Women's T20 World Cup

Women's Twenty20 International (T20I) Cricket World Cup From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The ICC Women's T20 World Cup is a biennial world cup for the sport of cricket in the T20I format. It is organised by the International Cricket Council.[3] The first edition was held in England in 2009.[4] For the first 3 editions, there were eight participating nations, but the number was raised to ten from the 2014 edition.[5] The number of teams are set to increase to twelve during the 2026 edition.[6]

FormatT20I
First edition2009 England
Latest edition2024 United Arab Emirates
Quick facts Administrator, Format ...
Women's T20 World Cup
Tournament logo
AdministratorInternational Cricket Council
FormatT20I
First edition2009 England
Latest edition2024 United Arab Emirates
Next edition2026 England & Wales
Tournament formatRound robin and knockout
Number of teams12 (16 from 2030)
Current champion New Zealand (1st title)
Most successful Australia (6 titles)
Most runsNew Zealand Suzie Bates (1,216)[1]
Most wicketsAustralia Megan Schutt (48)[2]
Websitet20worldcup.com
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At each tournament, a set number of teams qualify automatically, with the remaining teams determined by the Women's T20 World Cup Qualifier. As of 2024, a total of nine editions have been held and twelve teams have participated, Australia, having won the tournament six times (2010, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2020, 2023) are the most successful team, while England (2009), West Indies (2016) and New Zealand (2024) have one title each.[7]

New Zealand are the current champions having won the 2024 edition for the first time, after defeating South Africa in the final.

History

Hosts

Format

Qualification

Qualification is determined by the ICC Women's Twenty20 International rankings and a qualification event, the Women's World Twenty20 Qualifier. Until 2014, the top six teams of the ICC Women's Twenty20 International rankings would automatically qualify and the remaining two places determined by a qualification process. In the 2014 edition, six places were determined by the top eight teams of the ICC Women's T20I rankings, with the host country and three qualifiers joining them in the tournament.[citation needed] From 2016 onwards, seven places were determined by the top eight teams of the ICC Women's T20I Team rankings, with the host country and two qualifiers joining them in the tournament.[citation needed]

Tournament

Trophy

The winners of the ICC Women's T20 World Cup receive a trophy designed and made by British silversmiths Thomas Lyte. Standing at 50cm in height, the women’s trophy was created with silver-plated base metal and brings together a number of separate metal castings.[8]

Attendance

Summary

Tournaments

More information #, Year ...
Details of Women's T20 World Cup tournaments
# Year Dates Host(s) Venues Teams Matches Attendance Ref.
1 2009 11 June – 21 June 2009England and Wales Cricket Board4 in England815N/a[9]
2 2010 5 – 16 May 2010Cricket West Indies3 in the West Indies[10]
3 2012 26 September – 7 October 2012Sri Lanka Cricket4 in Sri Lanka17[11]
4 2014 23 March – 6 April 2014Bangladesh Cricket Board2 in Bangladesh1027[12]
5 2016 15 March – 3 April 2016Board of Control for Cricket in India8 in India23[13]
6 2018 9 – 24 November 2018Cricket West Indies3 in the West Indies[14]
7 2020 21 February – 8 March 2021Cricket Australia6 in Australia[15]
8 2023 10 – 26 February 2023Cricket South Africa3 in South Africa[16]
9 2024 3 – 20 October 2024Bangladesh Cricket Board2 in the United Arab Emirates[17]
10 2026 12 June – 5 July 2026England and Wales Cricket Board7 in England1233[18]
11 2028 TBAPakistan Cricket BoardTBA[19]
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Final results

More information Year, Final ...
Details of Women's T20 World Cup finals
Year Final Ref.
Date & Venue Winner Victory margin Runner-up
2009 21 June 2009
Lord's, London
 England
86/4 (17 overs)
6 wickets New Zealand
85 (20 overs)
[20]
2010 16 May 2010
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown
 Australia
106/8 (20 overs)
3 runs New Zealand
103/6 (20 overs)
[21]
2012 7 October 2012
R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
 Australia
142/4 (20 overs)
4 runs England
138/9 (20 overs)
[22]
2014 6 April 2014
Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka
 Australia
106/4 (15.1 overs)
6 wickets England
105/8 (20 overs)
[23]
2016 3 April 2016
Eden Gardens, Kolkata
 West Indies
149/2 (19.3 overs)
8 wickets Australia
148/5 (20 overs)
[24]
2018 24 November 2018
Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound
 Australia
106/2 (15.1 overs)
8 wickets England
105 (19.4 overs)
[25]
2020 8 March 2020
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne
 Australia
184/4 (20 overs)
85 runs India
99 (19.1 overs)
[26]
2023 26 February 2023
Newlands Cricket Ground, Cape Town
 Australia
156/6 (20 overs)
19 runs South Africa
137/6 (20 overs)
[27]
2024 20 October 2024
Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
 New Zealand
158/5 (20 overs)
32 runs South Africa
126/9 (20 overs)
[28]
2026 5 July 2026
Lord's, London
 TBA
TBD TBA
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Performance by nations

