
State of Origin success shows women's rugby league deserves to stand tall on its own
That match, held at the Sydney Showground, drew a crowd of 30,000 more than 100 years ago. Two weeks ago, Game One of the 2025 Women's State of Origin series drew more than two million viewers. This love of women's rugby league is not a new phenomenon. The interest, passion and talent has always been there, and it is because of Molly and Nellie that women's rugby league is where it is today.
These two women weren't just players, they were pioneers with vision, passion and serious guts. A century ago, when they took to the field, it was bold, brave and proved there was a genuine desire for women's rugby league. But their momentum was short-lived. Officials shut it down, and it would be another 78 years before we saw the birth of the Women's Interstate Challenge.
Still, Molly and Nellie lit a spark that never went out. It kept glowing quietly in local parks and backyard games, carried closely by generations of girls who kept playing and dreaming big.
As a former player, and someone who loves the game of rugby league I have observed in every generation players who are breaking the 'grass ceiling' and championing for change. We owe a lot to Nellie, Molly and every woman since who has picked up a ball and played, even when no one was watching. Everything we have today – the stadium crowds, the broadcast figures, the young girls proudly pulling on jerseys with their signs – is built on these women challenging the norm and their choice to pick up a rugby league ball.
When I was growing up in Gerringong, on the NSW south coast, I played junior rugby league with my brother. I was often the only girl on the field, and for a while, that was fine, until I turned 12 and the rules said I couldn't play anymore. Back then, the system didn't see girls as part of the game's future. Like so many others, I turned to netball and basketball, not because I wanted to, but because rugby league didn't yet have space for me.
That's what makes this current moment in women's rugby league so powerful. Today, girls don't have to give up the game, they can play as they are, all the way through. They can dream of wearing the sky blue or maroon jersey, not as a novelty, but as a real, attainable future.
Less than a decade ago, Women's State of Origin players were getting changed in car parks, staying in caravan parks, eating meals cooked by our team managers on a community barbecue. Now, they're playing in front of packed stadiums and pulling millions of viewers. That's incredible progress.
Yet Women in rugby league still juggle full-time work, study and family, alongside elite-level performance. Imagine the heights they will reach when women can be full-time athletes.
Sign up to Australia Sport
Get a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports desk
after newsletter promotion
To me, equality in rugby league means equal opportunity. It means sponsorships, broadcast deals, pathways, and media that not just reflects the skill and popularity of the women's game, but also that desire to build up a sport that started more than 100 years ago.
The fans' role has never been more important. When they buy a ticket, tune in, or sign up as a member, they're not just showing up, they're helping to make history. Every cheer, every social post, every conversation – it all adds weight to a game that deserves to stand tall on its own.
The young girls playing today on grassroots fields belong there. They don't need to fight for their place, they already have one. The women before them played for the love of the game, and everything they did was to ensure the young girls today could play with pride, confidence and visibility.
