Melbourne Stars (WBBL)

Australian Twenty20 cricket team From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Melbourne Stars (WBBL)

The Melbourne Stars (WBBL) are an Australian women's Twenty20 cricket team based in St Kilda, Victoria.[a] They are one of two teams from Melbourne to compete in the Women's Big Bash League, the other being the Melbourne Renegades. To date, the Stars' best performance occurred in WBBL|06 when they ended the regular season as minor premiers before ultimately finishing as runners-up.

Quick Facts League, Personnel ...
Melbourne Stars (WBBL)
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LeagueWomen's Big Bash League
Personnel
CaptainAnnabel Sutherland
CoachJonathan Batty
Team information
CityMelbourne
Colours  Green
Home groundCitiPower Centre
History
Twenty20 debut5 December 2015 (2015-12-5)
WBBL wins0
Official websiteMelbourne Stars
Current season
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History

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Formation

One of eight founding WBBL teams, the Melbourne Stars are aligned with the men's team of the same name.[2] At the official WBBL launch on 10 July 2015, Meg Lanning was unveiled as the Stars' first-ever player signing.[3] Lanning would also become the team's inaugural captain,[3] while David Hemp was appointed as the inaugural coach.[4]

The Stars played their first match on 5 December against the Brisbane Heat at the Junction Oval, winning by 20 runs.[5]

Rivalries

Hobart Hurricanes

The Stars and Hobart Hurricanes have combined to produce an inordinate amount of matches with close finishes, including:

  • 16 January 2016, Blacktown ISP Oval: On a crumbling pitch, criticised earlier in the Australian summer for its sub-standard preparation,[6] the Stars crawled to a first innings total of 7/96 before fighting back to have the Hurricanes at 4/49 in the twelfth over of the run chase. An unbroken stand of 48 runs from the next 51 balls between Corinne Hall and Amy Satterthwaite steered Hobart out of trouble, with Hall scoring a single on the final delivery to secure victory for the 'Canes.[7]
  • 20 January 2017, Blundstone Arena: In a rain-affected encounter, Hobart posted a first innings total of 3/115 off 14 overs. Chasing a revised target of 98 from twelve overs, Melbourne lost 4/7 late in the match (including the wicket of Emma Inglis for 51 off 31) to leave a required twelve runs from the last two balls for victory. Jess Cameron proceeded to hit a six off the penultimate legal delivery before Hurricanes off-spinner Amy Satterthwaite bowled a front-foot no-ball while also conceding a four on what would have otherwise been the final ball of the innings. With Satterthwaite having to bowl the final delivery again, Cameron scored the remaining single needed to pull off an unlikely six-wicket win for the Stars.[8]
  • 21 January 2017, Blundstone Arena: The following morning, on the last day of the WBBL|02 regular season, the Stars and Hurricanes met again—this time in what was effectively a quarter-final knockout match with the winner progressing to the semi-finals and the loser being eliminated from the tournament.[9] Meg Lanning made 81 runs for the Stars in the first innings, earning Player of the Match honours, but was dismissed in the 19th over by a stunning Julie Hunter catch at square leg.[10] A spell of 3/11 off four overs by Kristen Beams was not enough to defend the target of 136 as the Hurricanes scored the winning runs (through Corinne Hall again) with four wickets in hand and one ball remaining.[11]

Melbourne Renegades

Noteworthy matches between the Stars and their cross-town rivals, the Melbourne Renegades, include:

  • 1 January 2017, Melbourne Cricket Ground: Played in front of a reported crowd of 24,547—as part of a double-header with the men's BBL, setting a new record for the highest non-standalone WBBL attendance—the rain-affected match ended in anticlimactic fashion with the Renegades adjudged nine-wicket winners via the Duckworth–Lewis–Stern method.[12] Stars captain Meg Lanning initially protested the ruling with officiating umpires, claiming she had been given false information about the par score by the match referee.[13]
  • 20 January 2018, Melbourne Cricket Ground: Chasing 119 for victory, Renegades captain Amy Satterthwaite—who looked to have been run out earlier in the innings and left the field, but was recalled after TV replays showed wicket-keeper Nicole Faltum had dislodged the bails prematurely—hit a six off the final delivery against the bowling of Georgia Elwiss to tie the game. With scores still level after the super over, the Stars were awarded the win on the boundary count back rule.[14][15]
  • 29 December 2018, Docklands Stadium: The Renegades recorded the second one-wicket victory in the league's history when Lea Tahuhu, a fast bowler not known for her batting ability, hit the winning single off leg-spinning Stars captain Kristen Beams with just one ball to spare. Courtney Webb, on 21 not out, was the set batter at the non-striker's end.[16][17]

Captaincy records

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There have been six captains in the Stars' history, including matches featuring an acting captain.