As of the 2024 edition

Nations are ordered by best result then by appearances, then by winning percentage, then by total number of wins, total number of games, and then alphabetically:

More information Team, Appearances ...
Team Appearances Best result Statistics[29]
Total First Latest Played Won Lost Tie NR Win%
 Australia 920092024Champions (2010, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2020, 2023)493991(1)080.61
 England 920092024Champions (2009)4231101(0)075.00
 New Zealand 920092024Champions (2024)4229130069.04
 West Indies 920092024Champions (2016)3923160058.97
 South Africa 920092024Runners-up (2023, 2024)3918210046.15
 India 920092024Runners-up (2020)4022180055.00
 Sri Lanka 920092024First Round (2009–2024)3510250028.57
 Pakistan 920092024First Round (2009–2024)369260125.71
 Bangladesh 620142024First Round (2014–2024)253220012.00
 Ireland 420142023First Round (2014–2018, 2023)17017000.00
 Scotland 120242024First Round (2024)404000.00
 Thailand 120202020First Round (2020)403010.00
 Netherlands
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Note:

  • The number in bracket indicates number of wins in tied matches by Super Overs however these are considered half a win regardless of the result. The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties (irrespective of a tiebreaker) as half a win.

By editions

The table below provides an overview of the performances of teams in the ICC Women's T20 World Cup. For each tournament, the number of teams in each finals tournament (in brackets) are shown.

Legend
  • C – Champions
  • RU – Runners-up
  • SF – Semi-finalist
  • R1 – Round 1 (group stage)
  • Q – Qualified, Still in Competition
  •    – Did not qualify
  •  ×  – Did not enter
  •     — Hosts
More information No. of Teams/Hosts/YearTeams, (8) 2009 ...
No. of Teams/
Hosts/
Year

Teams
(8)
England
2009
(8)
Cricket West Indies
2010
(8)
Sri Lanka
2012
(10)
Bangladesh
2014
(10)
India
2016
(10)
Cricket West Indies
2018
(10)
Australia
2020
(10)
South Africa
2023
(10)
United Arab Emirates
2024
(12)
England
2026
Total
 Australia SFCCCRUCCCSFQ10
 Bangladesh ×××R1R1R1R1R1R1Q7
 England CR1RURUSFRUSFSFR1Q10
 India SFSFR1R1R1SFRUSFR1Q10
 Ireland ×××R1R1R1R1Q5
 New Zealand RURUSFR1SFR1R1R1CQ10
 Netherlands ×××Q1
 Pakistan R1R1R1R1R1R1R1R1R1Q10
 Scotland ××××R1Q1
 South Africa R1R1R1SFR1R1SFRURUQ10
 Sri Lanka R1R1R1R1R1R1R1R1R1Q10
 Thailand ×××R11
 West Indies R1SFSFSFCSFR1R1SFQ10
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Team debuts

More information Year, Debutants ...
Year Debutants Total
2009  Australia,  England,  India,  New Zealand,  Pakistan,  South Africa,  Sri Lanka,  West Indies 8
2010 none 0
2012 none 0
2014  Bangladesh,  Ireland 2
2016 none 0
2018 none 0
2020  Thailand 1
2023 none 0
2024  Scotland 1
2026  Netherlands 1
Total 13
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Records

As of 16 November 2024
More information T20 World Cup records, Batting ...
T20 World Cup records
Batting
Most runs New Zealand Suzie Bates 1,216 (20092024) [30]
Highest score Australia Meg Lanning v  Ireland at Sylhet 126 (2014) [31]
Highest partnership England Nat Sciver-Brunt & Heather Knight
v  Thailand at Canberra
169* (2020) [32]
Most runs in a tournament Australia Beth Mooney 259 (2020) [33]
Bowling
Most wickets Australia Megan Schutt 48 (20162024) [34]
Best bowling figures Cricket West Indies Deandra Dottin v  Bangladesh at Providence 5/5 (2018) [35]
Most wickets in a tournament New Zealand Amelia Kerr 15 (2024) [36]
Fielding
Most dismissals (wicket-keeper) Australia Alyssa Healy 32 (20102024) [37]
Most catches (fielder) New Zealand Suzie Bates 26 (20092024) [38]
Team
Highest team total  England (v  Pakistan) at Cape Town 213/5 (2023) [39]
Lowest team total  Bangladesh (v  West Indies) at Providence 46 (2018) [40]
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References

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