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Australian women’s cricketers exceed $1m in earnings – with more riches on the horizon

about 22 hours ago
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Five of Australia’s all-conquering team set for a showdown against hosts India in the women’s cricket World Cup semi-final on Thursday have surged through the threshold of $1m annual earnings, as the growing financial opportunities in the global game approach and even exceed the value of Cricket Australia contracts.That group might soon expand too, given an Indian Women’s Premier League “mega auction” is scheduled for November.The Australians – who have won three of the past four world T20 titles and are defending 50-over champions – are set to attract significant interest from the five franchises, each of which have approximately $2.6m to spend for the month-long tournament.Australian Cricketers’ Association chief executive Paul Marsh said he expected women’s salaries to continue to grow.

“It’s healthy, it can offer more and more players those sorts of opportunities, because that means we’ve got a better chance of securing the best athletes in the country,”While the earnings of individual athletes remain private, Ellyse Perry’s long-term endorsements with brands such as Adidas, Commonwealth Bank, Fox Sports and Weet-Bix have made her Australia’s highest earner for much of her 18-year career,Those sponsorships and the money paid under her Cricket Australia contract are now being complemented by significant franchise earnings,Perry collected around $300,000 for her eight matches with Royal Challengers Bengaluru this year according to public auction results, and another $130,000 for her stint in the Hundred in the UK,Ash Gardner was the second-highest paid player in the 2025 WPL behind only Indian star Smriti Mandhana, and earned around $550,000 for her nine matches with Gujarat Giants.

Annabel Sutherland accrued close to $350,000 with the Delhi Capitals, and was another – like Perry and Gardner – on the highest earnings tier in the Hundred,Captain Alyssa Healy is also likely to be at or close to the million-dollar mark annually, as is Beth Mooney, who earned almost $350,000 in the WPL alone,Emerging players will soon enter this upper echelon too, including Phoebe Litchfield and Georgia Voll – whose 99 earlier this year tied the WPL’s highest score,When the latest Cricket Australia pay deal was struck with the players in 2023, it was expected by 2027 the women’s team’s top-earner – then reported to be Meg Lanning – would earn $800,000, while the next half dozen highest earners would be on around $500,000,Playing income for the leading men’s player, Pat Cummins is approximately $3m, on top of his earnings from franchise cricket including around $3.

7m from Sunrisers Hyderabad.The BBL privatisation process is likely to trigger a renegotiation of that agreement, and Marsh will continue to “push everyone forward” towards gender equity.However, a priority will also be managing the physical demands of an increasingly crowded schedule.“Whilst there are not as many domestic T20 leagues in women’s cricket as there are as in men’s, the reality of it is, the players can only play so much,” he said.Cameron Richardson, who has managed Australian leg-spinner Alana King for a decade, said the landscape has changed “inexorably” in recent years.

King was picked up in last year’s WPL auction by the UP Warriorz but only played a single match, and she will enter next month’s auction as a free agent following an outstanding World Cup performance.She has taken the third-most wickets in the competition, and her 7-18 against South Africa were the best figures in tournament history.Sign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotionRichardson has been working with UK cricket management firm TGI Sport to help connect King with the best opportunities in the WPL during what he said can become a “random” auction process.“Let’s be honest, the Australian cricketers are the best performers on the most consistent team in world cricket, so you would like to think that in this auction process they will continue to be the case, but there’s no guarantee of that,” he said.Although franchise opportunities are increasingly remunerative, Richardson said King’s priority is still the Australian team.

“We treat the WPL as a bonus,” he said.“If it happens, it happens.If it doesn’t happen, it doesn’t happen, because her priority – absolutely 100% – is to her country.”
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Steve Coogan says Richard III film was ‘story I wanted to tell’ as he agrees to libel settlement

Steve Coogan has said his film about the discovery of the remains of Richard III was “the story I wanted to tell, and I am happy I did” after he and two production companies agreed to pay “substantial damages” to settle a high court libel claim over the film’s portrayal of a senior university administrator.Richard Taylor, deputy registrar at the University of Leicester at the time of the find, sued Coogan, his production company Baby Cow, and Pathe Productions for libel over his portrayal in the 2022 film The Lost King, which follows the amateur historian Philippa Langley and her search for the king’s skeleton.Taylor’s lawyers had asserted previously that he was portrayed in the film as “devious”, “weasel-like” and a “suited bean-counter”.Judge Lewis had ruled previously that the film portrayed Taylor as having “knowingly misrepresented facts to the media and the public” about the find, and as being “smug, unduly dismissive and patronising”, which had a defamatory meaning.The case was due to proceed to trial, but lawyers for Taylor read an agreed statement to the court on Monday saying the parties had settled the claim

