
State of Origin success shows women's rugby league deserves to stand tall on its own
In 1921, two women, Molly Cane and Nellie Doherty, put up their hands and asked to play rugby league. They weren't asking for glory, they certainly weren't chasing social clout. What they wanted was the chance to play a game they loved.
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 Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Ange-ball was breath of fresh air but Europa League alone could not save him
Ange Postecoglou advanced his case to the last. And it was a measure not only of his ability to own the narrative, to master it, but his body of work at Tottenham that he was able to do so with such conviction. The manager was charged with three tasks when he was given the job in June 2023. To overhaul the team's playing style, essentially to make them more entertaining. To reboot the squad with an emphasis on youth. And to win. Actually, there was a fourth, which talked to pretty much everything. To reshape the culture around the club, unifying everyone behind a cause, an identity. The way that Postecoglou told it and will continue to tell it as he processes how he has become the latest statistic of the Daniel Levy era is he delivered on the principle three. And, despite all the external negativity, he struck a telling blow at the very end in the battle to tick the final box. Ange-ball was a breath of fresh air at Spurs, the counterpoint to the counterattacking of the previous three managers – José Mourinho, Nuno Espírito Santo and Antonio Conte. The club's fans want their team to play on the front foot, to take chances and there is no doubt that Postecoglou has the same vision. It is how he always looks to set up, with pace and aggression, the change showcased to wide eyes from his first match – the pre‑season friendly against West Ham in Australia. The difference to what had been before was radical. Postecoglou bought into the selection policy, the bets on players with high ceilings for improvement, even if he knew that moving on a good number of experienced ones, starting with Harry Kane, was a risk. In a sense the approach has represented Levy going back to what he has long believed in. A part of Postecoglou's legacy is the successful promotion of a host of young signings – including Micky van de Ven, Lucas Bergvall, Archie Gray and Brennan Johnson. You can also include Destiny Udogie, who was new to the squad when Postecoglou arrived and also Pape Sarr, who had not played much for the team. The most robust pillar of Postecoglou's legacy is, of course, what he and the team achieved in the Europa League, beating Manchester United in the final in Bilbao to draw a thick line under the club's 17-year trophy drought. It was so much more than Postecoglou making good on his 'I always win things in my second season' comment. The triumph brought a mass outpouring of emotion among supporters who have been mocked without mercy by their rivals in London and beyond. For those that made it to Bilbao, in particular, it was the night that will live for ever in their hearts. It has lifted a weight from the club, breaking a cycle that had almost become self-perpetuating, providing a riposte to the pundits who, as Postecoglou would have it, are quick to lead the pile-ons; to all of those who do. Elite-level football is about the do-or-die moments. One result really can change perceptions, how a club feels about itself; the same with people on the outside. Thanks to Postecoglou, Spurs can call themselves winners. They have even kicked down the backdoor into the Champions League. So, how has Levy made this decision, one that has triggered the inevitable backlash? Trust him to sack a manager who has actually won. It is because Levy does not like winners. It is not who Spurs are, mate. Here is the thing. When Levy weighed up the case against Postecoglou, he found that – weirdly, uniquely – it also carried an irresistible strength. The chair loved Bilbao. He is grateful to Postecoglou for it. But what Levy wants is more than a one-punch knockout. Consider the line in his programme notes from the last game of the season against Brighton. 'The Europa League is one trophy – our clear ambition as a club has always been long-term, sustained success … competing for top honours every year,' he wrote. For the majority of his tenure, Postecoglou sung from the same hymn sheet. He said that a cup victory would not be a 'panacea'. Consistency in the Premier League was the priority. Do that and the rest would take care of itself. He changed his tune from around the turn of the year, a shift born out of circumstance – specifically an injury-hit squad being unable to fight on multiple fronts. Postecoglou would put everything on the Europa League, coming to rest and rotate for it; an all-or-nothing gamble, which he felt paid off handsomely. And yet – as even he admitted – not everyone at the club was happy with the strategy. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion In the final analysis, Levy was unable to look beyond the league form and the sample size was huge. After Postecoglou made a thrilling start to his tenure, winning eight and drawing two of 10 league matches, his record in the competition read: P66 W23 D9 L34 Pts 78. Do the sums and it is 45 points per 38 games, the length of a season. This time out, Spurs collected just 38 points to limp home in 17th. Only once in their history have they had a worse record – in 1914-15 when they won eight and drew 12 of 38 matches. In the Europa League knockout rounds, Postecoglou's team beat AZ, Eintracht Frankfurt, Bodø/ Glimt and the worst version of United since 1973-74 according to league statistics. In the cold light of day, Levy concluded that the run could not make up for the consistent vulnerability in the league. He looked past Postecoglou's assertion that 17th was a false position because of the bet on Europe; it was unacceptable, a failure to balance the demands. How could Levy be confident that Postecoglou would manage better in a Champions League season? Furthermore, were the injuries not a consequence of his full-throttle approach? Whither Ange-ball? It was to Postecoglou's credit that he rowed back on some of his fundamentals – most notably in the Europa League. One of the defining images of his tenure was in the early weeks against Chelsea when, despite two red cards, he ordered all of his remaining outfield players to hold a defensive line on halfway. That seems like a long time ago, as did the giddy praise for such derring-do. Equally, we did not see much of the fast and incisive stuff in his closing months. 'Are you not entertained?' Postecoglou once memorably asked, channelling his inner Gladiator. Yes, Ange, we were. The English game has lost a compelling character.


