TODAY’S PAPER | September 14, 2025 | EPAPER

Levelling the field

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Editorial September 14, 2025 1 min read

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For the first time in history, the International Cricket Council (ICC) has instated an all-female panel for the 13th edition of the Women's World Cup. This stride marks an exceptionally important moment in history for women's visibility and progress in sports. The first all-female panel arrives 52 years after the first edition of the Women's World Cup, with preceding editions comprising either all-male or majority male panels. This fight for visibility stretched on for decades despite the fact that the first Women's World Cup was held even before the men's.

An all-female panel is not the culmination of equity but merely the beginning. In previous years, the team of umpires and referees championed a handful of women who were chosen as a symbol of improving gender parity. But token representation is substantially meaningless when it comes to women's career progression and opportunities. This bold step grants women the opportunity to claim a space as their own, without having to purposefully measure themselves against men or share the field in a manner that risks reducing their presence to tokenism.

The question that now arises is — will some of these women also officiate in men's tournaments? Because true equity means integration, not segregation. While this appointment corrects an extensive imbalance in the cricketing world and signals recognition of women's expertise in a field historically dominated by men, it must also dignify the chosen officiators by giving them equal pathways to stand in men's internationals, World Cups and high stakes matches.

This landmark decision is a celebration of women's skill and authority in the world of sports and a promise of greater inclusion ahead. ICC has paved the way for equity not only within the physical cricket field but in the larger sense of the word as well.

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