More information Captain, Span ...
Captain Span M Won Lost Tied NR W–L%
Meg Lanning 2015–23 68 30 33 0 5 47.62
Kristen Beams 2017–19 19 7 12 0 0 36.84
Erin Osborne 2018–19 10 4 5 0 1 44.44
Elyse Villani 2019 14 2 12 0 0 14.29
Nicole Faltum 2022 14 5 6 0 3 45.45
Annabel Sutherland 2023–24 13 5 7 0 1 41.67
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Source:[18]

Season summaries

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Chart of yearly table positions for Melbourne Stars in WBBL
More information Season, W–L ...
Season W–L Pos. Finals Coach Captain Most Runs Most Wickets Most Valuable Player Refs
2015–16 7–7 5th DNQ David Hemp Meg Lanning Meg Lanning – 560* Morna Nielsen – 18 Meg Lanning* [19][20][21]
2016–17 7–7 5th DNQ David Hemp Meg Lanning[b] Meg Lanning – 502* Gemma Triscari – 13 Meg Lanning [22][23][24]
2017–18 5–9 7th DNQ David Hemp Kristen Beams[c] Lizelle Lee – 349 Erin Osborne – 15 Erin Osborne [25][26][27]
2018–19 5–8 7th DNQ David Hemp Kristen Beams[d] Lizelle Lee – 276 Alana King – 15 Alana King [28][29][30]
2019–20 2–12 8th DNQ David Hemp Elyse Villani Lizelle Lee – 475 Erin Osborne – 11 Lizelle Lee [31][32][33]
2020–21 8–3* 1st* RU Trent Woodhill Meg Lanning Meg Lanning – 493 Nat Sciver – 19 Nat Sciver [34][35][36]
2021–22 5–7 5th DNQ Jarrad Loughman Meg Lanning Elyse Villani – 439 Kim Garth – 15 Kim Garth [37][38][39]
2022–23 5–6 6th DNQ Jonathan Batty Nicole Faltum Annabel Sutherland – 304 Annabel Sutherland – 21 Annabel Sutherland [40][41][42]
2023–24 6–8 7th DNQ Jonathan Batty Meg Lanning Annabel Sutherland – 288 Sophie Day – 27* Annabel Sutherland [43][44][45]
2024–25 2–7 8th DNQ Jonathan Batty Annabel Sutherland Meg Lanning – 158 Kim Garth – 10 [46][47]
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Legend
DNQDid not qualifySFSemi-finalists*Led the league
EFLost the EliminatorRURunners-up^League record
CFLost the ChallengerCChampions

Home grounds

More information Venue, Games hosted by season ...
Venue Games hosted by season
01020304050607080910Total
Casey Fields222N/A[e]17
Eastern Oval11
Jubilee Park11
CitiPower Centre41623319
Melbourne Cricket Ground22421112
Ted Summerton Reserve22
Toorak Park11
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Current squad

The squad of the Melbourne Stars for the 2025–26 Women's Big Bash League season as of 19 February 2025.[49]

  • Players with international caps are listed in bold.
More information No., Name ...
No. Name Nat. Birth Date Batting Style Bowling Style Additional Info.
Batters
7 Meg Lanning Australia 25 March 1992 Right-handed Right-arm medium
All-rounders
77 Marizanne Kapp South Africa 4 January 1990 Right-handed Right-arm fast Overseas Pre-Signing
11 Rhys McKenna Australia 17 August 2004 Right-handed Left-arm fast
3 Annabel Sutherland Australia 12 October 2001 Right-handed Right-arm fast Captain
Wicket-keepers
55 Ines McKeon Australia 19 April 2007 Right-handed
20 Sophie Reid Australia 28 August 1997 Left-handed
Bowlers
6 Sophie Day Australia 2 September 1998 Left-handed Left-arm orthodox
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Players

Australian representatives

Australia The following is a list of cricketers who have played for the Melbourne Stars after making their debut in the national women's team (the period they spent as both a Melbourne Stars squad member and an Australian-capped player is in brackets):

Overseas marquees

Associate rookies

Statistics and awards

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Team stats

More information Opposition, M ...
Opposition M Won Lost Tied NR W–L%
Adelaide Strikers 19 9 9 0 1 50
Brisbane Heat 20 7 11 0 2 38.89
Hobart Hurricanes 19 7 12 0 0 36.84
Melbourne Renegades 20 8 10 0 2 44.44
Perth Scorchers 20 9 11 0 0 45
Sydney Sixers 20 9 10 0 1 47.37
Sydney Thunder 20 4 12 0 4 25
Total 135 53 75 0 10 41.41
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  • Highest score in an innings: 4/195 (20 overs) vs Sydney Sixers, 1 November 2024
  • Highest successful chase: 1/181 (19.3 overs) vs Adelaide Strikers, 21 November 2021
  • Lowest successful defence: 7/108 (20 overs) vs Sydney Thunder, 26 October 2021
  • Largest victory:
  • Longest winning streak: 6 matches (1–14 November 2020)
  • Longest losing streak: 6 matches (9–22 November 2024)

Source:[58]

Individual stats

Source:[58]

Individual awards

Sponsors

More information Year, Kit Manufacturer ...
Year Kit Manufacturer Chest Sponsor Back Sponsor Breast Sponsor Sleeve Sponsor
2015–16 Majestic Athletic Rebel Sport Antler VicHealth Rebel
2016–17 Optus Yes
2017–18
2018–19 Yes
2019–20 Yes
2020–21 MG MG Belling Dimplex
2021–22 Nike Aussie Broadband
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See also

References

Notes

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