Women's Twenty20 International
Women's Twenty20 international (WT20I) is the shortest form of women's international cricket. A women's Twenty20 international is a 20 overs-per-side cricket match between two of the International Cricket Council (ICC) members.[1] The first Twenty20 International match was held in August 2004 between England and New Zealand,[2][3] six months before the first Twenty20 International match was played between two men's teams.[4] The ICC Women's World Twenty20, the highest-level event in the format, was first held in 2009.
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In April 2018, the ICC granted full women's Twenty20 international (WT20I) status to all its members. Therefore, all Twenty20 matches played between two international sides after 1 July 2018 will be a full WT20I.[5] A month after the conclusion of the 2018 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup, which took place in June 2018, the ICC retrospectively gave all the fixtures in the tournament full WT20I status.[6] On 22 November 2021, in the 2021 ICC Women's T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier tournament, the match between Hong Kong and Nepal was the 1,000th WT20I to be played.[7]
The ICC has announced a new tournament starting in 2027 and called the ICC Women's T20 Champions Trophy.[8]
Involved nations
In April 2018, the ICC granted full Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) status to all its members from 1 July 2018.[9] As of September 2023, 82 nations have played the format.[10]
The full list of teams who have played full Women's Twenty20 International matches, with the date of their debut, is as follows (correct as of 1 September 2023):[11]
- England (5 August 2004)
- New Zealand (5 August 2004)
- Australia (2 September 2005)
- India (5 August 2006)
- South Africa (10 August 2007)
- Ireland (27 June 2008)
- West Indies (27 June 2008)
- Netherlands (1 July 2008)
- Pakistan (25 May 2009)
- Sri Lanka (12 June 2009)
- Bangladesh (28 August 2012)
- Malaysia (3 June 2018)
- Thailand (3 June 2018)
- Scotland (7 July 2018)
- Uganda (7 July 2018)
- United Arab Emirates (7 July 2018)
- Papua New Guinea (7 July 2018)
- Singapore (9 August 2018)
- Botswana (20 August 2018)
- Lesotho (20 August 2018)
- Malawi (20 August 2018)
- Namibia (20 August 2018)
- Mozambique (20 August 2018)
- Sierra Leone (20 August 2018)
- Brazil (23 August 2018)
- Mexico (23 August 2018)
- Chile (23 August 2018)
- China (3 November 2018)
- South Korea (3 November 2018)
- Zimbabwe (5 January 2019)
- Nepal (12 January 2019)
- Hong Kong (12 January 2019)
- Indonesia (12 January 2019)
- Myanmar (12 January 2019)
- Bhutan (13 January 2019)
- Nigeria (26 January 2019)
- Rwanda (26 January 2019)
- Kuwait (18 February 2019)
- Kenya (6 April 2019)
- Costa Rica (26 April 2019)
- Vanuatu (6 May 2019)
- Japan (6 May 2019)
- Fiji (6 May 2019)
- Samoa (6 May 2019)
- Tanzania (6 May 2019)
- Canada (17 May 2019)
- United States (17 May 2019)
- Guernsey (31 May 2019)
- Jersey (31 May 2019)
- Mali (18 June 2019)
- Germany (26 June 2019)
- France (31 July 2019)
- Austria (31 July 2019)
- Norway (31 July 2019)
- Argentina (3 October 2019)
- Peru (3 October 2019)
- Maldives (2 December 2019)
- Belize (13 December 2019)
- Philippines (21 December 2019)
- Oman (17 January 2020)
- Qatar (17 January 2020)
- Italy (9 August 2021)
- Sweden (29 August 2021)
- Eswatini (9 September 2021)
- Cameroon (12 September 2021)
- Belgium (25 September 2021)
- Bahrain (20 March 2022)
- Saudi Arabia (20 March 2022)
- Ghana (28 March 2022)
- Gambia (29 March 2022)
- Spain (5 May 2022)
- Denmark (28 May 2022)
- Barbados (29 July 2022)
- Malta (27 August 2022)
- Romania (27 August 2022)
- Greece (9 September 2022)
- Serbia (10 September 2022)
- Isle of Man (12 November 2022)
- Cambodia (21 December 2022)
- Turkey (29 May 2023)
- Estonia (26 August 2023)
- Cook Islands (1 September 2023)
- Luxembourg (5 September 2023)
- Mongolia (19 September 2023)
Rankings
