There are figures attached to Alana King’s career that others might frame and celebrate—a seven-wicket haul in a World Cup match and a unique Test five-for at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) that helped seal an Ashes whitewash. However, she carries them lightly.


Ask her about standout days or mind-boggling spells, and she immediately shifts the focus towards the group, the work, and the shared result. It is a perspective that shapes not only the way she plays, but also how she processes success, guiding how she approaches each match and measures the value of every contribution.


It’s striking to consider how different things might have been for Australia and herself had she not answered that defining phone call, a reward of her quiet hard work. It catapulted King to the biggest stage, with the national team landing its newest leg-spin talent.


The call that changed everything


The bold move from Victoria to Western Australia the season prior, coupled with a strong Women’s Big Bash League (WBBL) campaign, had paid off and placed King firmly on the radar. And that career-altering moment came ahead of the 2022 Women’s Ashes series.


“That phone call will live rent-free in my head. I think as soon as I got into camp, the whole group made me feel really welcomed. I felt like I belonged. Things changed a lot from that moment,” she recalled in a conversation with Sports stars.


King, coming in as a replacement for the injured Georgia Wareham, had no expectations of playing and was content to be around the squad, absorbing as much as she could. But little did she know that her maiden cap was far closer than anticipated.





 




“To play the first T20 and then go on to make all three debuts in that series was pretty remarkable. I don’t think it really hit until that first game of the Ashes, that first T20 at Adelaide Oval, when I was singing the anthems with my teammates. I was like, ‘Wow, this is a really cool moment I’m getting to live’”.


Debuting at 26, slightly later than many of her peers, King realised a childhood dream with her ever-supporting family watching from the stands. “I came into the Australian squad at a later age, but I think I was a lot more mature as a cricketer and as a person. I wouldn’t have it any other way,” she recalled.


To the fast lane


Australia backed its new entrant across the Ashes, and King repaid the faith with wickets in all but one game, playing her part in a dominant home series win and, in turn, earning a maiden World Cup call-up.


The 2022 Women’s ODI World Cup in New Zealand remains a special chapter. King finished as the team’s second-highest wicket-taker, with 12 scalps in nine matches, including a pivotal three-wicket haul in the final against defending champion England.


Just two months into her international career, King had ascended to the highest throne—a World Cup winner with Australia. From there, the trajectory only continued upward, fuelled by a simple mantra: “Do anything to help this team win.”


She had steadily evolved into a lethal weapon for the Green & Gold juggernaut, her versatility and willingness to embrace any role emerging as decisive assets. Whether it was restricting the run flow, unsettling batters, or shifting seamlessly into her preferred wicket-taking mode, she delivered every time.


An Ashes of a lifetime


If King had not already become a familiar name in the women’s game, she certainly did during the historic 2025 Women’s Ashes—a series that would soon be remembered as Alana King’s Ashes.


She began with 11 wickets across the three ODIs, highlighted by a sublime five-for that handed the home side a commanding lead. Three more scalps followed in the T20Is, setting the stage for the series-defining Test at the MCG.


King struck early, grinding through a marathon 23-over spell to take four wickets in the first innings. She matched it in the second, but wanted one more—not for the milestone, but to get Australia over the line.



Alana King picked nine wickets in the one-off Test against England that capped Australia’s perfect record in the Women’s Ashes last year.



 




England’s final pair resisted stubbornly, yet it was fitting that King delivered the decisive blow, sealing an innings victory and her maiden Test five-for. The effort etched her name onto the MCG honours board, making her only the second woman, after Peggy Antonio, to do so.


She finished with 23 wickets, equalling Ashleigh Gardner’s Ashes record, but it was the 16-0 clean sweep that mattered the most. “It was an incredible series as a collective. To play a big part in that, I’m very proud of. We celebrated the victory because they don’t come around all that often in the Ashes,” she said.


