"I never played cricket, which is a little bit interesting for some people," she told reporters in Sydney on Wednesday, before adding she had been encouraged into it by her parents. "I always followed cricket, my parents got me into it and Dad would drive me up from Goulburn to do the umpires course. "It took a few times to pass but it was something I was determined to do and I kept working through the grades in the Sydney competition."Claire Polosak, who umpired at #WWC17, will become the first woman to umpire a List A Australian men’s domestic fixture. pic.twitter.com/GXFXWJFhI8
— ICC (@ICC) October 4, 2017
Polosak has been on the Cricket Australia's development umpire panel for the past two years and has previously been a third-umpire in men's domestic cricket. Despite the expected rise in standard this weekend, Polosak said her preparations would not change for the occasion. "There's preparation, there's playing conditions, learning the players, having a meeting with your teammate, discuss what signals you're going to be using, how you're going to communicate," Polosak added.Claire Polosak will join a select few who have managed to break gender barriershttps://t.co/EgoPGvGsJR
— ESPNcricinfo (@ESPNcricinfo) October 4, 2017
"Physically, it's very similar stuff to a player, fitness, core strength, back and legs because you're standing up on the field for seven hours. "I've got mental triggers so I'm able to watch every ball as you go, so you can settle into that."Umpire Claire Polosak will make history when she debuts on-field in the JLT Cup on Sunday.
Full details - https://t.co/9lpuQCPHQN pic.twitter.com/vAscI9ojAn— Cricket Australia (@CAComms) October 4, 2017