Alyssa Healy wiki, bio, age, husband, net worth, instagram, stats, height

Alyssa Healy (born on 24 March 1990) is an Australian cricketer who plays for the Australian ladies' public group and New South Wales in homegrown cricket. She made her worldwide presentation in February 2010.
A right-gave hitter and wicket-attendant, she is the little girl of Greg Healy, who was important for the Queensland crew, while her uncle Ian Healy was Australia's Test wicket-manager and held the world record for the most Test excusals.
Healy first came to unmistakable quality in late 2006 when she turned into the principal young lady to play among young men in the tuition-based schools' opposition in New South Wales.
She climbed the state age-bunch positions and made her introduction for the senior New South Wales group in the 2007–08 season.
She played the vast majority of her initial two seasons as a master batsman because of the presence of Leonie Coleman—a wicket-manager for Australia—in the stateside.
Coleman left New South Wales toward the beginning of the 2009–10 season and Healy took up the glovework on a full-time reason for her state.
During a similar season, she recorded her most noteworthy score of 89 not out at quicker than a run a ball, and made the most excusals of any wicket-manager in the Women's National Cricket League.
Following the injury to Australian commander and wicket-guardian Jodie Fields, Healy was given her global introduction in the 2010 Rose Bowl arrangement against New Zealand.
She played in the initial five One Day Internationals (ODIs) and five Twenty20 (T20) internationals yet was dropped for the last three ODIs during the New Zealand leg of the arrangement. Healy played in each match of the 2010 World Twenty20 as Australia won the competition after an unbeaten mission.
In October 2018, Healy was named in Australia's crew for the 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 competition in the West Indies, she completed as the competition's driving runs scorer with 225 runs and won player of the competition.
In December 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) named her the T20I Player of the Year. In September 2019, during Australia's arrangement against Sri Lanka, Healy played in her 100th WT20I coordinate.
In a similar arrangement, Healy set another precedent for the most noteworthy individual score in a Women's T20I coordinate, with 148 not out.
In January 2020, she was named in Australia's crew for the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup in Australia. Healy completed the second-most elevated runs scorer in the competition with 236 runs.
In the last, she scored a quickfire 75 off 39 balls against India to assist Australia with winning their fifth title and won player of the match. In September 2020, in the second WT20I coordinate against New Zealand, Healy accepting her 92nd excusal as a wicket-manager.
Thus, she went past MS Dhoni's record of 91 excusals, to establish another precedent of most excusals as a wicket-guardian, male or female, in Twenty20 International cricket.
Early years
Conceived on the Gold Coast, Queensland, Healy is the little girl of Greg, who was an individual from the Queensland crew, while Greg's more youthful sibling Ian was Australia's Test wicket-manager from the last part of the 1980s until 1999 and was the world record holder for the most Test excusals.
Another uncle, Ken, played for Queensland. In spite of the family legacy, and watching her uncle speak to Australia, she said that she didn't get inspired by cricket until she moved from Queensland to Sydney as a kid and was urged into taking up the game by a companion. She went to secondary school at MLC School and later Barker College.
Her choice at 16 years old in late 2006 as wicket-attendant for Barker College First XI, the first run through a young lady had been picked to play among young men in the world-class non-public schools' cricket rivalry in New South Wales, drew press critique from different sources.
This came to fruition after a mysterious individual, accepted to be a previous male understudy, circled an email named "Spare Barker Cricket Now" in the school network assaulting the choice as a "disfavor" and calling for sexual orientation isolation of the cricket crew.
The sportscaster of Barker College censured the mysterious essayist as "gutless" and kept up that Healy's determination depended on merit.
Ian Healy and Alex Blackwell, a cricketer for the Australian ladies' group and previous Barker understudy, additionally shielded the choice and scrutinized the email creator.
The emailer was additionally condemned, and Alyssa Healy recognized, by social analysts in papers. In 2010, she reflected "I'd do everything again...I truly appreciated playing school cricket with the young men and it unquestionably helped lift my abilities and fix my strategy."
Both she and Australian colleague Ellyse Perry have freely pushed young ladies playing against young men.
In January 2007, Healy was chosen in the New South Wales group to play in the Under-19 interstate rivalry. Opening the batting in each of the three matches and keeping in just the second of these, she scored 47, 73, and 41 in her initial three matches, and took one catch.
She proceeded to end with 345 runs at a batting normal of 57.50, beating the run-scorers list, and was named the best under-17 player at the competition.
The next month, she was chosen in the Australia Youth group, made out of under-23 cricketers, to play against New Zealand A, the main player chose prior to making their senior homegrown presentation.
She scored 10 not out, 41 and 63 out of three matches, and made one confusing. Her 63 from 84 balls in the last match was the top-score for the Australians, however, it was insufficient to forestall a 22-run rout.
She played as a wicketkeeper batting in the center request in the primary match, and opened in the last two matches, playing simply as a batsman. The arrangement finished 1–1 after the subsequent match was tied.
2015–present
In June 2015, she was named as one of Australia's visiting party for the 2015 Women's Ashes in England.
Healy was named as the wicketkeeper over all types of the 2017 Women's Ashes arrangement in Australia. She was the main run-scorer in the ODI leg of the arrangement. The whole arrangement finished 8–8 in focuses, and as the holders, Australia held the Ashes.
In April 2018, she was one of the fourteen players to be granted a public agreement for the 2018–19 season by Cricket Australia.
In June 2018, Healy was named as the commander of the New South Wales Breakers for the 2018/19 season after the retirement of the past skipper, Alex Blackwell. She was named in front of Australian Women's Vice-Captain Rachael Haynes and Sydney Sixers Captain Ellyse Perry.
In October 2018, she was named in Australia's crew for the 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 competition in the West Indies. In front of the competition, she was named as one of the players to watch. She was the main run-scorer in the opposition, with 225 runs, and was named the player of the competition.
In November 2018, she was named in the Sydney Sixers' crew for the 2018–19 Women's Big Bash League season. In April 2019, Cricket Australia granted her an agreement in front of the 2019–20 season. In June 2019, Cricket Australia named her in Australia's group for their visit to England to challenge the Women's Ashes.
She was granted the Belinda Clarke Medal at the Allan Border Medal function by the CA in 2019. In January 2020, she was named in Australia's crew for the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup in Australia.
In Australia's match against Bangladesh, Healy and Beth Mooney made an initial association of 151 runs, the most elevated organization for Australia Women for any wicket in a WT20I coordinate. In the last, Healy shot 75 off 39 balls in a player of the match execution, which saw Australia win their fifth title.
Records
Starting on 21 February 2019, Healey holds the Guinness World Record for the most noteworthy catch of a cricket ball at 82.5m.
This was set as a component of a mission to check one year until the beginning of the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup. Alyssa Healy holds the world record for the most runs in a Women's T-20 International with 148* (61) at North Sydney Oval on Wednesday 2 October 2019 against Sri Lanka.
On 8 March 2020, Alyssa recorded the quickest (50 runs off 30 balls) throughout the entire existence of ICC occasion finals across designs (Men's and Women).
Individual life
In 2015, she got connected with quick bowler Mitchell Starc. They were hitched in April 2016. They met each other when they were 9 as Starc began as a wicketkeeper.
Healy and Starc are just the third hitched couple to play Test cricket, after the English couple the Prideauxs (Roger and Ruth), during the 1950s to 1960, and the Sri Lankan de Alwis couple (Guy and Rasanjali), during the 1980s and 1990s.
In March 2020, Starc flew home in front of the last ODI coordinate against South Africa, so he could observe Healy play in the last of the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup. Healy's brother by marriage is high jumper Brandon Starc.