England pacer Tymal Mills has been barred from promoting his OnlyFans account on his bat during The Hundred, the high-profile 100-ball cricket tournament in England. According to City AM, the Sussex Sharks skipper had approached the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) for approval but was turned down due to the competition’s strict “family-friendly” policy. Mills, who accepted the verdict, remains the first professional cricketer to launch an OnlyFans account.

While the platform is primarily associated with explicit content, Tymal Mills clarified that his profile will strictly feature cricket and lifestyle material—no glamour shots or adult themes. His goal, he says, is to share an authentic, behind-the-scenes look at the life of a professional cricketer.
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“Just to be absolutely clear, there will be no glamour shots,” Tymal Mills told The Athletic. “This is about giving fans genuine insight into my cricketing journey and day-to-day life. I can share my thoughts in real time, along with photos and videos that capture the highs and lows of being a cricketer.”
Tymal Mills has joined OnlyFans, but the ECB rejected his request to display the platform’s logo on his bat during The Hundred pic.twitter.com/vTBpVSuWil
— RCBIANS OFFICIAL (@RcbianOfficial) August 13, 2025
The 32-year-old, who also works in cricket media, believes the platform allows for a more personal and unfiltered connection with fans compared to traditional interviews, which he says often feel “manicured and generic.”
On the field, Mills has been in fine form for Southern Brave, picking up 3-22 in their opening game and later scoring a match-winning six runs in a nail-biting one-wicket win against Manchester Originals.
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Internationally, Mills has represented England in 16 T20Is and enjoyed stints in the IPL with Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) and Mumbai Indians (MI). Now, alongside his cricketing exploits, he’s exploring new ways to engage with supporters—albeit without crossing the ECB’s promotional boundaries.
