Perth Scorchers

Last updated

Perth Scorchers
Perth Scorchers logo.svg
Personnel
Captain Ashton Turner
Coach Adam Voges
Team information
Colours  Orange
Founded2011;13 years ago (2011)
Home ground WACA Ground (2011–2018)
Perth Stadium (2018-present)
Capacity60,000
History
BBL  wins5: BBL03, BBL04, BBL06, BBL11, BBL12
Official website www.perthscorchers.com.au
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Home kit

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Away kit

Cricket current event.svg Current season

The Perth Scorchers are an Australian men's professional Twenty20 franchise cricket team that competes in the Big Bash League. The Scorchers wear an orange uniform and are based in Perth in the Australian state of Western Australia. Their home ground is the Perth Stadium. [1]

Contents

The Scorchers are the most successful team in BBL history, winning a record five championships to date and being runners up on three occasions. They were defeated in their second final by the Brisbane Heat in BBL02. They then won the next two consecutive championships, becoming the first team to achieve the feat in the league's brief history. These wins came against the Hobart Hurricanes and the Sydney Sixers in a last-ball thriller at Canberra's Manuka Oval. Mickey Arthur was originally appointed coach, but quit before the beginning of the 2011–12 season after he was appointed coach of the Australian cricket team. He was replaced by his former assistant, Lachlan Stevens. Justin Langer replaced Stevens in November 2012. Following the appointment of Langer as the Australian coach in May 2018, [2] Adam Voges was named as the new coach for the 2018–19 season. [3]

Some of the Scorchers' finest players since their inception into the BBL have been Shaun Marsh, Michael Klinger, Cameron Bancroft, Mitch Marsh, Mitchell Johnson, Adam Voges, Ashton Turner, David Willey, Pakistani cricketers Yasir Arafat, Usman Qadir, Englishman Laurie Evans, legendary wrist spinner Brad Hogg and pace bowlers Jason Behrendorff, Jhye Richardson and Andrew Tye. [4]

The Scorchers also have a side in the Women's Big Bash League.

History

2011–2012: BBL01 season

Perth Scorchers taking on Hobart Hurricanes at the WACA Ground in 2011 HobartVSPerth WACA.jpg
Perth Scorchers taking on Hobart Hurricanes at the WACA Ground in 2011

The majority of the initial Scorchers squad was recruited from the Western Australia cricket team, with the addition of West Australian Simon Katich and international imports South Africa's Herschelle Gibbs and England's Paul Collingwood. [5] Brad Hogg was recruited despite having not played state or international cricket since the 2007–08 season. [6]

The Scorchers started the 2011–12 Big Bash League season poorly, losing to the Hobart Hurricanes in their opening game at the WACA Ground by 31 runs. However, they subsequently won 5 games in a row, finishing the season at the top of the ladder [7] and securing a home final. The Scorchers then won the semi-final against the Melbourne Stars by 11 runs but lost to the Sydney Sixers in the final by 7 wickets.

2012 Champions League

By finishing in the top two of the Big Bash League, they won a position at the 2012 Champions League Twenty20 tournament, held in South Africa in October 2012. The team performed poorly, only winning one game. The Marsh brothers, Shaun and Mitchell were both dropped from the final game after excessively celebrating Mitchell's 21st birthday during the tournament. [8]

2012–2013: BBL02 season

For the 2012–13 season, Collingwood did not return, and when their first choice overseas player Albie Morkel was unavailable, new coach Justin Langer recruited South African all-rounder Alfonso Thomas, who he had previously played with at Somerset. [9] Other squad changes included the return of Adam Voges and the departure of Nathan Rimmington and Luke Ronchi. Tasmanian Tom Triffitt was recruited as the wicket keeper. Pat Cummins was recruited from the 2011–12 winning Sydney Sixers, but was injured whilst playing for the Sixers at the 2012 Champions League Twenty20 and did not play for the Scorchers. [10]

