2014–16 ICC Women's Championship

2014–16 ICC Women's Championship
Administrator(s) International Cricket Council
Cricket format One Day International
Tournament format(s) Round robin
Host(s) Various
Champions Australia
Runner Up England
Most runs Meg Lanning (1232)
Most wickets Jess Jonassen (31)

The 2014–16 ICC Women's Championship was the first edition of the ICC Women's Championship, a women's One Day International cricket (WODI) competition contested by eight teams. The top four teams at the conclusion of the tournament (Australia, England, New Zealand and West Indies) gained automatically qualification for the 2017 World Cup. The bottom four teams (India, South Africa, Pakistan and Sri Lanka) face six qualifying teams in the 2017 World Cup Qualifier for the remaining four places at the World Cup.[1][2] When four or more WODIs were played in a series, only three pre-selected matches were included in the championship.[3]

Teams

The following teams played in the tournament:

Results

The breakdown of results was as follows. During each round, each team played against their opponent thrice.[4]

Round Window Home team Away team Date Result
1

June – October 2014

 Australia  Pakistan 21 August 2014 3–0
 England  India 21 August 2014 2–0
 West Indies  New Zealand 12 September 2014 3–0
 Sri Lanka  South Africa 15 October 2014 1–1
2 November – February 2014  Australia  West Indies 11 November 2014 3–0
 India  South Africa 24 November 2014 1–2
 Pakistan  Sri Lanka 09 January 2015 3–0
 New Zealand  England 11 February 2015 2–1
3 March – August 2015  Pakistan  South Africa 13 March 2015 1–2
 Sri Lanka  West Indies 15 May 2015 1–2
 India  New Zealand 28 June 2015 1–2
 England  Australia 21 July 2015 1–2
4 October 2015 – February 2016  West Indies  Pakistan 18 October 2015 3–0
 New Zealand  Sri Lanka 3 November 2015 3–0
 Australia  India 2 February 2016 2–1
 South Africa  England 7 February 2016 1–2
5 February – July 2016  India  Sri Lanka 15 February 2016 3–0
 New Zealand  Australia 20 February 2016 1–2
 South Africa  West Indies 24 February 2016 1–2
 England  Pakistan 20 June 2016 3–0
6 August – October 2016  Sri Lanka  Australia 18 September 2016 0–3
 South Africa  New Zealand 8 October 2016 1–2
 West Indies  England 14 October 2016 1–2
 Pakistan  India (see Note) (3–0)
7 October – November 2016  India  West Indies 10 November 2016 3–0
 Sri Lanka  England 12 November 2016 0–3
 New Zealand  Pakistan 13 November 2016 3–0
 Australia  South Africa 18 November 2016 3–0

Note: The round six fixtures between Pakistan and India should have taken place by the end of October 2016.[5] As of 9 November 2016, no decision was reached regarding the fixtures going ahead or not.[6] On 23 November 2016 the ICC Technical Committee ruled that India's Women's team had forfeited all of the matches, with the points being awarded to Pakistan.[7] Pakistan were awarded two points for each game, with India considered to have scored 0 runs in the 50 overs of each game, with their net run rate adjusted to reflect this.[8]

Points table

Team[9] Pld W L T NR NRR Pts
 Australia (Q) 21 18 3 0 0 +0.981 36
 England (Q) 21 14 6 0 1 +1.047 29
 New Zealand (Q) 21 13 8 0 0 +0.441 26
 West Indies (Q) 21 11 10 0 0 +0.128 22
 India* (q) 21 9 11 0 1 –0.488 19
 South Africa (q) 21 8 12 0 1 –0.235 17
 Pakistan* (q) 21 7 14 0 0 –1.126 14
 Sri Lanka (q) 21 2 18 0 1 –1.538 5

* Round 6 matches were awarded to Pakistan[10][11] (see Note on Results).

Statistics

Most runs

Player Team Mat Inns Runs Ave SR HS 100 50 4s 6s
Meg Lanning  Australia 21 21 1232 72.47 95.28 135* 5 5 146 9
Ellyse Perry  Australia 17 16 985 89.54 77.86 95* 0 12 88 7
Suzie Bates  New Zealand 20 20 978 54.33 82.25 110 2 8 119 3
Stafanie Taylor  West Indies 19 19 857 57.13 69.84 98* 0 8 88 6
Nicole Bolton  Australia 20 20 817 45.38 71.35 113 1 6 75 2
Last updated: 23 November 2016[12]

Most wickets

Player Team Mat Inns Wkts Ave Econ BBI SR 4WI 5WI
Jess Jonassen  Australia 21 21 31 19.09 3.86 5/50 29.6 1 1
Heather Knight  England 19 18 29 19.34 4.19 5/26 27.6 1 1
Anisa Mohammed  West Indies 21 21 27 22.51 3.67 4/32 36.7 1 0
Rajeshwari Gayakwad  India 16 16 25 19.32 3.43 4/21 33.7 3 0
Kristen Beams  Australia 18 18 24 21.62 3.55 4/15 36.5 2 0
Anya Shrubsole  England 14 14 24 21.79 4.12 4/19 31.6 3 0
Inoka Ranaweera  Sri Lanka 18 17 24 24.58 4.57 4/53 32.2 1 0
Last updated: 23 November 2016[13]

References

  1. "About the ICC Women's Championship". ICC. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  2. "World Cup 2017: Women's Championship will form qualifying". BBC Sport. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  3. "India and New Zealand aiming for upward ICC Women's Championship movement". ICC. Retrieved 3 July 2015.
  4. "Inaugural ICC Women's Championship to commence in August". ICC. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  5. "Pakistan-India women series in doubt". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 9 November 2016.
  6. "Young India seek game time with eye on World Cup". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 9 November 2016.
  7. "CC Technical Committee decision – ICC Women's Championship 2014-16 Round 6 – Pakistan v India". ICC. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  8. "ICC awards Pakistan women full points for unplayed India series". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  9. "ICC Women's Championship point table". ESPN Cricinfo (Sports Media). Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  10. "ICC Women's Championship — Standings". ICC. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  11. "ICC Women's Championship 2014 to 2016/17 Table". CricketArchive. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  12. "ICC Women's Championship, 2014-2016/17 / Records / Most runs". ESPNcricinfo. ESPN Sports Media. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  13. "ICC Women's Championship, 2014-2016/17 / Records / Most wickets". ESPNcricinfo. ESPN Sports Media. Retrieved 21 July 2015.

External links

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