Women's Cricket World Cup

One Day International competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The ICC Women's Cricket World Cup is the quadrennial international championship of the One Day International format with 50 overs per team. It is organised by the International Cricket Council.

FormatODI
First edition
Latest edition
Quick facts Administrator, Format ...
Women's Cricket World Cup
Tournament logo
logo
AdministratorInternational Cricket Council
FormatODI
First edition
Latest edition
Number of teams10
Current champion India (1st title)
Most successful Australia (7 titles)
Most runsNew Zealand Debbie Hockley (1,501)
Most wicketsSouth Africa Marizanne Kapp (44)
Close

Until 2005, when the two organisations merged, it was administered by a separate body, the International Women's Cricket Council. The first World Cup was held in England in 1973, two years before the inaugural men's tournament. The event's early years were marked by funding difficulties, which meant several teams had to decline invitations to compete and caused gaps of up to six years between tournaments. However, since 2005, World Cups have been hosted at regular four-year intervals.

Qualification for the World Cup is through the ICC Women's Championship and the World Cup Qualifier. The 1997 edition was contested by eleven teams[1] and since then no new teams have debuted in the tournament. Since 2000 the number of teams in the World Cup has been fixed at eight. However, in March 2021, the ICC decided that the tournament would expand to 10 teams from the 2029 edition.[2][3]

The thirteen World Cups played have been held in five countries, with India and England having hosted the event three times. Australia is the most successful team, having won seven titles and failing to make the final on only four occasions. England (four titles), New Zealand and India (one title each) are the only other teams to have won the event, while the West Indies and South Africa (once each) have each reached the final without going on to win.

History

First World Cup

Women's international cricket was first played in 1934, when a party from England toured Australia and New Zealand. The first Test match was played on 28–31 December 1934, and was won by England.[4] The first Test against New Zealand followed early the following year. These three nations remained the only Test-playing teams in women's cricket until 1960, when South Africa played a number of matches against England.[4] Limited overs cricket was first played by first-class teams in England in 1962.[5] Nine years later, the first international one day match was played in men's cricket, when England took on Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.[6]

Talks began in 1971 about holding a World Cup for women's cricket, led by Jack Hayward.[7] South Africa, under pressure from the world for their apartheid laws, were not invited to take part in the competition.[8] Both of the other two Test-playing nations, Australia and New Zealand were invited. Hayward had previously organised tours of the West Indies by England women and it was from this region that the other two competing nations were drawn; Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago. To make up the numbers England also fielded a "Young England" team, and an "International XI" was also included.[7] Five South Africans were invited to play for the International XI as a means of compensation for the team not being invited but these invitations were later withdrawn.[8]

The inaugural tournament was held at a variety of venues across England in June and July 1973,[9] two years before the first men's Cricket World Cup was played.[10] The competition was played as a round-robin tournament and the last scheduled match was England against Australia. Australia went into the game leading the table by a solitary point; they had won four matches and had one abandoned. England had also won four matches but they had lost to New Zealand.[9][11] As a result, the match also served as a de facto final for the competition. England won the match, held at Edgbaston Birmingham, by 92 runs to win the tournament.[12]

Editions and results

Fifteen teams have appeared at the Women's Cricket World Cup at least once, excluding qualification tournaments. Three teams have competed at every tournament: England, Australia and New Zealand. They were the only sides to have won a title until 2025, when India won their first title.

More information S.No., Year ...
S.No. Year Host(s) Final venue Final Teams Winning Captain
Winners Result Runners-up
1 1973 England No final  England
20 points
England won on points
table
 Australia
17 points
7 Rachael Heyhoe Flint
2 1978 India No final  Australia
6 points
Australia won on points
table
 England
4 points
4 Margaret Jennings
3 1982 New Zealand Lancaster Park, Christchurch  Australia
152/7 (59 overs)
Australia won by 3 wickets
scorecard
 England
151/5 (60 overs)
5 Sharon Tredrea
4 1988 Australia Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne  Australia
129/2 (44.5 overs)
Australia won by 8 wickets
scorecard
 England
127/7 (60 overs)
5 Sharon Tredrea
5 1993 England Lord's, London  England
195/5 (60 overs)
England won by 67 runs
scorecard
 New Zealand
128 (55.1 overs)
8 Karen Smithies
6 1997 India Eden Gardens, Kolkata  Australia
165/5 (47.4 overs)
Australia won by 5 wickets
scorecard
 New Zealand
164 (49.3 overs)
11 Belinda Clark
7 2000 New Zealand Bert Sutcliffe Oval, Lincoln  New Zealand
184 (48.4 overs)
New Zealand won by 4 runs
scorecard
 Australia
180 (49.1 overs)
8 Emily Drumm
8 2005 South Africa SuperSport Park, Centurion  Australia
215/4 (50 overs)
Australia won by 98 runs
scorecard
 India
117 (46 overs)
8 Belinda Clark
9 2009 Australia North Sydney Oval, Sydney  England
167/6 (46.1 overs)
England won by 4 wickets
scorecard
 New Zealand
166 (47.2 overs)
8 Charlotte Edwards
10 2013 India Brabourne Stadium, Mumbai  Australia
259/7 (50 overs)
Australia won by 114 runs
scorecard
 West Indies
145 (43.1 overs)
8 Jodie Fields
11 2017 England Lord's, London  England
228/7 (50 overs)
England won by 9 runs
scorecard
 India
219 (48.4 overs)
8 Heather Knight
12 2022 New Zealand Hagley Oval, Christchurch  Australia
356/5 (50 overs)
Australia won by 71 runs
scorecard
 England
285 (43.4 overs)
8 Meg Lanning
13 2025 India
Sri Lanka[a]
DY Patil Stadium, Navi Mumbai  India
298/7 (50 overs)
India won by 52 runs
scorecard
 South Africa
246 (45.3 overs)
8 Harmanpreet Kaur
14 2029 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA 10 TBA
Close