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‘We were fitted with remote control penises’: Harry Enfield and Kathy Burke on Kevin and Perry Go Large

We’d done Kevin and Perry on Harry Enfield and Chums and thought it would be fun to make a Wayne’s World-y thing while we still had the impetus of the TV programme. I went on holiday and Dave Cummings, who’d written for Harry Enfield and Chums, did the first draft. I came back and took over. A month later, it was all happening. It was really quick

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From White Teeth to Swing Time: Zadie Smith’s best books - ranked!

How do you follow a smash hit like White Teeth, which, as everyone now knows, sold for a six-figure sum while the author was still at university, and turned Zadie Smith into a literary superstar and poster girl for multi­culturalism at 24? With a novel about a pot-smoking Chinese‑Jewish autograph hunter, the dangers of fame and the shallowness of pop culture, of course.The Autograph Man begins in full wisecracking throttle with three boys in the back of a car on their way to watch a wrestling match between Big Daddy and Giant Haystacks at the Royal Festival Hall. As 12-year-old Alex-Li Tandem gets Big Daddy’s autograph (the start of an obsession), his own daddy drops dead from a brain tumour. Unfortunately, the rest of the novel doesn’t quite live up to the prologue. The critical heavyweights of the time didn’t pull their punches: “A poky, pallid successor” (Michiko Kakutani, who had rapturously reviewed White Teeth, in the New York Times), “cartoonish” and full of “misplaced ironies and grinning complicities” (James Wood in the LRB)

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Ardal O’Hanlon: ‘I fell asleep on stage once – I could hear someone doing my material, got annoyed and woke up’

What’s the longest word you can make out of the letters A-R-D-A-L-O-H-A-N-L-O-N in 30 seconds?“Anal” springs to mind, because I was doing a show in Limerick in Ireland and the stage manager genuinely thought my name was Anal. He called me over the Tannoy [PA system]: “Could Anal please come to the stage door?” But there must be a bigger word than that. I’m usually good at Countdown. This is quite annoying. This is how I define myself – by my ability to conjure up words from random letters

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My cultural awakening: A Jim Carrey series made me embrace baldness – and shave my head on the spot

I was a mess of insecurities, trying to hide thinning hair, worried I was ageing too quickly. Then a scene in the TV show Kidding changed everythingGrowing up, I was obsessed with Jim Carrey. I was just entering my teens when The Mask came out, and I can still picture myself watching Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls on TV one weekend afternoon, absolutely howling at the silliness of it. His elastic facial expressions, the energy, the stunts – it was the perfect tenor of humour for a young boy.By the time I was in college, I had moved on to his more thoughtful films

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From Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere to IT: Welcome to Derry – your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Jeremy Allen White channels the Boss in a hotly tipped new biopic, and Pennywise the clown returns to terrorise unsuspecting children in a spooky horror prequel seriesSpringsteen: Deliver Me from NowhereOut now The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White plays the Boss in this buzzed-about Bruce Springsteen biopic focusing on the period when he was making his 1982 album Nebraska (so, post-Born to Run but pre-Born in the USA), with Jeremy Strong playing critic turned producer Jon Landau.The MastermindOut now Kelly Reichardt returns with an art heist movie inspired by a real robbery in 1970s Massachusetts, in which two Gauguins, a Picasso and a Rembrandt were nicked. Here, it’s Arthur Dove paintings that catch the eye of Josh O’Connor’s art thief James Blaine Mooney.ParaNormanOut now An odd dearth of family films has left a gap in the market into which this rerelease of 2012’s animated adventure ParaNorman has decided to slip. Norman Babcock (Kodi Smit-McPhee) is the misfit 11-year-old who speaks with the dead, enabling a spooky adventure to unfold in time for Halloween

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Hundreds of hospice beds and staff cut in England amid funding crisis

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‘No more children are going to die like you’: how Sheffield mother kept her promise to boys killed by father 11 years ago

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NHS makes morning-after pill available for free across pharmacies in England

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Five more prisoners freed in error after sex offender’s release from Essex jail

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EHRC guidance will help businesses comply with the law on sex and gender | Letter

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Gambling does not cause any ‘social ills’, lobbyist tells incredulous MPs

1 day ago