Women's rugby league is exploding, and it's here to stay. I'm thrilled to be a part of it but it's up to all of us to continue striving to make this the greatest game of all.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Stuart Broad picks England bowling attack for first Ashes Test against Australia
Stuart Broad has selected his preferred England bowling attack for the first Test of this winter's Ashes against Australia and has prioritised raw pace. After the thrilling drawn series with India this summer, England's Test side are now turning their attention to a daunting trip Down Under, trying to win the famous old urn on Australian soil for the first time since 2010-11. In fact, England haven't even won a single Test in Australia since that 2010-11 tour and questions remain as to whether their bowling unit has enough quality to consistently take 20 wickets. In the pace stakes, they have a number of options and former England quick Broad, who now works as a pundit, has taken to social media to name his attack for the first Test in Perth, which begins on 21 November. He has oped for out-and-out pace, even though his selected seamers are injury-prone, and explained his reasoning for the line-up. On X (formerly Twitter), in answer to a tweet asking users for their England bowling attack for the first Test in Perth, Broad wrote: 'Wood, Archer, Atkinson, Bashir, Stokes. Go all out for the W there as have to start well and it's a bowler friendly pitch.' Mark Wood, Jofra Archer and Gus Atkinson are probably the three quickest options England have, although Wood and Atkinson spent at least part of the summer injured, while Archer finally played his first Test matches in more than four years after injury hell of his own. Broad would complement this pace trio with England skipper Ben Stokes, whose own bowling capabilities are often injury-limited but still have the ability to turn a match when they are unleashed, as shown by his brilliant 5-72 during India's first innings of the fourth Test at Old Trafford last summer. Shoaib Bashir is Broad's spinner of choice and the 21-year-old will likely be competing with the likes of Rehan Ahmed, Liam Dawson and Jack Leach for slow-bowler berth in England's XI for the Ashes. His reasoning for the make-up of the attack –that England need to be aggressive in their selection to try and win the first Test on a bowler-friendly pitch – is sound, although the lack of fitness reliability may cause a few jitters among England fans. After the first Test in Perth, the Ashes heads to the Gabba in Brisbane for a day-night encounter with the pink ball before more traditional Tests in Adelaide, Melbourne and then Sydney to finish. Australia have held the Ashes since 2018, having won the two series Down Under in that time 4-0 and retaining thanks to 2-2 draws in the pair of series in England.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
‘Cannibal' boxer who is son of former world champion eating wife's placenta and breastfeeding
A BOXER believes he has gained a "superpower" after eating his wife's placenta and drinking her breastmilk. Nikita Tszyu is preparing to take on the undefeated Lulzim Ismaili on August 20. 2 2 And he has had a boost in his preparation for the bout thanks to an unusual diet, courtesy of his wife Nikita Bedwell. The couple welcome their first child, named Curiosity, in June. Tszyu took the decision to start eating his wife's placenta, and he has noticed some big benefits. He told Triple M Breakfast with Beau, Cat & Woodsy: "I just had a baby. "And my wife… we freeze-dried her placenta and I've been supplementing on her placenta recently… in tablet form. "I've technically become a cannibal. It's actually like a superpower. "I've done tests with my sparring – days where I've had it and days where I haven't – and it feels like I got all this crazy amount of energy." The Aussie boxer, who is the son of former world champion Tim Tszyu, has not stopped at placenta, also deciding to drink his wife's breastmilk. Asked if he had breastmilk, the fighter replied: "I have, I have. The reporter interjected: "They reckon breast milk is the best thing you can have! It's so good for you, so clean."


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
Test cricket could 'bankrupt' nations
The traditional Test calendar could lead to bankruptcy for certain nations, Cricket Australia chief Todd Greenberg warned as he called for a slimmed-down wants quality prioritised over quantity to ensure a viable future for red-ball International Cricket Council (ICC) recently set up a working group to discuss the Test format and the potential to introduce a two-tier system."Scarcity in Test cricket is our friend, not our foe," said Greenberg."I don't think everyone in world cricket needs to aspire to play Test cricket, and that might be OK."We're literally trying to send countries bankrupt if we force them to try to play Test cricket." Greenberg wants to see marquee series such as the Ashes between England and Australia - the 2025-26 series gets under way in Australia in 100 days' time - receive greater pulsating five-match series between England and India this summer was Test cricket at its Australia won each of their three Tests in the West Indies by at least 133 runs, while New Zealand cruised to a comfortable series victory in Zimbabwe - winning one of the Tests by an innings and 359 runs."We need to make sure we invest in the right spaces to play Test cricket where it means something and has jeopardy," Greenberg added."That's why the Ashes will be as enormous and profitable as it is - because it means something."The emergence of shorter forms of the sport has proved difficult for Test cricket, with T20 franchise leagues and The Hundred offering lucrative player contracts in domestic cricket, and adding further congestion to the global calendar.