Cricket woman

  1. Women's cricket
  2. ICC Women's T20 World Cup
  3. Team USA Women
  4. Women’s Ashes Test match: Australia and England draw after thrilling finish
  5. Women’s cricket team of the year: from Alice Capsey to the Kerr sisters


Download: Cricket woman
Size: 71.73 MB

Women's cricket

Women's cricket has been played internationally since the inaugural In 2004, a shorter format still was initiated, with the introduction of Australia are the only women team to achieve three global titles in last 12 months. Women's franchise cricket [ ] Since 2015, women have played franchise cricket in the Australian In 2016, the semi-professional 2018 marked the inaugural year for women's franchise cricket in India. In 2018, the In 2022, Commonwealth Games 2022 [ ] In August 2019, Commonwealth Games Foundation announced addition of women's cricket to New Zealand claimed the bronze medal after beating England by 8 wickets in the Bronze Medal Match. See also [ ] • • • • • • References [ ] • Judy Threlfall-Sykes (October 2015). A History of English Women's Cricket, 1880-1939 (PDF) (Thesis). p.55-56 . Retrieved 29 July 2016. • ESPN Cricinfo. 26 June 2006 . Retrieved 1 July 2019. • International Cricket Council . Retrieved 17 November 2021. • Women's CricZone . Retrieved 17 November 2021. • Buckley, George Bent (1935). Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket: A Collection of 1000 Cricket Notices from 1697 to 1800 AD Arranged in Chronological Order. Birmingham: Cotterell. • . Retrieved 2010-02-09. • . Retrieved 2012-03-06. • ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 2021-04-07. • ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 2021-04-07. • ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 2021-04-07. • . Retrieved 2023-02-27. • ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 2022-07-04. • Reuters (14 March 2022). Sportstar . Retrieved 2022-07-04. {{ |last= has gener...

ICC Women's T20 World Cup

• • • • • • • • • • The ICC Women's T20 World Cup (known as the ICC Women's World Twenty20 until 2019) is the biennial international championship for At each tournament, a set number of teams qualify automatically, with the remaining teams determined by the Qualification [ ] Qualification is determined by the Summary [ ] Year Host nation(s) Final venue Final Winners Result Runners-up 86/4 (17 overs) 85 (20 overs) 106/8 (20 overs) 103/6 (20 overs) 142/4 (20 overs) 138/9 (20 overs) 106/4 (15 overs) 105/8 (20 overs) 149/2 (19 overs) 148/5 (20 overs) 106/2 (15.1 overs) 105 (19.4 overs) 184/4 (20 overs) 99 (19.1 overs) 156/6 (20 overs) 137/6 (20 overs) To be confirmed To be confirmed Performance of teams [ ] Team Appearances Best performance Statistics Total First Latest Played Won Lost Tie NR Win% 8 Champions (2010, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2020, 2023) 44 35 8 1(1) 0 80.68 8 Champions (2009) 38 28 9 1(0) 0 75.00 8 Champions (2016) 34 20 14 0 0 58.82 8 Runners-up (2009, 2010) 36 24 12 0 0 66.66 8 Runners-up (2020) 36 20 16 0 0 55.55 8 Runners-up (2023) 33 14 19 0 0 42.42 8 First Round (2009–2023) 31 10 21 0 0 32.25 8 First Round (2009–2023) 32 8 23 0 1 25.80 5 First Round (2014–2023) 20 2 19 0 0 9.52 4 First Round (2014–2018, 2023) 17 0 17 0 0 0.00 1 First Round (2020) 4 0 3 0 1 0.00 Note: • The number in bracket indicates number of wins in tied matches by • Teams are sorted by their best performance, then winning percentage, then (if equal) by alphabetical order. Team results by tour...

Team USA Women

For your club or league to become a fully-fledged Organizational Member, you must ensure that you are compliant with the USA Cricket Constitution. This means if you are a club, you need at least 12 players to join USA Cricket as individuals and be aligned with your club. For leagues, you must have at least 3 clubs aligned to your league and members of USA Cricket.

Women’s Ashes Test match: Australia and England draw after thrilling finish

Alana King runs out Anya Shrubsole on day four of the Women’s Ashes Test between Australia and England at Manuka Oval in Canberra. Photograph: Mark Kolbe/Getty Images Alana King runs out Anya Shrubsole on day four of the Women’s Ashes Test between Australia and England at Manuka Oval in Canberra. Photograph: Mark Kolbe/Getty Images 30 Jan 2022 08.17 GMT One of the great days of Ashes cricket 449 runs. 14 wickets. What a day of Test cricket. What to make of all that then? Incredible, no? Spare a thought for Geoff Lemon who is writing the match report as we speak and has to cram all that beautiful chaos into something intelligible. He wouldn’t have it any other way and neither would we. That was a real pleasure to OBO, thanks for your company over the past five hours or so. Both sides will now somehow have to gather themselves for the ODIs which get underway on Thursday. We’ll be there for those of course. I’m off for a lie down. Maybe I’ll just sneak a glimpse at the highlights first... And sure enough here is Geoff’s report, a belter, just like the match. Wonder if there was a devil on the shoulder of Kate Cross saying: do it Have had a few messages intimating the same thing. Kate Cross did waft at a few in the penultimate over but she shut up shop admirably in the last. England now have to win all three ODI matches to snaffle the Ashes which is a big ask but there’s a chance. There wouldn’t be if Cross had got big ideas and hacked one up in the air or gone dancing down in...

Women’s cricket team of the year: from Alice Capsey to the Kerr sisters

England’s Alice Capsey, Australia’s Alyssa Healy and India’s Harmanpreet Kaur were prominent in a superb year of cricket. Composite: Guardian Picture Desk England’s Alice Capsey, Australia’s Alyssa Healy and India’s Harmanpreet Kaur were prominent in a superb year of cricket. Composite: Guardian Picture Desk I t’s been another big year for women’s cricket (is there ever a quiet one, these days?) It began with an Ashes series and a 50-over World Cup in New Zealand, but the highlight was surely a maiden appearance at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham. Only two Tests were played, though, so this team is an all-format XI – with a slight bias towards Test performances. That perhaps reflects The Spin’s Christmas wish to see more multi-day cricket for women in 2023, please! 1) Alyssa Healy (Australia) She loves a World Cup final (see also 2) Beth Mooney (Australia) Remember Mooney breaking her jaw two weeks before the Ashes and having to have emergency surgery? No? That’s because she played anyway – and hit two half-centuries. She also averaged 101 in ODIs in 2022 (yes, you read that correctly), and top-scored with 61 in the Beth Mooney of Australia explains to an onlooker where she fractured her jaw. Photograph: Mark Evans/Getty Images 3) Alice Capsey (England) Finally made her international debt in July, aged just 17, by which time her brilliance was probably the 4) Nat Sciver (England) Enjoyed a phenomenal year with bat in hand, bookending the World Cup with two centuries a...