When winning isn’t guaranteed


For all the dominance Australia has enjoyed, the past two years have also delivered sobering reminders of how unforgiving elite cricket can be. The invincibility that once defined the side was punctured in consecutive World Cup semifinals—first at the 2024 Women’s T20 World Cup, and then again at the 2025 Women’s ODI World Cup.


“We were quite disappointed that we stumbled in the semifinal. Unfortunately, in the last couple of years, we’ve lost two crucial games in the World Cup,” she admitted.


The title holder was stunned by India, the eventual champion, only two months ago. “It hurts, no doubt. It’s always good in hindsight because you can always say, ‘We should have done this or we could have done that.’ But at the end of the day, credit to India.


“They outplayed us. It was a really important game. For them to go on to win the World Cup, no doubt they would have done the whole of India proud. It’s going to do a world of good for the women’s game all around,” she said.


That solitary loss, as brutal as it was, did little to overshadow the broader picture of Australia’s campaign. Six wins from seven matches, and a washout, meant it once again completed a flawless group stage.


The run was aptly capped by another crowning moment for King—a rare seven-wicket haul, the first such feat in World Cup history. “It was one of those days, and it all happened really quickly. I didn’t obviously take it in then,” said King, who uprooted South Africa in quick time.



King’s record 7/18 skittled South Africa for 97 in the Women’s ODI World Cup last year.



 




“I got spoken about a fair bit, which I get a little bit embarrassed about. It was great that my mum and dad were there to witness it. It doesn’t come around that often. I’ll remember it for the rest of my career and even post my career.”


There was pride in the performance, but she accepted it would have felt more rewarding if the team had finished on a high note. “I don’t really look at personal accolades too much. I would have loved to have that included in a World Cup win, but it was not meant to be.”


Sharpening the edge


For King, the highs of personal achievement are never an endpoint, but a foundation for the next challenge. Her leg-spin, always her go-to weapon, is honed relentlessly, with hours spent refining variations and upping her skill.


“When you’re under pressure, you’re going to go to the ball that you’re going to feel most comfortable with,” she explained. “I spend a lot of time working on that. No doubt, you have to work on a few variations to make sure you’re keeping ahead of the game and the batters.”


She approaches each game with focus, curiosity, and a drive to improve. “Whether it’s variations or just tactical things, I think I learn a lot from my own peers, my teammates and the coaches and mentors that I’ve got around me.


“I keep having honest conversations with people I know who are going to give me the truth and not sugarcoat anything on where I need to get better at. I’m definitely looking forward to the challenge this year,” King said.


The upcoming India series on home soil offers a fresh test. She is well aware of the threat posed by a rejuvenated and inspired line-up. “India is going to be a massive threat in all formats of the game. It’s going to be a very exciting series,” she said.


The next challenges


But before the multi-format schedule and an all-important T20 World Cup, there’s the Women’s Premier League, where King is donning the Delhi Capitals jersey, in as a replacement for fellow Aussie Anabel Sutherland.


Initially going unsold in this year’s mega auction and getting scant game time with her previous franchise, UP Warriorz, King is ready for what’s to come. “It feels like I’ve blinked and I’m back in India,” she quipped. “No doubt, I would have loved to have a bit more game time last year, but that’s the way cricket goes, especially franchise cricket.


“But I think it’s just an exciting time to be here. I get to pass on some knowledge to the younger generation, the domestic players over here, and learn from them as well. I’m playing with some new international players I haven’t played with before. I’ve never worked with Jonathan Batty before, so I’m excited for that.


“If I’m in the best 11, I’m in the best 11. I’ll go and play my role. I’m here to enjoy it, contribute to the team and learn as much as I can.”


For King, it’s a constant quest to better herself, with the bigger picture always in mind. Her humility and commitment to collective success keep her a step ahead, both in the game and beyond. And she will continue to move forward the same way she always has—focused on the work, anchored in the team and content to let her mastery speak for her.


Published on Jan 09, 2026



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