Cricket Ireland on Thursday announced that it will invest 1.5m euro in the women's game in the country.
The investment in women's cricket in Ireland will see professional contracts for 20 cricketers, seven of which are full-time contracts, nine part-time, and four non-retainers. All full-time contracts will start this month, meaning Ireland will have the country's first-ever full-professional women's cricketers going into the 2022 summer season.
The part-time contracts are designed to support players who are in education, offering the financial support to fund their training, development and summer playing schedule.
"The work behind-the-scenes to get to this point has - in reality - been three years in the making. Coming off the back of th' team's performance at the ICC Women's T20 World Cup in 2018, we - as an organisation - committed ourselves to a journey to professionalise women's cricket. It was not only a good thing to do, it was the right thing to do," Warren Deutrom, Chief Executive of Cricket Ireland, said in a release issued by ICC.
"Women's cricket's time has come around the world -- we've seen the incredible growth and professionalisation of the women's game across several major nations like Australia, England and India and the strong focus on female cricket in the new ICC strategy. It's now Ireland's turn" he added.
The total 1.5m euro announced on Thursday represents a three-fold increase on spending from 2019.
"It is important to note that today's announcements are not a case of 'done and dusted'. This is not a final destination. This is just the start of our new era," said Richard Holdsworth, High-Performance Director for Cricket Ireland.
"In 2021 our women's senior side qualified for the ICC Women's Championship - we don't want to just compete in this competition once, we want to stay there. We want to entrench ourselves in the top ranks of the women's game. Today may be the culmination of three years' work, but it also represents the first day of a new project. A project to keep us in the top tier and to not only participate but truly compete against the top nations," he added.
In addition to the confirmation of the 20 playing contracts, Cricket Ireland have confirmed that head coach Ed Joyce has agreed on a three-year extension to his contract. And Joyce will oversee a busy summer, with Ireland to host Australia, South Africa and Pakistan in June and July.
--IANS
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(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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