Schutt was born in Adelaide,[1] into what she has praised as a "loving family", headed by her parents Brian and Sue. According to Schutt, "I'm 99 per cent my dad; I have my mum's eyes, but that's about it," and, "I thank [my dad] for all my sporting-ness." However, he denies having been any good at sport.[4]
Together with her older sister Natalie, with whom she shared a bedroom, and her younger brother Warren, Schutt was raised in a modest home in Hackham West, an outer southern suburb of Adelaide. She attended Hackham West Primary School, then Wirreanda Secondary School, and although she loved school and achieved good grades, she also "wagged a bit".[4]
In Hackham West, children often played cricket in the suburban streets, and Schutt was amongst them. One day when she was 11 years old, she was asked to fill in for someone in a Seaford club match. During that game, she was bowled first ball, but took a wicket with her own first ball. She was also spotted by someone who invited her to join a new girls' team. After being spotted again playing for that team, she was recruited by the Flinders University Cricket Club.[4] Then, at age 13, she moved to Sturt, where her teammates included Shelley Nitschke.[4][5]
Schutt proceeded along the South Australian state pathway through the under-15, under-17 and under-19 teams.[4] Yet despite being a "fluky good" cricketer as a teenager, she took a long time to fall in love with the game. At 16, she tried boundary umpiring for an Australian rules football league, and was called up to play football for a short time at junior level, but she soon returned to cricket. In 2018, she told Adelaide's Sunday Mail that until she was 19:[4]
"I took things for granted and I had to figure out how lucky I was to be playing a sport amongst really good people and a sport that is an incredible sport, it's so simple yet so complicated. It took me to appreciate everything around me to actually fall in love with the game ... and I'm glad I did."
In an article Schutt wrote for The Guardian in 2021, she observed that as an unexpected by-product of the COVID-19 pandemic she had been able to consider certain issues with more clarity:[6]
"Some of this has been around equality in sport, a belated reflection on my childhood, of being the token girl who played sport at my school and the perception that was normal. Or of growing up believing women's cricket pathways were equal to their men's counterparts when they quite clearly were not."
Career
A right-arm fast-medium bowler, Schutt made her international debut against New Zealand,[1] a match in which she bowled expensively, conceding 33 runs from five overs.[7] She collected two wickets in her next match, against the same opposition,[8] and was rated by ESPNcricinfo's review of women's cricket in 2012 as a player to watch in the following year.[9] She was selected as part of Australia's squad for the 2013 Women's Cricket World Cup,[10] something that ESPNcricinfo's Jenny Roesler suggested was due to Australia's lack of bowlers.[9]
During the World Cup, Schutt appeared in all of Australia's seven matches, claiming 15 wickets at an economy of 4.13.[11] She took at least one wicket in each of the matches,[8] and her 15 were the most by any bowler in the tournament.[12]The Daily Telegraph described her rapid rise from playing club cricket to being the leading bowler in the World Cup as "meteoric", but Schutt explained that the humidity in India favoured her swing bowling.[13] Schutt opened the bowling for Australia in the World Cup final against the West Indies, which her side won by 114 runs; she claimed two wickets for the concession of 38 runs in the match.[14] Her best bowling performance for Australia was the three wickets for 40 runs she claimed in the World Cup group match against New Zealand.[1]
In June 2015, she was named as one of Australia's touring party for the 2015 Women's Ashes in England.[15]
In December 2017, she was named as one of the players in the ICC Women's T20I Team of the Year.[16]
In October 2018, she was named in Australia's squad for the 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 tournament in the West Indies.[20][21] Ahead of the tournament, she was named as one of the players to watch.[22]
In January 2022, Schutt was named in Australia's squad for their series against England to contest the Women's Ashes.[33] Later the same month, she was named in Australia's team for the 2022 Women's Cricket World Cup in New Zealand.[34] On 3 February 2022, in the first WODI match of the Women's Ashes, Schutt took her 100th wicket in WODI cricket.[35]
Schutt's nickname is "Shooter".[4][40] She came out as lesbian, and married her long-term partner Jess Holyoake in 2019. An early supporter of same-sex marriage in Australia, Schutt stated that "saying partner is nice but when having to explain that it's a woman a lot of the time I think that often gets a reaction which isn't quite comfortable...now we're able to [just] say wife, flat out, and people know that's the deal."[41][42] In May 2021, Schutt announced that Holyoake was expecting their first child.[43]