Before October 2018, ICC did not maintain a separate Twenty20 ranking for the women's game, instead aggregating performance over all three forms of the game into one overall women's teams ranking.[12] In January 2018, ICC granted international status to all matches between associate nations and announced plan to launch separate T20I rankings for women.[1] In October 2018 the T20I rankings were launched with separate ODI rankings for Full Members.[13]
ICC women's T20I rankings | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Rank | Team | Matches | Points | Rating |
1 | Australia | 24 | 7,119 | 297 |
2 | England | 27 | 7,619 | 282 |
3 | New Zealand | 22 | 5,805 | 264 |
4 | India | 37 | 9,618 | 260 |
5 | South Africa | 22 | 5,372 | 244 |
6 | West Indies | 26 | 6,115 | 235 |
7 | Sri Lanka | 31 | 6,988 | 225 |
8 | Pakistan | 27 | 5,920 | 219 |
9 | Bangladesh | 25 | 4,859 | 194 |
10 | Ireland | 25 | 4,464 | 179 |
11 | Papua New Guinea | 19 | 2,997 | 158 |
12 | Zimbabwe | 16 | 2,511 | 157 |
13 | Thailand | 34 | 5,326 | 157 |
14 | Scotland | 20 | 2,848 | 142 |
15 | Netherlands | 25 | 3,073 | 123 |
16 | United Arab Emirates | 37 | 4,482 | 121 |
17 | Namibia | 23 | 2,581 | 112 |
18 | Uganda | 39 | 4,230 | 108 |
19 | Tanzania | 19 | 1,985 | 104 |
20 | Indonesia | 16 | 1,648 | 103 |
21 | Nepal | 23 | 2,310 | 100 |
22 | Hong Kong | 33 | 2,809 | 85 |
23 | United States | 13 | 1,054 | 81 |
24 | Kenya | 33 | 2,457 | 74 |
25 | Rwanda | 30 | 2,213 | 74 |
26 | Malaysia | 34 | 2,369 | 70 |
27 | Italy | 20 | 1,319 | 66 |
28 | Jersey | 13 | 839 | 65 |
29 | Vanuatu | 18 | 1,101 | 61 |
30 | Nigeria | 26 | 1,569 | 60 |
31 | Canada | 9 | 513 | 57 |
32 | Greece | 11 | 613 | 56 |
33 | Germany | 15 | 766 | 51 |
34 | Isle of Man | 11 | 549 | 50 |
35 | Spain | 6 | 256 | 43 |
36 | France | 23 | 973 | 42 |
37 | Brazil | 20 | 846 | 42 |
38 | Sweden | 16 | 586 | 37 |
39 | Sierra Leone | 15 | 518 | 35 |
40 | China | 9 | 256 | 28 |
41 | Myanmar | 10 | 275 | 28 |
42 | Botswana | 22 | 592 | 27 |
43 | Bhutan | 9 | 219 | 24 |
44 | Bahrain | 8 | 164 | 21 |
45 | Oman | 4 | 81 | 20 |
46 | Kuwait | 14 | 282 | 20 |
47 | Singapore | 21 | 382 | 18 |
48 | Mozambique | 9 | 154 | 17 |
49 | Malta | 6 | 100 | 17 |
50 | Romania | 13 | 207 | 16 |
51 | Japan | 16 | 198 | 12 |
52 | Guernsey | 8 | 95 | 12 |
53 | Samoa | 16 | 164 | 10 |
54 | Cameroon | 12 | 111 | 9 |
55 | Cook Islands | 6 | 53 | 9 |
56 | Denmark | 5 | 29 | 6 |
57 | Qatar | 17 | 61 | 4 |
58 | Austria | 21 | 46 | 2 |
59 | Cambodia | 13 | 28 | 2 |
60 | Norway | 11 | 3 | 0 |
61 | Fiji | 16 | 0 | 3 |
62 | Serbia | 7 | 0 | 0 |
63 | Ghana | 7 | 0 | 0 |
64 | Eswatini | 9 | 0 | 0 |
65 | Philippines | 9 | 0 | 0 |
66 | Argentina | 17 | 0 | 0 |
References: ICC Women's T20I Rankings, Updated on 3 October 2023 |
Statistics and records
See also
References
- "Women's Twenty20 Playing Conditions" (PDF). International Cricket Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2010.
- Miller, Andrew (6 August 2004). "Revolution at the seaside". Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
- "Wonder Women – Ten T20I records women own". Women's CricZone. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
- English, Peter (17 February 2005). "Ponting leads as Kasprowicz follows". Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
- "All T20I matches to get international status". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
- "ICC Board brings in tougher Code of Sanctions". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
- "Favourites Nepal eye for Global Qualifier spot". Cricket Addictors Association. 19 November 2021. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- Jolly, Laura (8 March 2021). "New event, more teams added to World Cup schedule". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
- "ICC grants T20I status to all 104 members countries". Cricbuzz. 26 April 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
- "Women T20I matches / Team records / Results summary". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
- "Team records | Women's Twenty20 Internationals | Cricinfo Statsguru | ESPNcricinfo.com". Cricinfo. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
- "ICC Women's Team Rankings launched". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
- "ICC Launches Global Women's T20I Team Rankings". 12 October 2018. Retrieved 13 October 2018.