The Scorchers again started the season poorly, losing to the Melbourne Stars in their second match when they scored an Australian record low team total of 69 runs. [11] However, as they did in the previous season, they recovered and won five of the next six games in a row, finishing in second position [12] and securing a home final against the Melbourne Stars. In a rain-affected semi-final, the Scorchers won by 8 wickets off the final ball of the innings. They hosted the grand final against the Brisbane Heat but were defeated by 34 runs. [13]

2013 Champions League

The Scorchers again qualified for the 2013 Champions League Twenty20 tournament, but with a squad depleted by injury and a lack of player availability, [14] again performed poorly, losing all three of their matches to finish bottom of their group. [15]

2013–2014: BBL03 season

For their third BBL season, the Scorchers retained the services of senior players Simon Katich, Brad Hogg, Adam Voges, Shaun Marsh and Mitchell Marsh, but lost Michael Hussey and Marcus North to the two Sydney-based teams. [16] South African Alfonso Thomas returned as an international player, but new signing Dwayne Smith from the West Indies did not travel to Perth for personal reasons. He was replaced in the team by Yasir Arafat from Pakistan. [17]

The Scorchers finished third with five wins from eight games and defeated the Sydney Sixers in their semi-final at the Sydney Cricket Ground to advance final. The fourth-placed Hobart Hurricanes defeated the Melbourne Stars in the other semi-final, affording the Scorches the hosting rights for their third consecutive final. The Scorchers finally won their first BBL title, and brought silverware to Western Australian cricket for the first time in over a decade. [18]

Final

7 February 2014
16:45 (D/N)
Scorecard
Perth Scorchers (H)
4/191 (20 overs)
v
Hobart Hurricanes
7/152 (20 overs)
Shaun Marsh 63* (43)
Evan Gulbis 1/14 (1 over)
George Bailey 58 (32)
Brad Hogg 2/17 (4 overs)
Perth Scorchers won by 39 runs
Western Australia Cricket Association Ground, Perth
Attendance: 20,783
Umpires: Mick Martell and John Ward
Player of the match: Brad Hogg (Perth)
  • Perth Scorchers won the toss and elected to bat.

2014–2015: BBL04 season

Adam Voges was elected to captain the side after the retirement of Simon Katich, while Englishman Michael Carberry signed on for the season as an international recruit, and also regained the services of Yasir Arafat. For the fourth straight year, the Scorchers made it to the final of the Big Bash League, after finishing in 2nd place and defeating the Melbourne Stars in the semi-final for the third time. However, the final was not played the WACA Ground and was instead played at Manuka Oval due to World Cup and tri-series constraints, despite Perth technically earning a Home final after finishing ahead of their finals opponents the Sydney Sixers. The rematch of the BBL01 final came down to the last ball, with the Scorchers needing a run to win. After a brilliant last over from Brett Lee in his final cricket game which included 2 wickets, a fumbled run-out on the last ball handed the Scorchers their second title.

Final

Final
28 January
19:40 (D/N)
Scorecard
Sydney Sixers
5/147 (20 overs)
v
Perth Scorchers
6/148 (20 overs)
Moises Henriques 77 (57)
Jason Behrendorff 1/19 (4 overs)
Shaun Marsh 73 (59)
Brett Lee 3/25 (4 overs)
Perth Scorchers won by 4 wickets
Manuka Oval, Canberra
Attendance: 11,837
Umpires: Mick Martell and Paul Wilson
Player of the match: Shaun Marsh (Scorchers)
  • Sydney Sixers won the toss and elected to bat

2015–2016: BBL05 season

Adam Voges retained his role as captain, while Michael Carberry and David Willey become the two international players. On 30 December 2015 the Scorchers completed the first ever 10-wicket win in BBL history against Melbourne Renegades. They maintained their record of qualifying for every Big Bash finals series, but lost to the Melbourne Stars in the semi-final, making this season the only one in which the Scorchers failed to qualify for the final, and ending their hopes of a third successive trophy.

2016–2017: BBL06 season

Mitchell Johnson, having retired from international cricket, joined the Scorchers. Crowd favourite Brad Hogg left the Scorchers to join the Melbourne Renegades. In the semi-final, Johnson took three wickets for three runs from his four overs, a BBL record low runs conceded, and the third best in all Twenty20 history. [19] He was economical again in the final, conceding only 13 runs as Perth won their third BBL trophy, against the Sydney Sixers.

Final

Final
28 January
16:15
Scorecard
Sydney Sixers
9/141 (20 overs)
v
Perth Scorchers (H)
1/144 (15.5 overs)
Brad Haddin 38 (25)
Jhye Richardson 3/30 (4 overs)
Michael Klinger 71* (49)
Nathan Lyon 1/28 (4 overs)
Perth Scorchers won by 9 wickets
WACA Ground
Attendance: 21,832 [20]
Umpires: Mick Martell and Paul Wilson
Player of the match: Jhye Richardson (Scorchers)
  • Perth Scorchers won the toss and elected to field.
  • The crowd of 21,832 is the highest ever for a BBL match at the WACA.

2017–2018: BBL07 season

The Scorchers unveiled an updated logo ready for the upcoming seventh Big Bash season. Unusually, they decided to only recruit a single overseas player, David Willey who would return for his third season. [21] Mitchell Marsh took over the captaincy from Michael Klinger.

The Scorchers finished atop the table with eight wins in their ten matches and welcomed the Hobart Hurricanes to Perth Stadium for the semifinal. Winning the toss and electing to field first, a depleted Scorchers bowling unit had no answers for the bats of Matthew Wade and Ben McDermott, surrendering 210 runs in the innings. The bats never got going as the Scorchers could only answer with 139 runs before their tenth wicket fell in the 18th over. [22]

2018–2019: BBL08 season

Aside from Adam Voges moving from playing to coaching, the Scorchers returned most of their roster from BBL07, as well as adding Pakistani bowler Usman Qadir. However, very little would go right for them in this tournament. Struggles from key players like Klinger and Hilton Cartwright, as well as varying absences of Ashton Agar, Jason Behrendorff, and Jhye Richardson contributed to a poor season with only four wins in 14 matches. This would place the Scorchers last in the table, failing to qualify for the finals for the first time in BBL. [23]

2019–2020: BBL09 season

The Scorchers roster saw significant overhaul preceding BBL09, which included the retirement of Klinger as well as the departures of Cartwright, Nathan Coulter-Nile, and Shaun Marsh. Notable additions included bowlers Fawad Ahmed and Matthew Kelly, batsmen Nick Hobson and Kurtis Patterson, and English imports Chris Jordan and Liam Livingstone. Ahmed and Jordan proved effective additions with 15 wickets each, and Livingstone made for a dynamic opening partnership with Josh Inglis. Depth was an issue, however, and the Scorchers would finish with six wins in 14 matches, just one point behind the Hurricanes and Thunder for a spot in the now expanded BBL playoff. [24]

2020–2021: BBL10 season

The Scorchers loaded up on import bats for BBL10, returning Livingstone as well as bringing on Joe Clarke, Colin Munro, and Jason Roy. Ashton Turner took over the captaincy for this tournament. The Scorchers stumbled out of the gates, with three defeats and a no result in their first four matches. They ended the skid with a New Year's Eve victory over the Adelaide Strikers and would go on to win eight of the last ten matches and finish second on the table behind the Sydney Sixers. Munro had a strong tournament that earned him a spot on the ESPNcricinfo BBL team of the season. He was joined by Jhye Richardson, who led the tournament with 29 wickets. [25] The Scorchers fell to the Sixers in the Qualifier before cruising to a 49 run victory over the Brisbane Heat in the Challenger. This earned them a rematch against the Sixers in the Final. Scorchers bowling was unable to contain the opposition's bats as the Sixers won by 27 runs to claim consecutive BBL titles.

