2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20

http://dbpedia.org/resource/2018_ICC_Women's_World_Twenty20

Die ICC World Women’s Twenty20 2018 war die sechste Weltmeisterschaft im Twenty20-Cricket der Frauen und fand vom 9. bis 24. November 2018 in den West Indies statt. Zum ersten Mal wurde der Wettbewerb unabhängig von dem der Männer ausgetragen. Im Finale konnte sich Australien mit 8 Wickets gegen England durchsetzen. rdf:langString
The 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 was the sixth edition of the ICC Women's World Twenty20, hosted in the West Indies from 9 to 24 November 2018. It the second World Twenty20 hosted by the West Indies (after the 2010 edition), and the West Indies were the defending champions. The qualifier tournament for the competition was held in July 2018 in the Netherlands. Both Bangladesh and Ireland won their respective semi-final matches in the qualifier, to advance to the Women's World Twenty20 tournament. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20
rdf:langString ICC Women’s World Twenty20 2018
xsd:integer 2018
xsd:integer 47184300
xsd:integer 1121674434
rdf:langString No play was possible due to rain.
rdf:langString Rain during England Women's innings set them a revised target of 64 from 16 overs.
xsd:integer 2020
xsd:integer 2016
rdf:langString No toss.
rdf:langString Australia Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString England Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString England Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString India Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString India Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString South Africa Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Pakistan Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Pakistan Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString West Indies Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString South Africa Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Ireland Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Ireland Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Bangladesh Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString West Indies Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Nitin Menon and Sharfuddoula
rdf:langString Shaun George and Claire Polosak
rdf:langString Sue Redfern and Langton Rusere
rdf:langString Ahsan Raza and Sharfuddoula
rdf:langString Gregory Brathwaite and Claire Polosak
rdf:langString Gregory Brathwaite and Sue Redfern
rdf:langString Gregory Brathwaite and Wayne Knights
rdf:langString Kim Cotton and Ahsan Raza
rdf:langString Kim Cotton and Nitin Menon
rdf:langString Nitin Menon and Jacqueline Williams
rdf:langString Nitin Menon and Langton Rusere
rdf:langString Sam Nogajski and Jacqueline Williams
rdf:langString Sam Nogajski and Sharfuddoula
rdf:langString Shaun George and Jacqueline Williams
rdf:langString Shaun George and Langton Rusere
rdf:langString Shaun George and Sue Redfern
rdf:langString Wayne Knights and Langton Rusere
xsd:integer 4
xsd:date 2018-11-09
xsd:date 2018-11-10
xsd:date 2018-11-11
xsd:date 2018-11-12
xsd:date 2018-11-13
xsd:date 2018-11-14
xsd:date 2018-11-15
xsd:date 2018-11-16
xsd:date 2018-11-17
xsd:date 2018-11-18
xsd:date 2018-11-22
xsd:date 2018-11-24
xsd:integer 23
xsd:integer 2020
rdf:langString Chloe Tryon played in her 50th WT20I for South Africa.
rdf:langString This was the first occasion in WT20Is that a wicket was taken with the first ball of both innings. *Bangladesh Women were eliminated as a result of this match.
rdf:langString Clare Shillington scored her 1,000th run in WT20Is. *India Women qualified for the semi-finals as a result of this match. *Pakistan Women, New Zealand Women and Ireland Women were all eliminated as a result of this match.
rdf:langString Australia Women qualified for the semi-finals as a result of this match.
rdf:langString Deandra Dottin took her first five-wicket haul in WT20Is and took the best figures by a West Indian in WT20Is. *Bangladesh's total was the lowest by any team at an ICC Women's World Twenty20.
rdf:langString Sophia Dunkley, Kirstie Gordon and Linsey Smith all made their WT20I debuts.
rdf:langString This was Pakistan's highest total in an ICC Women's World Twenty20. *India were awarded ten penalty runs after Pakistan's cricketers ran onto the danger area of the pitch on two separate occasions.
rdf:langString Ellyse Perry became the first cricketer for Australia, male or female, to take 100 wickets in Twenty20 International matches.
rdf:langString Tayla Vlaeminck made her WT20I debut. *Ellyse Perry became the first cricketer for Australia, male or female, to play in 100 Twenty20 International matches. *Smriti Mandhana scored her 1,000th run in WT20Is.
rdf:langString Kim Garth made her 100th international appearance for Ireland. *Australia were awarded five penalty runs after Ireland's cricketers ran onto the danger area of the pitch. *Alyssa Healy's 21-ball half-century was the fastest at an ICC Women's World Twenty20.