Performance by nations

Overview

The table below provides an overview of the performances of nations over past World Cups, as of the end of the 2025 tournament. Teams are sorted by best performance, then by appearances, total number of wins, total number of games, and alphabetical order respectively.

More information Appearances, Statistics ...
Appearances Statistics
Team Total First Latest Best performance Mat. Won Lost Tie NR Win%
 Australia 1319732025Champions (1978, 1982, 1988, 1997, 2005, 2013, 2022)10085121286.73
 England 1319732025Champions (1973, 1993, 2009, 2017)10067292268.36
 New Zealand 1319732025Champions (2000)9455342360.43
 India 1119782025Champions (2025)7942341254.54
 South Africa 819972025Runners-up (2025)5526270249.05
 West Indies 819932022Runners-up (2013)4616280134.78
International XI 2197319824th place (1973)183140116.66
 Ireland 519882005Quarter-finals (1997)347260120.58
 Sri Lanka 719972025Quarter-finals (1997), 5th place (2013 & 2025)419290223.68
 Netherlands 419882000Quarter-finals (1997)26224007.69
 Trinidad & Tobago 1197319735th place (1973)6240033.33
 Pakistan 6199720256th place (2009)37331038.82
 Jamaica 1197319736th place (1973)5140020.00
 Bangladesh2202220257th place (2022, 2025)142110115.38
 Denmark 2199319977th place (1993)132110015.38
Young England 119731973Bottom place (1973)6150016.66
As of 2 November 2025
Source: ESPNcricinfo
Close

No longer have ODI status.No longer exists.

Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • SF – Losing semi-finalist (no third-place playoff)
  • QF – Losing quarter-finalist (no further playoffs)
  •     — Hosts
More information Team, 1973 (7) ...
Team England
1973
(7)
India
1978
(4)
New Zealand
1982
(5)
Australia
1988
(5)
England
1993
(8)
India
1997
(11)
New Zealand
2000
(8)
South Africa
2005
(8)
Australia
2009
(8)
India
2013
(8)
England
2017
(8)
New Zealand
2022
(8)
IndiaSri Lanka
2025
(8)
Total
 Australia 2nd1st1st1st3rd1st2nd1st4th1stSF1stSF13
 Bangladesh 7th7th2
 Denmark 7th9th2
 England 1st2nd2nd2nd1stSF5thSF1st3rd1st2ndSF13
 India 4th4th4thSFSF2nd3rd7th2nd5th1st11
 Ireland 4th5thQF7th8th5
 Netherlands 5th8thQF8th4
 New Zealand 3rd3rd3rd3rd2nd2nd1stSF2nd4th5th6th6th13
 Pakistan 11th5th8th8th8th8th6
 South Africa QFSF7th7th6thSFSF2nd8
 Sri Lanka QF6th6th8th5th7th5th7
 West Indies 6th10th5th6th2nd6thSF7
Defunct teams
International XI 4th5th2
 Jamaica 6th1
 Trinidad & Tobago 5th1
England Young England 7th1
Close

Debutant teams

More information Year, Teams ...
Close

No longer have ODI status.No longer exists.

Awards

More information Year, Player ...
Close

Team statistics

More information Year, Host Team ...
Close

Tournament records

More information Batting, Bowling ...
World Cup records
Batting
Most runs New Zealand Debbie Hockley1,5011982–2000[13]
Highest average (min. 10 innings) Australia Karen Rolton74.921997–2009[14]
Highest score Australia Belinda Clark (v  Denmark)229*1997[15]
Highest partnership England Tammy Beaumont & Sarah Taylor (v  South Africa)2752017[16]
Most runs in a tournament South Africa Laura Wolvaardt5712025[17]
Bowling
Most wickets South Africa Marizanne Kapp442009–2025[18]
Lowest average (min. 500 balls bowled) New Zealand Katrina Keenan9.721997–2000[19]
Best bowling figures Australia Alana King (v  South Africa)7/182025[20]
Most wickets in a tournament Australia Lyn Fullston231982[21]
Fielding
Most dismissals (wicket-keeper) England Jane Smit401993–2005[22]
Most catches England Janette Brittin191982–1997[23]
New Zealand Suzie Bates2009–2025
Team
Highest score  Australia (v  Denmark) 412/31997[24]
Lowest score  Pakistan (v  Australia) 271997[25]
Highest win %  Australia 86.73[26]
Most Wins 85[27]
Close

See also

Notes

  1. The official sole host for the tournament was India. Following an agreement between the BCCI and the PCB, the ICC confirmed Sri Lanka as hosts for all Pakistani matches as well as some Sri Lankan games.

References

Bibliography

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI