Apple Watch Helps Power The Australian Women’s Cricket Team

We’ve all been delighted by the way women’s sport in Australia is making all the headlines and performing so well on the global stage. But as women who love tech, it’s also fantastic to see that our sporting heroes are tapping into the best technology has to offer to improve their health and fitness. Ahead of this year’s Ashes series in the UK, the Australian Women’s Cricket Team has been using Apple Watch and a powerful activity monitoring app from the Australian Institute of Sport to optimise team training, reduce injury risk and enhance performance.

“Apple Watch delivers highly accurate and instantaneous data, which has helped us overcome previous challenges where player data reached us too late to be leveraged,” explains David Bailey, Cricket Australia’s performance coach. “Now we can analyse player data in real time and put interventions in place to manage player fatigue and mitigate the risk of injury. Since the team has worn Apple Watch and shared activity, we’ve seen players become more accountable and engaged in the training process, more motivated by the data, and have more fun along the way.”   

Apple Watch is being used by the Australian Women’s Cricket Team

Here’s how it works

Through wearing Apple Watch and interacting with the app, the team tracks and shares their all-day activity, enabling coaches to monitor and modify the team’s workload based on key metrics including training load, heart rate, mood and sleep data. This real-time dashboard gives performance staff an insight into the team’s workload and training capacity, and the ability to make meaningful modifications to improve a player’s prospects, even from afar during periods where players are travelling.

The Australian Institute of Sport developed the app to equip professional teams with a comprehensive athlete management tool that gives players and coaches powerful data to make better decisions. The app measures training load and player fatigue to ensure players do not overtrain and run the risk of injury.  

Australian Institute of Sport’s Ian Morrow is the the applied technology & innovation project manager. He says: “We’ve always known that speed, breadth and accuracy would be critical if data was going to make a difference to a team’s performance. We also knew we could get performance benefits by having athletes obsessed with their data, and Apple Watch has helped us do this. The ability for the AIS to utilise the powerful sensors within Apple Watch gave us an opportunity to deliver on our ambition to innovate within performance management and create something literally game changing.” 

The popularity of Apple Watch is also driving players to wear it for longer and therefore share a more comprehensive view of their day. The ability for players to share their Activity Rings with each other keeps them motivated during the off-season and helps them feel connected to the team. 

Build your health with Apple Watch



Meg Lanning, captain – Australian Women’s Cricket Team says it’s brilliant. 

The Aussie Cricket Team

Meg says: “Within elite sports there’s often not huge differences or margins between the best teams in the world, so being precise and insights-led with the way that you train can make a huge difference when you’re on the field. Data is not only motivating from a personal perspective, it can create a competitive edge as well. Using a device as personal as an Apple Watch has enabled everyone in the squad to communicate better and take ownership of their own training preparation, giving them a clear understanding of what they’re doing and why. ” 

Robyn Foyster: Robyn Foyster is an award-winning journalist and former Editor-In-Chief of The Australian Women's Weekly and Publisher of the Hearst Group in Australia, responsible for Harper's BAZAAR, Cosmopolitan and madison magazine. Robyn is the owner and editor of Women Love Tech, Game Changers and The Carousel. Robyn's tech company AR TEch produced the augmented reality app for Sydney's Vivid Festival in 2018 and the retail app Sweep. She is a speaker and a judge of the Telstra Business Awards and Mumbrella Awards. Robyn is passionate about supporting women in STEM. She is also a 2022 B&T Women In Media Awards Finalist and a multiple Finalist in the 2022 Samsung Lizzie's Awards.

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