Final


6 February 2021
19:40 (N)
Scorecard
Sydney Sixers
6/188 (20 overs)
v
Perth Scorchers
9/161 (20 overs)
James Vince 95 (60)
Andrew Tye 2/29 (4 overs)
Liam Livingstone 45 (35)
Ben Dwarshuis 3/37 (4 overs)
Sydney Sixers won by 27 runs
Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney
Attendance: 25,295 [26]
Umpires: Sam Nogajski and Paul Wilson
Player of the match: James Vince (Sydney Sixers)
  • Perth Scorchers won the toss and elected to field.

2021–2022: BBL11 season

The Scorchers retained most of their key players going into BBL11. Whilst they lost imports Livingstone, Clarke, and Roy, they brought in English batter Laurie Evans and fast bowler Tymal Mills. However, the Scorchers would face a unique challenge in this tournament. After an opening victory over Brisbane Heat in Perth, the Scorchers were forced to play all of their remaining games on the road due to Western Australia's tightened travel requirements in response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. [27] Undeterred, the squad started the tournament on a blistering pace with wins in their first six matches. The Scorchers would go on to finish atop the table with 11 wins in 14 matches. Marsh, Agar, and Tye all had stellar tournaments and were named to the ESPNcricinfo BBL team of the season. [28] In the Qualifier, the Scorchers cruised to a handy 48 run victory over the Sixers. In the Final six days later, the Scorchers again faced a Sixers squad depleted by injury and COVID-19. With outstanding bowling and an audacious partnership between Evans and Turner, the Scorchers defeated the Sixers by 79 runs to win their record fourth BBL title.

Final


28 January 2022
19:40 (N)
Scorecard
Perth Scorchers
6/171 (20 overs)
v
Sydney Sixers
10/92 (16.2 overs)
Laurie Evans 76* (41)
Nathan Lyon 2/24 (3 overs)
Daniel Hughes 42 (33)
Andrew Tye 3/15 (3 overs)
Perth Scorchers won by 79 runs
Docklands Stadium, Melbourne
Attendance: 10,333 [29]
Umpires: Sam Nogajski and Phillip Gillespie
Player of the match: Laurie Evans (Perth Scorchers)
  • Sydney Sixers won the toss and elected to field.

2022–2023: BBL12 season

Due to a number of factors, the Scorchers lost numerous key pieces from BBL11's championship squad. Opener Patterson signed with the Sixers, while Munro was taken by the Heat in the inaugural BBL international draft. The Scorchers made three picks in the draft and none would play in the tournament. Evans, the 12th overall pick, had his contract terminated on 11 November after testing positive for a banned substance. [30] Phil Salt, the 19th overall pick, withdrew from the tournament due to injury on 2 December, while Marsh was ruled out of the tournament on the same day. [31] Mills, the 30th and final pick of the draft, withdrew on 15 December for personal reasons that were later revealed to be a stroke suffered by his daughter. [32] To cover for these losses, the Scorchers signed South African batter Faf du Plessis as well as English batters Adam Lyth and Stephen Eskinazi. [33] [34] Despite the personnel losses, the Scorchers started the tournament strong. The Scorchers finished the season on top of the season ladder playing the Sydney Sixers in Perth in the Qualifier match and beating them by 7 wickets on the back of a 132* run partnership between captain Ashton Turner and opener Cam Bancroft to reach the BBL final for the eighth time.

They played the Brisbane Heat a week later in the BBL12 Decider, winning by 5 wickets with 4 balls remaining. On a very hot day at Perth Stadium in front of a record Scorchers and BBL Finals crowd of 53,886, Brisbane set a competitive target of 175. In the run chase, every Scorchers' batsman reached double figures, but only Turner scored a half century, with 53 runs from 32 balls until he was run out. It was then left to the inexperienced Nick Hobson and teenager Cooper Connolly to score the remaining 39 runs from the last 19 balls. Connolly, in only his second BBL innings, scored 25 runs off 11 balls including 2 sixes before Hobson finished the task with a six and a four to give the Scorchers their fifth Big Bash title.

