really lucky here in New Zealand; the strength and conditioni­ng, the coaching, the oneon-one skills that you’re getting now, we are starting to see players that are fitter, faster, stronger, who can hit the ball further and bowl the ball faster.

“All those things happen because [players] have had that support and investment into them, and the opportunit­y to dedicate their life to sport has made the biggest difference,” she says.

Asked about the vision for women’s cricket, Devine has a simple wish list.

“The end goal is that people don’t call me a female cricketer — I’m just a cricketer and it doesn’t matter about gender,” says Devine. “That’s the path we’re heading towards now, and the more we can be on level pegging with the boys, the better.”

The first time I saw a female team, I was like, ‘oh, we have a NZ women’s team’. White Ferns captain Sophie Devine

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Sophie Devine is pleased to see the opportunit­ies available for female players like those in the Auckland under-19s.
Photo / Photosport Sophie Devine is pleased to see the opportunit­ies available for female players like those in the Auckland under-19s.

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