BBC News
4 hours ago
- BBC News
Harris inspires Bears win, Blaze beat Essex
Australian Laura Harris produced another powerful batting display as the Bears beat Somerset by 69 runs at Edgbaston to move to the top of the Women's T20 Blast group raced to 50 off 17 deliveries against Durham last month and was only two balls slower this time as her 77 helped the home side to a score of had Emma Corney taken off on a stretcher with a leg injury during the Bears innings, and she was unable to bat as they replied with 103-9, skipper Georgia Davis taking 3-12 and Millie Taylor 3-13 for the hosts. At Derby, The Blaze climbed to second with a seven-wicket win over Essex, who were bowled out for 104 before Kathryn Bryce saw her side home with an unbeaten 51 off 51 scorecards The Bears made a poor start after being put in by Somerset skipper Sophie Luff, losing Abi Freeborn and Issy Wong in the second over, and Davina Perrin in the fourth, with Mollie Robbins taking all three struggled to 73-5 at the halfway point of their innings but the visitors then lost Corney, who twisted her leg awkwardly while Kalis helped Harris add 44 for the sixth wicket before she was unluckily run out for 32 when Amanda-Jane Wellington deflected a straight drive by her partner into the stumps at the bowler's though, hit fours sixes and nine fours in her exhilarating 34-ball knock which came to an end when she was run out attempting a second run from the final ball of the innings. The Somerset run chase never really got going as Davis had Amelie Munday stumped for 19 and added the vital wicket of Fran Wilson, who gave a catch to mid-off after making 31 from 32 was the only other batter to reach double figures but had only made 13 when she gave a return catch to Hannah also removed Griffiths as Somerset slumped from 82-3 to 98-8 and pace bowler Wong finished the visitors off when Hannah Jones was caught at long-on at the start of the final over. In the day's other game, a brilliant piece of fielding by The Blaze's Ella Claridge provided the early highlight as she dived full length at gully to make a one-handed save and then ran out Lissy MacLeod who had been called for a single by Grace only reached 50 in the 12th over but Maddie Penna (17), Jo Gardner (22) and Sophia Smale (16) helped them reach three figures before Kate Coppack and Abtaha Maqsood were run out from the final two balls of their Elwiss was caught behind off Coppack for a duck at the start of The Blaze's reply, and Esmae MacGregor (2-28) added the wickets of Marie Kelly and Sarah Kathryn Bryce - who had earlier taken 2-11 in Essex's innings - took her side home in style off the first ball of the 15th over by hitting left-arm spinner Smale for a straight six to end the game and bring up her own half-century off 51 balls. Saturday fixtures Old Trafford: Lancashire Thunder v Surrey (13:00 BST start)Arundel: Hampshire Hawks v Durham (14:30)Trent Bridge: The Blaze v Somerset (15:00)


The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
Conor Wallace is ready to ‘shoot for the stars' as he prepares for Dylan Colin fight
Conor Wallace will return to the ring this weekend to take on Dylan Colin as chief support to his stablemate Jai Opetaia vs Claudio Squeo in Australia. The Irish-born Aussie had a busy 2024, fighting three times. He outpointed Jerome Pampellone between two knockouts over Jack Gipp and Asemahle Wellem. Wallace has had a brief lay-off after having surgery on his hand but is happy for the time off and feels as though he will be back better than ever as he continues to rebuild from a loss to Leti Leti in 2021, which he avenged via knockout eighteen months later to get back on track. Wallace said: '[After a couple of hand surgeries] I've gone from strength to strength. Having that loss to Leti Leti - then rematching him and knocking him out is probably the best thing that could have happened. I got that loss out of the way, it made me hungrier. I wasn't an undefeated prospect anymore.' Dmitry Bivol vs Artur Beterbiev trilogy fight - with many top-ranked fighters waiting for their opportunity. Wallace is ranked number two by the IBF and number seven by both the WBC and WBO. He said the state of the division is frustrating for the top fighters at the moment due to the uncertainty surrounding the belts. But he doesn't want to focus on that - instead relishing the opportunity to fight again and stay ready for any opportunities that may come. He said, 'It's frustrating, we have done all this good work to get to number two in the IBF.' He added: 'It is what it is, all that stuff is out of my control. My job is to stay focused, and I've got a great team around me, and I'm happy to be given the chance to stay active' Having only fought in Australia so far, Wallace has gone through all the top opposition domestically at 175 lbs and is ready to take the next step to fight internationally because he has nothing left to prove at the national level. Wallace said: 'I can't get any higher [ranked] than I am without fighting an international opponent. I've taken the risk many times in Australia with Jack Gipp and even fought the South African guy [Asemahle Wellem]. I've got everything to lose and nothing to gain in those fights.' He continued: 'We are happy to go wherever for the big fights, we have done all the hard work to get into the position I am now, so the main thing is to beat whoever they put in front of me, and no matter where that is, we will go.' The Aussie said he will fight anyone to achieve his world title dream sooner rather than later, and is not overlooking Colin, but represents the next step on his journey to the top of the light-heavyweight division. Wallace said: 'My goal is to win a world title, and I'll fight whoever for that.' He added on his future: 'There is only so long you can wait. Hopefully, everything goes to plan. I'm not overlooking this opponent, but hopefully we can get through him, and hopefully we can get a big fight towards the end of the year. You've got to shoot for the stars.'