Final

4 February 2023
16:30 (N)
Scorecard
Brisbane Heat
7/175 (20 overs)
v
Perth Scorchers
5/178 (19.2 overs)
Nathan McSweeney 41* (37)
Jason Behrendorff 2/26 (4 overs)
Ashton Turner 53 (32)
Matthew Kuhnemann 1/28 (4 overs)
Perth Scorchers won by 5 wickets
Perth Stadium
Attendance: 53,866
Umpires: Sam Nogajski and Paul Wilson
Player of the match: Ashton Turner (Perth Scorchers)
  • Brisbane Heat won the toss and elected to bat.

2023–2024: BBL13 season

For the second year in a row, Perth Scorchers lost a key opening batter – Bancroft signed with the Sydney Thunder [35] – and declined to use a platinum pick in the international draft. They did, however, bring in several English batters. With the 16th pick, they selected Zak Crawley, followed by bringing back Evans with the 17th pick. [36] Scorchers also retained Eskinazi and brought back Sam Whiteman, who had spent the previous two campaigns with Sydney Thunder. Marsh would miss his second consecutive Big Bash, this time due to test duties.

Following an opening no-result against Renegades in Geelong, Scorchers started strong with victories in their first four completed matches. In the second of those, facing Hobart Hurricanes, Turner came up limping after bowling his first delivery and exited the match. It was thereafter announced that Turner had aggravated a meniscus injury in his right knee, requiring surgery that would take him out of the tournament. [37] Aaron Hardie would assume the captaincy in his stead. [38] Scorchers experienced an uneven second half of the competition, losing three of their last five matches as they struggled to find an effective opening partnership. Jhye Richardson would also be lost to injury in this period. [39] With the tournament reduced from 14 to 10 matches for each team and a four-team final, Scorchers finished third on the table to set up a showdown against Adelaide Strikers in the Eliminator.

Players

The Scorchers have focused on selecting mainly local players in their squad throughout their time in the BBL. This practice was questioned by some commentators, including Brad Hodge and Dirk Nannes, as being unfair or possibly illegal to "bundle" contracts by overpaying on state cricket association contracts and underpaying on the Scorcher's contract. However, no adverse findings have ever been delivered against the Scorchers or the WACA. [40] In 2023 it was highlighted that the Melbourne Stars had five ex-Scorchers on their squad. [41]

Season summaries

Chart of yearly table positions for Perth Scorchers in BBL Performance Chart BBL SCO.svg
Chart of yearly table positions for Perth Scorchers in BBL
Season W–L Pos. FinalsCoachCaptainMost RunsMost WicketsMost Valuable PlayerRefs
2011–12 5–2*1st*RU Mickey Arthur Marcus North Mitch Marsh – 309 Ben Edmondson – 14 [42] [43]
2012–13 5–32ndRU Justin Langer Simon Katich Shaun Marsh – 412* Alfonso Thomas – 14 [44] [45]
2013–14 5–33rdC Justin Langer Simon Katich Simon Katich – 314 Yasir Arafat – 12 [46] [47]
2014–15 5–32ndC Justin Langer Adam Voges Michael Klinger – 326* Jason Behrendorff – 15 [a] [48] [49]
2015–16 5–33rdSF Justin Langer Adam Voges [b] Michael Klinger – 285 Andrew Tye – 13 David Willey [50] [51] [52]
2016–17 5–3*1st*C Justin Langer Adam Voges [c] Michael Klinger – 334 Mitchell Johnson – 13 Andrew Tye [53] [54] [55]
2017–18 8–2*1st*SF Justin Langer Adam Voges [d] Ashton Turner – 252 Andrew Tye – 16 Ashton Agar [56] [57] [58]
2018–19 4–108thDNQ Adam Voges Mitch Marsh [e] Ashton Turner – 378 Andrew Tye – 17 Ashton Turner [59] [60] [61]
2019–20 6–86thDNQ Adam Voges Mitch Marsh Liam Livingstone – 425 Fawad Ahmed – 15 [f] Jhye Richardson [62] [63] [64]
2020–21 8–52ndRU Adam Voges Ashton Turner Colin Munro – 443 Jhye Richardson – 29* Jhye Richardson [65] [66] [67]
2021–22 11–3*1st*C Adam Voges Ashton Turner Kurtis Patterson – 391 Andrew Tye – 25 Ashton Agar [68] [69] [70]
2022–23 11–3*1st*C Adam Voges Ashton Turner Aaron Hardie – 460* Andrew Tye – 26 Aaron Hardie [71] [72] [73]
2023–24 6–33rdKF Adam Voges Ashton Turner [g] Aaron Hardie – 334 Jason Behrendorff – 16 Aaron Hardie [74] [75] [76]
Legend
DNQDid not qualifySFSemi-finalists*Led the league
EFLost the EliminatorRURunners-up^League record
KFLost the KnockoutCFLost the ChallengerCChampions

