No Big Bash games on Christmas Day or Australia Day
Big Bash officials have once again baulked at putting a match on Christmas Day and will finish the 42-day tournament on the eve of Australia Day.
Only a washout of the final will put cricket on January 26.
A December 14 start for the tournament has been locked in with a Boxing Day showdown between the Sydney Sixers and Melbourne Stars and a 13th consecutive News Year's Eve clash in Adelaide among the fixture highlights.
Pakistan star Babar Azam looms as the headline international act this season, with several of his teammates, including speed demon Shaheen Shaf Afridi, joining the playing ranks.
An Ashes Test series will rob the Big Bash of the best Australian and English talent until the final two or three weeks of the tournament, which will finish on January 25, with January 26 slotted as a reserve day for the final. — KFC Big Bash League (@BBL) July 2, 2025
Cricket Australia hasn't played on January 26 since 2023 and has refrained from any mention of Australia Day amid concerns from some players, including Indigenous women's star Ash Gardner, about the implications of playing on a day that has different significance among Australians.
Christmas Day was also ruled out, meaning the NBL remains the only Australian sport willing to take the plunge on that day.
'With uninterrupted action every night of the regular season and all the marquee games our fans love, this schedule ensures the BBL remains the heartbeat of summer,' Big Bash boss Alastair Dobson said.
'The fan-favourite fixtures, combined with the family-friendly entertainment that makes the Big Bash, has BBL|15 well positioned to build on the success of last summer.
'We were blown away by the quality of overseas talent signed via the BBL draft and can't wait to see these global superstars in action alongside some of Australia's biggest names.'
Despite making himself eligible, English pace ace Jofra Archer was overlooked in the BBL draft, with clubs fearful he would be unavailable due to the Ashes.
Archer returned to the England squad for the series against India but missed selection in the second Test.
Originally published as The 42-day Big Bash season won't include games on Christmas Day or Australia Day
Hashtags

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


Perth Now
44 minutes ago
- Perth Now
'Hell of a team': Lions' gushing praise for Wallabies
Joe Schmidt has ruled out extending his Wallabies coaching tenure, despite presiding over one of Australia's headiest Test wins since the glory days of the 2003 Rugby World Cup. Schmidt must have been tempted to ask Rugby Australia about staying on until the 2027 global showpiece on Australian shores after gracious British and Irish coach Andy Farrell heaped stunning praise on the Wallabies after falling 22-12 to the inspired hosts on Saturday night. But the committed family man insists he won't entertain any such idea, saying his priority after this year's Rugby Championship will be caring for his ailing son Luke, who has severe epilepsy. Queensland Reds mentor Les Kiss will take over from Schmidt after the 2026 Super Rugby season - and the New Zealander remains comfortable with that. "I'm looking forward to Les Kiss coming in and taking over," Schmidt said. "I actually apologised to the players a little while ago. I bit one of their heads off. My son had had a bad day, and I can normally separate the two things, but it does impact me when he's had a bad day. "And so I know that I have a short enough shelf life and need to be more present at home. "I haven't been home for two months, so as much as I just think they're a great group of young men, there's other things that I need to make sure I tick off." While it hasn't all been smooth sailing since taking over from Eddie Jones last year, the Wallabies' progression under Schmidt has been obvious, and Farrell reckons Australian fans have every right to dream big two years out from the next World Cup down under. If not for a controversial no-penalty in the last-minute 29-26 second-Test loss to the Lions in Melbourne, the Wallabies would have won the series instead of losing it 2-1. And Farrell knows his side was given more than a run for their money, despite critics claiming the sixth-ranked Wallabies didn't even deserve to host the Lions in 2025. "I went on record last week saying I thought it was insulting about people asking the question about the Wallabies and Lions touring here etc," Farrell said. "I mean, everyone has their ups and downs. Have a look at the progress over the last 18 months. It's been through the roof, and you look at that side that's been out there over the last three weeks. "They're a hell of a team. I said to Joe before the game on the pitch that I think special things are going to happen for this team over the next 18 months, and by the time the World Cup comes around, they'll be a force to be reckoned with, like everyone's seen in the past. "They've got some special athletes and some special players, and it's no surprise to us how they've performed over the last couple of weeks." The Wallabies' stirring victory at Accor Stadium was the perfect precursor for a gruelling start to the Rugby Championship. Schmidt's side heads to South Africa for back-to-back Tests against the world champion Springboks in Johannesburg and Cape Town on August 17 and 24. "Hopefully we're on the way and now we go to South Africa to verse the best team in the world," said Wallabies captain Harry Wilson. "So we've got another epic battle ahead of us, and the one thing we will take from tonight is a lot of confidence, and probably from last week too."


