With her final international white-ball match now complete, Alyssa Healy closes the curtain on a career spanning nearly two decades, multiple World Cups and countless defining performances. From landmark innings to elite wicketkeeping standards, her influence on the game is best illustrated through the numbers.
Below is a statistical overview of her remarkable journey.
One-Day Internationals
ODIs stood out as Healy’s strongest format, particularly given her elevated performances on the World Cup stage. The standout remains her 170 in the 2022 World Cup final.
As a designated wicketkeeper, Healy amassed 3420 ODI runs — the second-highest tally in Women’s ODIs behind Sarah Taylor’s 3813. She also leads all wicketkeepers for centuries (7), ahead of Taylor’s six; no other keeper has more than two.
2000-plus ODI runs as designated wicketkeepers
- Sarah Taylor (ENG-W) – 3813 runs
- Alyssa Healy (AUS-W) – 3420 runs
- Trisha Chetty (SA-W) – 2661 runs
- Amy Jones (ENG-W) – 2220 runs
- Rebecca Rolls (NZ-W) – 2144 runs
In total, Healy scored 3777 ODI runs at 37.02. Of those, 3387 came as an opener at an average of 43.42, compared to 390 runs from 33 innings at 16.25 when batting at No.3 or lower. Reflecting on that transition, Healy described her promotion to the top as “a real turning point” and admitted she “didn’t feel comfortable probably for the first eight years of career” on the Willow Talk podcast. After debuting in ODIs and T20Is in February 2010, she became a full-time opener in 2017 and retained that role thereafter.
Healy in ODIs – Before and After Promotion
- Debut–July 2017: 495 runs in 52 matches at 15.96
- Since October 2017: 3282 runs in 74 matches at 46.22
Her overall strike-rate of 100.69 is the joint-highest among the 54 batters with at least 2000 runs in Women’s ODIs, alongside Chloe Tryon. All eight of Healy’s ODI hundreds came at a strike-rate of 100 or more. Only Meg Lanning (11), Nat Sciver-Brunt and Smriti Mandhana have scored more centuries at over a run-a-ball.
Healy is one of only five players to achieve the double of 2000-plus runs (3420) and 100-plus dismissals (119) as a wicketkeeper in Women’s ODIs. Sarah Taylor, Trisha Chetty, Rebecca Rolls and Amy Jones are the others.
She is also one of only two wicketkeepers to score hundreds in consecutive ODI innings. Healy registered 142 and 113* against India and Bangladesh respectively in Visakhapatnam during the Women’s ODI World Cup 2025. Amy Jones had previously achieved the feat earlier that year.
Two of the only three ODI centuries by a wicketkeeper-captain belong to Healy — the same 142 and 113* in the 2025 World Cup. The only other instance is Nigar Sultana’s 101 against Thailand Women in Lahore in April 2025. Healy’s 142 against India is also the second-highest score by a wicketkeeper-captain in all ODIs, across men’s and women’s cricket, behind AB de Villiers’ 149 in 2015.
Her ODI output remained consistent regardless of match situation, with nearly identical returns when batting first or chasing.
- Batting first: 2099 runs at 37.48, SR 102.59
- Batting second: 1678 runs at 36.47, SR 98.41
Healy concluded her ODI career with 158 off 98 balls against India at the Bellerive Oval, Hobart on March 1. That innings is now the highest score by any player in their final ODI, surpassing Johmari Logtenberg’s 153* in 2007.
T20 Internationals
Healy stands alone as the only wicketkeeper with over 100 dismissals in Women’s T20Is, finishing with 126 — well ahead of Amy Jones’ 90. Her tally includes 63 catches and 63 stumpings, the highest in both categories.
Her unbeaten 148 against Sri Lanka at North Sydney in 2019 remains the highest score by a designated wicketkeeper in Women’s T20Is. It is the fifth-highest overall and the best among full-member teams. The innings featured 19 fours and seven sixes — both the most by a wicketkeeper in a T20I innings.
Reaching her century in just 46 balls during that knock made it the second-fastest hundred in Women’s T20Is, behind Deandra Dottin’s 38-ball effort in 2010.
As in ODIs, Healy’s T20I returns surged after her promotion to opener.
- Debut–Feb 2017: 811 runs at 17.63
- Thereafter: 2243 runs at 30.31
Opening Partnerships
Healy and Beth Mooney combined for 2720 runs in Women’s T20Is — the second-highest partnership aggregate for any pair, behind Smriti Mandhana and Shafali Verma. Both duos recorded four century stands. Among nine opening pairs with over 1000 runs, Healy and Mooney’s scoring rate of 7.87 is bettered only by Mandhana and Shafali.
ODI World Cup
Healy’s 170 off 138 balls against England in Christchurch in 2022 remains the highest individual score in an ODI World Cup final, men’s or women’s. She finished that edition with 509 runs — then a record for a single tournament, later surpassed by Laura Wolvaardt in 2025.
Together with Rachael Haynes, she compiled 671 runs as a pair in 2022 — the highest partnership aggregate in a single edition.
Across all ODI World Cups, Healy scored 906 runs, the most by any wicketkeeper. She and Sarah Taylor are the only wicketkeepers with centuries in the tournament’s history. Healy struck four — joint-second overall alongside Suzie Bates, Janette Brittin and Charlotte Edwards — with only Nat Sciver-Brunt (5) ahead.
Her 170 in the 2022 final followed a 129 in the semifinal against the West Indies, making her the first cricketer to score a century in both the semifinal and final of the same World Cup.
T20 World Cup
Healy lifted six Women’s T20 World Cup titles as a player (2010, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2020 and 2023), more than anyone else. She appeared in seven finals overall — also a record.
She accumulated 1008 runs in T20 World Cups, the third-most in history, and holds the highest strike-rate (129.39) among players with at least 150 runs in the tournament. Of those runs, 916 came as a designated wicketkeeper.
Healy played 42 T20 World Cup matches, the joint second-most, and earned seven Player of the Match awards — again joint second. Behind the stumps, she recorded 32 dismissals in the tournament, the highest tally.
Across Formats
Heading into her farewell Test, Healy has 6472 international runs and seven centuries from 269 matches as a designated wicketkeeper — the highest across all three metrics in women’s international cricket.
She also leads the all-time list for dismissals with 266. Her 163 catches are second only to Trisha Chetty’s 175, while her 103 stumpings trail Sarah Taylor’s 104 by just one.
Through nearly two decades, Healy’s numbers reflect not only longevity but sustained excellence — redefining expectations for wicketkeeper-batters in women’s cricket.