Captaincy records

There have been seven captains in the Scorchers' history, including matches featuring an acting captain.

CaptainSpanMWonLostTiedNRW–L%
Marcus North 2011–1213750158.33
Simon Katich 2012–142413100156.52
Adam Voges 2014–183422120064.71
Mitchell Marsh 2014–20217140030
Michael Klinger 2015–199630066.67
Ashton Turner 2018–246142170271.19
Aaron Hardie 2023–248440050

Current squad

The squad of the Perth Scorchers for the 2024–25 Big Bash League season as of 14 December 2024. [77]

No.NameNationalityBirth DateBatting styleBowling styleNotes
Batters
20 Sam Fanning Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 November 2000Left-handedRight-arm off spin
19 Nick Hobson Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 22 August 1994Left-handedRight-arm medium
9 Keaton Jennings Flag of England.svg  England 19 June 1992Left-handedRight-arm medium Overseas Draft Pick (Bronze)
32 Finn Allen Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 22 April 1999Right-handedRight-arm off spin Overseas Draft Pick (Platinum)
All-rounders
18 Ashton Agar Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 14 October 1993Left-handed Left-arm orthodox spin
8 Cooper Connolly Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 22 August 2003Left-handed Left-arm orthodox spin
21 Aaron Hardie Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 7 January 1999Right-handedRight-arm fast
10 Mitch Marsh Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 October 1991Right-handedRight-arm fast
17 Ashton Turner Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 25 January 1993Right-handedRight-arm off spin Captain
7 Matthew Spoors Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 6 May 1999Right-handedRight-arm leg spin
Wicket Keepers
27 Matthew Hurst Flag of England.svg  England 10 December 2003Right-handedOverseas Draft Pick (Silver)
95 Josh Inglis Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 4 March 1995Right-handed
Bowlers
4 Mahli Beardman Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 31 August 2005Right-handedRight-arm fast
5 Jason Behrendorff Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 April 1990Right-handedLeft-arm fast
99 Bryce Jackson Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 28 November 1999Right-handedRight-arm fast Local Replacement Player
12 Matthew Kelly Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 7 December 1994Right-handedRight-arm fast
28 Lance Morris Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 28 March 1998Right-handedRight-arm fast
2 Jhye Richardson Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 20 September 1996Right-handedRight-arm fast
68 Andrew Tye Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 12 December 1986Right-handedRight-arm medium

Players

Australian representatives

The following is a list of cricketers who have played for the Scorchers after making their debut in the national men's team (the period they spent as both a Scorchers squad member and an Australian-capped player is in brackets):

Overseas players

Source: [78]

Statistics and Awards

Team stats

Big Bash League:

Opposition M WonLostTied NR W–L%
Adelaide Strikers 2513120052
Brisbane Heat 231580065.22
Hobart Hurricanes 211380061.9
Melbourne Renegades 211640180
Melbourne Stars 241580165.22
Sydney Sixers 2817110060.71
Sydney Thunder 18990050
Total16098600262.03

Champions League Twenty20:

Opposition M WonLostTied NR W–L%
Auckland Aces 11000100
Chennai Super Kings 101000
Delhi Daredevils 101000
Hollywoodbets Dolphins 11000100
Highveld Lions 100010
Kolkata Knight Riders 201010
Lahore Lions 11000100
Mumbai Indians 101000
Otago Volts 101000
Rajasthan Royals 101000
Titans 101000
Total12370230

