The Women's BBL has been a resounding success

By Stacey O'Loughlin / Roar Pro

No matter who emerges victorious in the first ever Women’s Big Bash League finals, it’s pretty clear that when it comes to the inaugural competition, everyone is already a winner.

The incredible success of the tournament has blown open doors when it comes to the potential for women’s sport in Australia.

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There’s an argument that tends to arise when women’s sport is discussed, that there’s a reason why it doesn’t get the coverage, sponsorship or support that men’s sports do.

And that no matter how hard we try, gender equality in sport will never happen because people aren’t interested in women’s sport.

The incredible strides that women’s sports have taken in the past year or so give rise to a resounding counter argument that says that argument is nonsense. This summer the Women’s Big Bash League has proven that oft-used axiom: if you build it, they will come.

By ‘it’, I mean build a genuinely professional product, something that doesn’t look out of place next to men’s sport.

That professionalism has to come from all sides: in organisation, TV coverage, promotion, and in the competition itself. With the WBBL, never has a women’s sport ticked so many boxes at once.

Cricket Australia and Channel Ten have gone out of their way to ensure the quality of this tournament.

The teams are linked to existing BBL franchises to attract established fan-bases. Top international and Australian players were recruited, the teams are all competitive and the games have been played at a very high standard. Double headers were scheduled with the BBL so that games could be televised, and to ensure the most professional coverage possible Channel Ten have used the same TV production set up as the BBL.

The camera angles, quality of the commentary, graphics and statistics, player interviews, the kids zones – minus some fireworks and Freddie Flintoff antics – it’s just like watching a men’s Big Bash game. Which is exactly what it needs to be.

Even with all of these things, expectations for the competition were still modest. For Cricket Australia it was a loss leader, sharing the substantial cost of double headers with Channel Ten to get the women on the air, and not charging for entry to stand-alone games to make sure they were played in front of crowds.

For Network Ten it was the cost of doing business with Cricket Australia and the immensely profitable BBL as they aim to compete with Channel Nine in cricket broadcasting. They put the girls on ONEHD and apparently projected that average audiences could be as low as 40,000 per game. It was more a show of good faith from all involved, rather than something that was expected to garner ratings or profits.

And then it began.

The first weekend of games saw crowds of more than 1500 in Melbourne and 1000 in Sydney. The first televised game, Heat versus Strikers on December 18, drew an average of 250,000 viewers on ONE – more than five times Channel Ten’s internal projections.

The next day Sixers versus Scorchers followed up with a 183,000 average audience. In the space of two days the WBBL went from a curious experiment to a TV property that was outdrawing men’s sports as significant as the A-League.

Channel Ten immediately responded by promoting the Melbourne Derby to their main channel, and as the season went on the numbers just got bigger and bigger. Crowds of 10,500 in Adelaide on New Years Eve, 12,901 for the Melbourne Derby, 14,611 for Renegades versus Thunder at Etihad, and 12,220 for Saturday’s Sydney Smash.

The move to Ten proved fruitful as an average of 372,000 tuned into the Stars versus Renegades clash, with a peak audience of 439,000. Attendance and ratings records for women’s cricket were not only being broken, but being annihilated on an almost match-by-match basis.

At the beginning of the season the WBBL semi-finals weren’t even supposed to be televised; they were going to be held at suburban ovals mid-week to probably a couple hundred spectators. Now they have been re-scheduled as double headers, and the girls will fight for a place in the final at the Adelaide Oval and MCG, in front of thousands of fans and on live television.

The final will be broadcast live on Channel Ten on Sunday, and the trickle down effect has already reached beyond the WBBL itself.

The increase in interest in women’s cricket led to the announcement of the Governor-General’s XI match as an annual fixture for the women, and the Southern Stars’ upcoming T20 series versus India will be broadcast on the Nine Network. By next summer, we should have our first generation of bona fide, honest to goodness, fully professional female cricketers.

And other sports have already responded as well: in the new year, the FFA organised to hold extra televised double headers to cover the last two rounds of the regular W-League season. The flow-on effect of this unprecedented interest in female sport could be felt for years to come, and this could truly be a landmark summer for women’s sport in this country.

Without a shadow of a doubt, it is already a landmark summer for women’s cricket.

Of course, we can’t get too far ahead of ourselves just yet, as the long-term viability of the WBBL is still unknown. It remains to be seen whether it can become a stable, profitable entity in its own right, and becoming a profitable entity is the only way to guarantee the future of the WBBL as a professional competition.

But in the short term, we can go ahead and call the inaugural Women’s Big Bash League a resounding, unequivocal success. As it turns out, people will watch women’s sport. If you build it, people will come. Now they just need to keep coming back.

The Crowd Says:

2016-02-08T20:34:32+00:00

Adam Smith

Guest


Just saw on ABC TV segment on Womens AFL. They are trying to form a league. The momentum is real, and great to see this is finally happening.

2016-01-20T08:00:37+00:00

Slane

Guest


Love the over rate in women's cricket. They just seem to fly through their overs compared to the blokes.