Perth Now
44 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Popyrin pushed to limit to make Canada quarter-finals
Australia's Alexei Popyrin remains on track for back-to-back Canadian Open titles after fighting his way to a three-set win over fifth seed Holger Rune. For the second match in a row in Toronto, 18th-seeded Popyrin had to claw his way back after losing the first set, beating the talented Dane 4-6 6-2 6-3 on Saturday (local time). It was just the second career meeting between the pair and squared the ledger at one apiece, Rune having won their only previous encounter in a tough three-setter on clay at the 2023 Rome Masters. Popyrin, the defending champion in Canada, is looking to continue his impressive run at this tournament, his victory over Rune his ninth consecutive win at the event. The Australian also recovered from the loss of the first set of his third-round match to score a 5-7 6-4 6-4 win over former world No.1 and 2021 US Open and Canadian Open champ Daniil Medvedev of Russia. Popyrin has his sights set on back-to-back Canadian Open titles after thrashing Russia's Andrey Rublev 6-2 6-4 in last year's final. In the quarter-finals, Popyrin faces top-seeded Alexander Zverev, who advanced after the No.14 seed Francisco Cerundolo, of Argentina, was forced to retire with an abdominal injury with the German leading 6-4 1-0. Zverev, the 2017 Canadian Open champion who is ranked third in the world, ended up the top seed in Toronto after the world's top top-ranked players Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz skipped the event. Another Australian, ninth-seeded Alex de Minaur, plays his round-of-16 clash against American Frances Tiafoe on Sunday (Monday AEST). De Minaur came to Canada in impeccable form, having won last week's Washington Open, his 10th career title. The fleet-footed Aussie will be hoping to continue his dazzling recent form at the year's final major, the US Open, which starts in New York on August 24. De Minaur has twice reached the quarter-finals at the hard-court event at Flushing Meadows, firstly in 2021, then repeating that effort last year. In other results on Saturday, Alex Michelsen reached the quarter-finals after toppling fellow American Learner Tien 6-3 6-3. Michelsen next faces 11th-seeded Russian Karen Khachanov, a 6-4 7-5 winner over eighth-seeded Norwegian Casper Ruud. - with AP


West Australian
44 minutes ago
- West Australian
'Hell of a team': Lions' gushing praise for Wallabies
Joe Schmidt has ruled out extending his Wallabies coaching tenure, despite presiding over one of Australia's headiest Test wins since the glory days of the 2003 Rugby World Cup. Schmidt must have been tempted to ask Rugby Australia about staying on until the 2027 global showpiece on Australian shores after gracious British and Irish coach Andy Farrell heaped stunning praise on the Wallabies after falling 22-12 to the inspired hosts on Saturday night. But the committed family man insists he won't entertain any such idea, saying his priority after this year's Rugby Championship will be caring for his ailing son Luke, who has severe epilepsy. Queensland Reds mentor Les Kiss will take over from Schmidt after the 2026 Super Rugby season - and the New Zealander remains comfortable with that. "I'm looking forward to Les Kiss coming in and taking over," Schmidt said. "I actually apologised to the players a little while ago. I bit one of their heads off. My son had had a bad day, and I can normally separate the two things, but it does impact me when he's had a bad day. "And so I know that I have a short enough shelf life and need to be more present at home. "I haven't been home for two months, so as much as I just think they're a great group of young men, there's other things that I need to make sure I tick off." While it hasn't all been smooth sailing since taking over from Eddie Jones last year, the Wallabies' progression under Schmidt has been obvious, and Farrell reckons Australian fans have every right to dream big two years out from the next World Cup down under. If not for a controversial no-penalty in the last-minute 29-26 second-Test loss to the Lions in Melbourne, the Wallabies would have won the series instead of losing it 2-1. And Farrell knows his side was given more than a run for their money, despite critics claiming the sixth-ranked Wallabies didn't even deserve to host the Lions in 2025. "I went on record last week saying I thought it was insulting about people asking the question about the Wallabies and Lions touring here etc," Farrell said. "I mean, everyone has their ups and downs. Have a look at the progress over the last 18 months. It's been through the roof, and you look at that side that's been out there over the last three weeks. "They're a hell of a team. I said to Joe before the game on the pitch that I think special things are going to happen for this team over the next 18 months, and by the time the World Cup comes around, they'll be a force to be reckoned with, like everyone's seen in the past. "They've got some special athletes and some special players, and it's no surprise to us how they've performed over the last couple of weeks." The Wallabies' stirring victory at Accor Stadium was the perfect precursor for a gruelling start to the Rugby Championship. Schmidt's side heads to South Africa for back-to-back Tests against the world champion Springboks in Johannesburg and Cape Town on August 17 and 24. "Hopefully we're on the way and now we go to South Africa to verse the best team in the world," said Wallabies captain Harry Wilson. "So we've got another epic battle ahead of us, and the one thing we will take from tonight is a lot of confidence, and probably from last week too."