THE Wairarapa Cricket Association is scouring the district and its surrounds to see how many past female cricketers can be enticed back into the game at the senior level.
Summer might be finished but planning for the 2016-17 season is well under way, with one of the top priorities being the re-establishment of a senior women's squad to compete in the Central Districts competition starting in November.
In the season just completed, Wairarapa had junior girls' sides at under-13, under-15 and under-18 levels, who all competed with success at various points. The under-18 side in particular were the break-out stars, finishing second on debut at the Central Districts under-18 tournament in Whanganui. With increasing numbers playing the game, and on-field success, the establishment of a senior women's team to complement these junior sides was the next logical step.
"Our playing and development success at the junior level is obviously home-grown and we want to take this same philosophy into re-establishing a senior women's side," says WCA development manager Simon Roseingrave. "We are hamstrung slightly by not having a local senior women's playing structure, but we also know that over the past one to 15 years there have been a number of women who have played for local junior representative teams, first XI college sides or the Wairarapa women's side the last time it existed. We are hoping that their love for the game hasn't diminished and they will be keen to get back into some competitive cricket".
This team will add an important step to the WCA's player pathway, and provide opportunity for Wairarapa female cricketers at all levels, as the province fully aligns to Central Districts and New Zealand Cricket structures. In fact, the presence of the under-13 representative side means that only Wairarapa and Hawke's Bay will be able to field four separate rep teams next season, and Roseingrave is keen to see a local tournament at that age group in January 2017.