rdf:langString Dayalan Hemalatha made her WT20I debut. *Jemimah Rodrigues and Harmanpreet Kaur's 134-run partnership was India's highest for any wicket in WT20Is. *Harmanpreet Kaur became the first woman for India to score a century in WT20Is and the third for any country to score one at an ICC Women's World Twenty20. *India's total was the highest by any team at an ICC Women's World Twenty20. *Suzie Bates became the highest scorer in ICC Women's World Twenty20s.
rdf:langString Heather Knight played her 50th WT20I for England. *Anya Shrubsole took a hat-trick. *Danielle Wyatt scored her 1,000th run in WT20Is. *South Africa Women were eliminated as a result of this match.
rdf:langString Isobel Joyce, Cecelia Joyce, Ciara Metcalfe and Clare Shillington all played in their final match for Ireland Women. *Suzie Bates became the first cricketer, male or female, to score 3,000 runs in Twenty20 International matches. *Sophie Devine's 21-ball half-century was the joint-fastest at an ICC Women's World Twenty20.
rdf:langString Celeste Raack made her WT20I debut. *Javeria Khan made the highest score by a Pakistan cricketer in WT20Is. *This was Pakistan's highest total in an ICC Women's World Twenty20.
rdf:langString West Indies Women and England Women both qualified for the semi-finals as a result of this match. *Sri Lanka Women were eliminated as a result of this match.
xsd:integer 10
xsd:integer 2016
rdf:langString Match abandoned
rdf:langString Australia Women won by 8 wickets
rdf:langString Australia Women won by 9 wickets
rdf:langString New Zealand Women won by 8 wickets
rdf:langString India Women won by 7 wickets
rdf:langString Pakistan Women won by 38 runs
rdf:langString England Women won by 8 wickets
rdf:langString England Women won by 7 wickets
rdf:langString South Africa Women won by 7 wickets
rdf:langString South Africa Women won by 30 runs
rdf:langString Australia Women won by 33 runs
rdf:langString Australia Women won by 52 runs
rdf:langString Australia Women won by 71 runs
rdf:langString India Women won by 34 runs
rdf:langString India Women won by 48 runs
rdf:langString India Women won by 52 runs
rdf:langString New Zealand Women won by 54 runs
rdf:langString Sri Lanka Women won by 25 runs
rdf:langString West Indies Women won by 31 runs
rdf:langString West Indies Women won by 4 wickets
rdf:langString West Indies Women won by 60 runs
rdf:langString West Indies Women won by 83 runs
xsd:integer 46 64 71 72 76 79 81 85 87 90 93 94 97 99 101 102 104 105 106 107 109 112 113 115 116 117 119 120 133 137 139 142 144 145 153 160 165 167 187 194
<second> 1200.0 660.0 960.0
rdf:langString Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound
rdf:langString Alyssa Healy
rdf:langString Megan Schutt
rdf:langString Deandra Dottin
rdf:langString Ashleigh Gardner
rdf:langString Final
rdf:langString Semi Final 1
rdf:langString Semi Final 2
rdf:langString Group stage and knockout
rdf:langString Suzie Bates 48
rdf:langString Kim Garth 24
rdf:langString Alyssa Healy 48
rdf:langString Alyssa Healy 46
rdf:langString Alyssa Healy 56*
rdf:langString Ellyse Perry 39*
rdf:langString Alyssa Healy 53
rdf:langString Amy Jones 28*
rdf:langString Amy Jones 53*
rdf:langString Ashleigh Gardner 33
rdf:langString Ayasha Rahman 39
rdf:langString Bismah Maroof 26
rdf:langString Bismah Maroof 53
rdf:langString Chamari Athapaththu 44
rdf:langString Chloe Tryon 27
rdf:langString Danni Wyatt 27
rdf:langString Danni Wyatt 43
rdf:langString Deandra Dottin 46
rdf:langString Fargana Hoque 8
rdf:langString Gaby Lewis 39
rdf:langString Harmanpreet Kaur 103
rdf:langString Hayley Matthews 62
rdf:langString Isobel Joyce 30
rdf:langString Isobel Joyce 33
rdf:langString Javeria Khan 36
rdf:langString Javeria Khan 74*
rdf:langString Kycia Knight 32
rdf:langString Marizanne Kapp 25
rdf:langString Marizanne Kapp 26
rdf:langString Marizanne Kapp 38
rdf:langString Mithali Raj 51
rdf:langString Mithali Raj 56
rdf:langString Nigar Sultana 20
rdf:langString Rumana Ahmed 34*
rdf:langString Shashikala Siriwardene 21
rdf:langString Shashikala Siriwardene 31
rdf:langString Smriti Mandhana 34
rdf:langString Smriti Mandhana 83
rdf:langString Sophia Dunkley 35
rdf:langString Sophie Devine 51
rdf:langString Stafanie Taylor 16
rdf:langString Suzie Bates 35
rdf:langString Suzie Bates 67
rdf:langString Hayley Matthews 3/16
rdf:langString Jahanara Alam 3/21
rdf:langString Aliya Riaz 2/25
