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The Women's Cricket World Cup is the quadrennial international championship of Women's One Day International Cricket tournament. Matches are played as One Day Internationals over 50 overs per team. There is also another championship for Twenty20 International cricket, the Women's T20 World Cup .
The Women's T20 World Cup is the biennial international championship for women's Twenty20 International cricket. [3] The event is organised by the sport's governing body, the International Cricket Council, with the first edition having been held in England in 2009. [4]
The first ever Cricket World Cup was the Women's Cricket World Cup organised in 1973 by the WCA; it was based on an idea of cricketer Rachael Heyhoe Flint and businessman Jack Hayward. [94] After the success of the Women's Cricket World Cup, the men's tournament took place two years later. [95]
2017 Women's Cricket World Cup; Under-19 Women's T20 World Cup; 2022 Women's Cricket World Cup This page was last edited on 13 November 2022, at 15:01 (UTC). ...
The 2024 Women's T20 World Cup was the ninth edition of the Women's T20 World Cup.Originally scheduled to be hosted in Bangladesh from 3 to 20 October 2024, it was later relocated to the United Arab Emirates for the same dates due to political unrest in Bangladesh, although the Bangladesh Cricket Board still held the hosting rights. [1]
The County Ground, Hove (pictured above), located in the English county of Sussex, hosted the first women's Twenty20 International in 2004. In total, 242 cricket grounds have hosted at least one women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) cricket match. Seventy-seven countries have hosted at least one women's T20I match.
The 2025 ICC Women's Cricket World Cup will be the 13th edition of Women's Cricket World Cup. It is scheduled to be hosted in India. [1] This will be the fourth time that India are going to host the tournament after the 1978, 1997 and 2013 edition. This will be the last time that the tournament will have 8 teams. [2]
The Women's Cricket Association handed over the running of women's cricket in England to the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) in 1998. [6] In 2005, after the eighth Women's World Cup, the International Women's Cricket Council was officially integrated under the umbrella of the International Cricket Council , and an ICC Women's Cricket ...