Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Flavell scored the first double century in women's Test cricket in 1996; over the next eight years five more double centuries were scored, by Joanne Broadbent (Australia, 1998), Michelle Goszko (Australia, 2001), Karen Rolton (Australia, 2001), Mithali Raj (India, 2002), and Kiran Baluch (Pakistan, 2004), which was then succeeded by a 13-year ...
At 38 years and 99 days, Bahrain's Deepika Rasangika scored 161 not out against Saudi Arabia in March 2022 and became the oldest player to score a WT20I century. [20] At the age of 16 years and 233 days, Uganda's Prosscovia Alako became the youngest player to score a WT20I century when she made 116 against Mali at the 2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 ...
[13] [14] Raj and Gandhi's centuries are one of 44 occurrences where two or more centuries have been scored in a WODI. [15] [16] The oldest player to score a WODI century is New Zealand's Barbara Bevege who was aged 39 years and 48 days when she reached 101 against the International XI during the 1982 Women's World Cup. [17] [18]
11 years, 40 days Nia Greig: 31 July 2019 [164] 11 years, 134 days Sumayya Abdul: 2 December 2019 [31] 11 years, 293 days ... List of women's Test cricket records;
Records for the short form of women's international cricket, One Day Internationals, are at List of women's One Day International cricket records. Cricket is, by its nature, capable of generating large numbers of records and statistics. Women's Test cricket has been played since 1934–35 with essentially the same rules as are played today, and ...
First Women's Test Century First Women's ODI Century First Women's T20I Century Women's Test Total Women's ODI Total Women's T20I Total 1 Heather Knight [49] 2010–2023 England: 157 vs Australia, August 2013 [50] 106 vs Pakistan, June 2017 [51] 108* vs Thailand, February 2020 [52] 2 2 1 2 Tammy Beaumont: 2009–2023 England
In The Laws of Cricket, the only explicit difference between men's and women's cricket is the ball size. According to The Laws of Cricket: Clause 4.6.1 Women’s cricket Weight: from 4.94 ounces/140 g to 5.31 ounces/151 g Circumference: from 8.25 in/21.0 cm to 8.88 in/22.5 cm.
As of the conclusion of the 2022 Women's Cricket World Cup, Bates held the record for the most Women's ODI centuries by a New Zealander with 12 in total, and was second only to Meg Lanning of Australia overall. [33] [34] She had also scored a single Women's Twenty20 International century. [35]