Source: [79]

Individual stats

Source: [79]

Individual awards

Notes

  1. Yasir Arafat also took 15 wickets, but at a higher bowling average.
  2. Michael Klinger stood in as acting captain for five games.
  3. Michael Klinger stood in as acting captain for three games.
  4. Ashton Turner stood in as acting captain for one game.
  5. Ashton Turner and Michael Klinger stood in as acting captain for seven games and one game respectively.
  6. Chris Jordan and Jhye Richardson also took 15 wickets, but at a higher bowling average.
  7. Aaron Hardie was appointed as captain after three games due to an injury to Ashton Turner.

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The 2018–19 Big Bash League season or BBL|08 was the eighth season of the KFC Big Bash League, the professional men's Twenty20 domestic cricket competition in Australia. The tournament started on 19 December 2018. Adelaide Strikers were the defending champions. The competition was extended to a full home and away season for the first time, with each team to play each other twice at both a home venue and away venue. This consists of 56 regular season matches, two semi-final fixtures and the final. For this season of the tournament, the toss was replaced by a bat flip, with "roofs and flats" used instead of heads or tails.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017–18 Perth Scorchers WBBL season</span>

The 2017–18 Perth Scorchers Women's season was the third in the team's history. Coached by Lisa Keightley and captained by Elyse Villani, the Scorchers ended the regular season of WBBL|03 in third place. They then defeated the Sydney Thunder by 27 runs in a semi-final at Optus Stadium to set up a re-match of the previous year's final against the Sydney Sixers. In the championship decider, held at Adelaide Oval, the Scorchers suffered a heavy nine-wicket loss to once again finish the tournament as runners-up.

The 2019–20 Big Bash League season or BBL|09 was the ninth season of the Big Bash League, the professional men's Twenty20 domestic cricket competition in Australia. The tournament started on 17 December 2019 and concluded on 8 February 2020.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2021–22 Perth Scorchers WBBL season</span> Womens Big Bash season

The 2021–22 Perth Scorchers Women's season was the seventh in the team's history. Coached by Shelley Nitschke and captained by Sophie Devine, the Scorchers finished the regular season of WBBL|07 on top of the ladder to claim their first minor premiership. They hosted the championship decider at Perth Stadium on 27 November 2021, defeating the Adelaide Strikers by 12 runs to win a maiden WBBL title. Marizanne Kapp was named Player of the Final for her influential all-round performance, scoring 31* off 23 deliveries and producing bowling figures of 1/25 from four overs. For the second consecutive season, batter Beth Mooney was the league's leading run-scorer.

The 2021–22 Perth Scorchers season was the eleventh in the club's history. Coached by Adam Voges and captained by Mitchell Marsh they competed in the BBL's 2021–22 season. In the final, they beat Sydney Sixers to clinch their fourth BBL title.

The 2022–23 Hobart Hurricanes Women's season was the eighth in the team's history. Coached by Dan Marsh and captained by Elyse Villani, the Hurricanes finished the regular season of WBBL|08 in fourth place and qualified for the finals for the first time since WBBL|02. They were eliminated from the knockout phase of the tournament, losing to the Brisbane Heat in the Eliminator.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2022–23 Perth Scorchers WBBL season</span> Womens Big Bash season

The 2022–23 Perth Scorchers Women's season was the eighth in the team's history. Coached by Shelley Nitschke and captained by Sophie Devine, the Scorchers entered WBBL|08 as defending champions after claiming their maiden title in WBBL|07. They finished the regular season in fifth position and consequently failed to qualify for the finals.

The 2022–23 Perth Scorchers season was the twelfth in the club's history. Coached by Adam Voges and captained by Ashton Turner they competed in the BBL's BBL|12.

The 2023–24 Perth Scorchers season was the thirteenth in the club's history. Coached by Adam Voges, captained by Ashton Turner, and vice captained by Aaron Hardie. They competed in the BBL|13 season.

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