2016-01-19T17:54:10+00:00

Jarijari

Guest


I'm a big fan Stacey. Despite being an old Sydney bloke, for the first time in my life I went for a Melbourne team (the Stars, mainly because of the excellent leggie Kristen Beams and the incomparable Meg Lanning, but also because they so nicely welcomed me into their camp). Women's cricket works because so there's much great talent -- Veronica Pyke, Charlotte Edwards, Sarah McGlashan, Lauren Cheatle and Grace Harris, and of course Ellyse Perry -- yet no big-headed idiot.

2016-01-19T10:37:09+00:00

compo

Guest


they MUST include the International female players...that way we have the cream of the crop in AUS ! very much enjoyed their cricket...heaps of good games too...

2016-01-19T04:00:37+00:00

dan ced

Guest


I kept my eye on Sarah Taylor because pre tournament she got a matching winning hundred for the Scorpions. I hadn't really heard of her before that, moreso Edwards. She was impressive, seemed good with the gloves too. I saw a bit of Perry, and Ferling for AUS when they showed some of the Ashes on TV, so I was interested in seeing them in the BBL, but I noticed a few other players. Coyte and Wellington, I saw a Sophie Molineux innings that interested me as she was supposedly only 17, and showed some good technique and fight. A bit disappointed I didn't see any live, as it was on at 3PM on a workday as a curtain raiser.

2016-01-19T02:57:59+00:00

Happy Hooker

Guest


I've enjoyed seeing Ellyse Perry the most

2016-01-19T02:07:24+00:00

Ian

Guest


What I've enjoyed most is getting to see more of the players who aren't Ellyse Perry and Meg Lanning.

2016-01-19T00:06:46+00:00

ChrisB

Guest


It's been fantastic to see women's cricket get the attention and audience it so richly deserves. Kudos to CA - they cope plenty of criticism but they've picked a worthy winner here From the games i've seen the standard has been top-notch and should have silenced some of the idiots who say it's not the same standard as the men's game. This and the English version starting later this year should also lead to increased standards in some of the other countries too, especially if we can hopefully get some girls involved from the Sub-continent. The Kiwis are already on the way back after some poor years, and this competition has shown how competitive the Windies and Saffirs now are

2016-01-18T23:03:18+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


The difficulty is that matches don't go for set periods of time. They need to allow enough time for the "worst-case scenario" longest possible match time, but also ensure that the men's match kicks off at the scheduled time for TV. Not an easy thing to manage.

2016-01-18T23:00:14+00:00

Happy Hooker

Guest


Agree Adam. If they were closer together, more people would at least see some of the women's matches, even if they aren't there for the start. I know they need to leave time for super overs in the event of a tie, and for the pitch to be rolled again and marked in between, but the men don't need to be out on the oval throwing and catching an hour before the game. Compress the gap to an hour.

AUTHOR

2016-01-18T22:55:44+00:00

Stacey O'Loughlin

Roar Pro


I think it's partly the quality of the bowling (which has been very strong) and also just the fact that the women don't hit boundaries at will the same way the men do in the BBL. T20s are the primary short-form game for women, and probably more closely resemble men's 50 over games in terms of how they're played. They don't have the hit-and-giggle aspect of the men's Big Bash. There have been a lot of good batting performances during the tournament, including many 50s and Grace Harris' century.

2016-01-18T22:47:27+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Guest


tops

2016-01-18T22:24:35+00:00

dan ced

Guest


It was shit, because the Strikers didn't make the finals! Batting was too inconsistent. Taylor rarely got enough support. Enjoyable though, even if at times the batting looked a bit suspect. Perhaps that was the quality of the bowling, I've barley seen any women's cricket before this series (one or two international matches).

2016-01-18T22:23:29+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


Its definitely the thing that has impressed me the most. When a league like this has high-profile sponsors, it sends a message to the market that it has a very real value and that you should value it as well.

2016-01-18T22:18:30+00:00

Kaks

Roar Guru


Thats always been the issue with Women sports hasnt it? Sponsorship/money? CA has done a great job

2016-01-18T22:14:04+00:00

Adam

Guest


Next WBBL season should be more attractive to a wider cultural audience as well with the likelihood of the top Indian female players participating as well. It's been a wonderful attraction this year and for the first time my 4 & 6 y.o. daughters are taking an interest in cricket having been to the big MCG double header. The only negative of the double header is the 90min gap between games makes for a very long afternoon/evening.

2016-01-18T22:11:06+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


Kudos to the sponsors for getting on board with this concept as well. In a world where even NRL teams have struggled to find high-profile sponsors, its refreshing to see sponsors putting their money where their mouth is when it comes to women's sport.

2016-01-18T21:51:08+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


For the first time ever the cricketing public has been able to see via their tv screens the best of our women's domestic game. There is some serious talent out there.There has been the usual run fests from our established stars like Meg Lanning and Ellyse Perry plus Englishwomen Sarah Taylor and Charlotte Edwards. But what about the rookies like Ashleigh Gardner, Amanda Wellington, Molly Strano, Grace Harris, Naomi Stalenberg, Beth Mooney and Lauren Cheadle. They have been able to showcase their talents and we all like what we see.

2016-01-18T20:13:31+00:00

AR

Guest


Good article. It's been an extraordinary success hasn't it? The AFL is desperate to follow suit and the WLeague continues its healthy trajectory. Women's sport (professional, that is) seems to be finally kicking on. And it has cricket to thank.

2016-01-18T17:42:33+00:00

english twizz

Guest


20/20 starting in England as well

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