rdf:langString Aliya Riaz 2/29
rdf:langString Anuja Patil 3/15
rdf:langString Anya Shrubsole 3/10
rdf:langString Ashleigh Gardner 3/22
rdf:langString Chamari Athapaththu 3/17
rdf:langString Dane van Niekerk 2/13
rdf:langString Dayalan Hemalatha 3/26
rdf:langString Deandra Dottin 5/5
rdf:langString Ellyse Perry 2/12
rdf:langString Ellyse Perry 2/2
rdf:langString Ellyse Perry 3/16
rdf:langString Heather Knight 3/9
rdf:langString Jahanara Alam 3/23
rdf:langString Jess Watkin 3/9
rdf:langString Kim Garth 1/17
rdf:langString Kim Garth 2/22
rdf:langString Kirstie Gordon 3/16
rdf:langString Laura Delany 1/9
rdf:langString Lea Tahuhu 2/18
rdf:langString Leigh Kasperek 3/19
rdf:langString Leigh Kasperek 3/25
rdf:langString Lucy O'Reilly 3/19
rdf:langString Megan Schutt 2/13
rdf:langString Megan Schutt 3/12
rdf:langString Moseline Daniels 1/6
rdf:langString Nashra Sandhu 2/8
rdf:langString Nat Sciver 3/4
rdf:langString Nida Dar 1/17
rdf:langString Oshadi Ranasinghe 1/21
rdf:langString Poonam Yadav 2/22
rdf:langString Radha Yadav 1/20
rdf:langString Radha Yadav 3/25
rdf:langString Salma Khatun 2/17
rdf:langString Salma Khatun 3/20
rdf:langString Shabnim Ismail 3/10
rdf:langString Shabnim Ismail 3/12
rdf:langString Shakera Selman 2/15
rdf:langString Shashikala Siriwardene 1/12
rdf:langString Sophie Ecclestone 1/12
rdf:langString Stafanie Taylor 1/20
rdf:langString Stafanie Taylor 4/12
xsd:integer 9
xsd:date 2018-11-24
rdf:langString Die ICC World Women’s Twenty20 2018 war die sechste Weltmeisterschaft im Twenty20-Cricket der Frauen und fand vom 9. bis 24. November 2018 in den West Indies statt. Zum ersten Mal wurde der Wettbewerb unabhängig von dem der Männer ausgetragen. Im Finale konnte sich Australien mit 8 Wickets gegen England durchsetzen.
rdf:langString The 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 was the sixth edition of the ICC Women's World Twenty20, hosted in the West Indies from 9 to 24 November 2018. It the second World Twenty20 hosted by the West Indies (after the 2010 edition), and the West Indies were the defending champions. The tournament was awarded to the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) at the 2013 annual conference of the International Cricket Council (ICC). The tournament's dates were confirmed at an ICC board meeting in January 2015. In February 2017, the ICC confirmed that this would be the first T20 tournament that uses the Decision Review System, with one review per side. The qualifier tournament for the competition was held in July 2018 in the Netherlands. Both Bangladesh and Ireland won their respective semi-final matches in the qualifier, to advance to the Women's World Twenty20 tournament. The first match scheduled to be played in Saint Lucia, between England and Sri Lanka, was abandoned due to rain. With further rain forecast in Saint Lucia, the ICC looked at a contingency plan of moving other group games to Antigua. The following day, the ICC confirmed that the Group A matches would remain in Saint Lucia. The ICC cited logistical issues and cost as the main factors for not moving the fixtures. Australia in Group B qualified for the semi-finals, with their win against New Zealand, to give them three wins from three matches. India, also in Group B, qualified for the semi-finals, after they beat Ireland by 52 runs, with three wins from three matches. In Group A, tournament hosts the West Indies, along with England, progressed to the semi-finals, after wins in their penultimate group-stage fixtures. In the first semi-final, the West Indies faced Australia, with England and India playing each other in the second semi-final. Australia beat the West Indies by 71 runs and England beat India by 8 wickets to progress to the final. Australia won their fourth title after beating England in the final by 8 wickets. Meg Lanning, captain of the Australian team said that the victory was "the most satisfying win I've been involved in" adding that "there will be some big celebrations". England's captain, Heather Knight, said that the team did not post a competitive total, but was "proud of the girls for reaching another world final". Australia's Alyssa Healy was named the player of the tournament.
rdf:langString Yes
rdf:langString Yes
rdf:langString Alyssa Healy
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 48685

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