In February 2020, Litchfield batted at No.4 in the Bushfire relief match for the Ponting XI.
Domestic career
In October 2019, she made her WBBL debut on 18 October 2019, aged 16, and scored 26 runs off 22 balls.[3] In her second match for the Thunder, she became the youngest player to make a half century in the WBBL.[4][5]
In November 2020, at 17 years of age, Litchfield played in the Sydney Thunder's WBBL 2020-21 title win. Although she did not get to bat, she took a catch dismissing Alana King for 0 of the bowling of Heather Knight.[6]
In October 2024, Litchfield became the youngest player at 21 years, 193 days old, to captain a WBBL team as permanent captain.[7]
In November 2022, she was named in the T20I squad for their series against India.[9] She made her WT20I debut in the 2nd WT20I of the series on 11 December 2022, but did not get to bat.[10] In her second T20I, she scored 11 in the 5th T20I match. In December 2022, Litchfield was named in the Australian ODI squad for a series against Pakistan.[11]
In January 2023, she made her ODI debut in the first match of the series on the 16 January 2023, opening the batting, she became the youngest Australian to score an ODI fifty, making 78 (not out) to chase down the total.[12] In the second match of the series, Litchfield became the first Australian women's cricketer to start their ODI career with back to back 50s, hitting 67 (not out).[13]
In March 2023, she was named in Australia's Test squad for the Ashes series against England. She was also named for the ODIs and T20Is.[14] In April 2023, she received her first Cricket Australia national women's contract.[15] In June 2023, she made her Test debut, opening the batting on 22 June 2023.[16] Litchfield scored 23 in the first innings before being given out lbw. The ball was missing the stumps but Litchfield chose not to review.[17] Litchfield scored 46 runs in the 2nd innings before being bowled. Litchfield did not feature in the T20Is. She opened the batting in the ODIs with scores of 34, 4 and 1.
In July 2023, in the third ODI against Ireland, Litchfield scored her maiden white-ball century, scoring 106 not out, and received the player of the match award.[18] She became the second-youngest Australian woman to hit an ODI century.[19]
In September 2023, Litchfield was named in the ODI and T20I squads to play the West Indies.[20]
In October 2023, Litchfield returned to the T20I team in the first T20I but did not get to bat. In the 2nd T20I, Litchfield scored her first T20I half-century, she equalled Sophie Devine's record for the fastest fifty in a women's T20I off 18 balls, against the West Indies, batting at No.6.[21]
In January 2024, Litchfield scored her second ODI hundred, scoring 119, against India at the Wankhede Stadium.[22]