2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament

http://dbpedia.org/resource/2019_Kwibuka_Women's_T20_Tournament

The 2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament was a women's T20I cricket (WT20I) tournament held in Rwanda from 18 to 23 June 2019. This was the sixth edition of the annual Kwibuka T20 Tournament, first organised in 2014 in remembrance of the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. The seventh edition of the tournament was scheduled to take place in June 2020, but was postponed until the following year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament
xsd:integer 2019
xsd:integer 61079893
xsd:integer 1114255210
xsd:integer 2021
rdf:langString Tanzania Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Uganda Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Mali Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Mali Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Rwanda Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Rwanda Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Gasana Christian and John Mayeku
rdf:langString Jackson Nzayisenga and Vicky Prajapati
rdf:langString John Mayeku and Jackson Nzayisenga
rdf:langString John Mayeku and Vicky Prajapati
rdf:langString Vicky Prajapati and John Mayeku
xsd:integer 1
xsd:date 2019-06-18
xsd:date 2019-06-19
xsd:date 2019-06-20
xsd:date 2019-06-21
xsd:date 2019-06-22
xsd:date 2019-06-23
xsd:integer 12
xsd:integer 2021
rdf:langString Coumba Diarra , Catherine Kibuge and Nasra Mohamedi all made their WT20I debuts.
rdf:langString Marie Bimenyimana became the first female batter for Rwanda to score a century in Women's T20 Internationals.
rdf:langString Ramata Cisse, Balkissa Coulibaly, Maimouna Coulibaly, Sirantou Kagnassy, Tenin Konate, Aicha Kone, Mariam Samake, Aissata Sangare, Youma Sangare, Oumou Sow and Nafoutouma Traore all made their WT20I debuts. * The six runs scored by Mali Women was the lowest team total in a completed WT20I match.
rdf:langString Fatuma Kibasu became the first female batter for Tanzania to score a century in Women's T20 Internationals.
rdf:langString Mala Djiguiba and Mariam Sidibe made their WT20I debuts. * Uganda's 314/2 was the highest total in a WT20I match. * The margin of victory is the biggest ever in a WT20I match. * Mali now have the three lowest totals in women's T20 Internationals, having achieved those on three consecutive days. * This was the first time when two batters scored centuries in the same innings of a WT20I match. * Prosscovia Alako became the first batter for Uganda to score a century in Women's T20 internationals. * The 227-run partnership between Prosscovia Alako and Rita Musamali was the highest for any wicket in Women's T20 Internationals. * The bowling figures of 3-0-82-0 by Oumou Sow are the most expensive in women's Twenty20 cricket.
rdf:langString Winfrida Kevin, Hudaa Mohamedi , Prosscovia Alako, Esther Iloku, Maria Kagoya and Susan Kakai all made their WT20I debuts.
rdf:langString Christine Anayo, Mildred Anyigo and Gloria Obukor all made their WT20I debuts.
xsd:integer 4
xsd:integer 2018
rdf:langString Tanzania Women won by 10 wickets
rdf:langString Rwanda Women won by 10 wickets
rdf:langString Rwanda Women won by 216 runs
rdf:langString Tanzania Women won by 14 runs
rdf:langString Tanzania Women won by 5 runs
rdf:langString Tanzania Women won by 6 wickets
rdf:langString Tanzania Women won by 70 runs
rdf:langString Tanzania women won by 268 runs
rdf:langString Uganda Women won by 10 wickets
rdf:langString Uganda Women won by 30 runs
rdf:langString Uganda Women won by 304 runs
rdf:langString Uganda Women won by 8 wickets
xsd:integer 6 8 10 11 14 17 18 30 55 61 80 81 91 105 108 109 113 125 246 285 314
<second> 570.0 830.0
rdf:langString Rita Musamali
rdf:langString Joyce Apio
rdf:langString Gisele Ishimwe 19
rdf:langString Balkissa Coulibaly 1
rdf:langString Cathia Uwamahoro 28
rdf:langString Diane Dusabemungu 13
rdf:langString Esther Iloku 31*
rdf:langString Esther Iloku 38*
rdf:langString Fatuma Kibasu 106*
rdf:langString Fatuma Kibasu 54*
rdf:langString Gloria Obukor 33
rdf:langString Josiane Nyirankundineza 5*
rdf:langString Mariam Samake 1
rdf:langString Mariam Samake 4*
rdf:langString Mariam Samake 9*
rdf:langString Marie Bimenyimana 114*
rdf:langString Marie Bimenyimana 36
rdf:langString Monica Pascal 11*
rdf:langString Monica Pascal 40
rdf:langString Monica Pascal 53
rdf:langString Neema Pius 38
rdf:langString Oumou Sow 3
rdf:langString Prosscovia Alako 116
rdf:langString Prosscovia Alako 9*
rdf:langString Rita Musamali 43*
rdf:langString Tenin Konate 4
rdf:langString Aicha Kone 1/26
rdf:langString Aicha Kone 1/59
rdf:langString Diane Dusabemungu 4/5
rdf:langString Evelyn Anyipo 2/7
rdf:langString Fatuma Kibasu 2/22
rdf:langString Henriette Ishimwe 2/25
rdf:langString Immaculee Muhawenimana 1/10
rdf:langString Josiane Nyirankundineza 3/0
rdf:langString Joyce Apio 2/18
rdf:langString Joyce Apio 2/19
rdf:langString Joyce Apio 4/2
rdf:langString Marie Bimenyimana 2/19
rdf:langString Marie Bimenyimana 3/8
rdf:langString Mildred Anyigo 3/1
rdf:langString Nasra Saidi 5/0
rdf:langString Nuru Tindo 2/1
rdf:langString Nuru Tindo 2/7
rdf:langString Perice Kamunya 2/12
rdf:langString Perice Kamunya 3/14
rdf:langString Stephani Nampiina 3/17
rdf:langString Youma Sangare 1/54
xsd:integer 18
xsd:date 2019-06-23
rdf:langString The 2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament was a women's T20I cricket (WT20I) tournament held in Rwanda from 18 to 23 June 2019. This was the sixth edition of the annual Kwibuka T20 Tournament, first organised in 2014 in remembrance of the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. The participants were the women's national sides of Rwanda, Uganda, Mali and Tanzania, with the latter two teams making their first appearance in the tournament while defending champions Kenya withdrew due to lack of funding. This was the first time in the tournament's history that the matches were recognised as official WT20I games as per ICC's announcement to provide full WT20I status to all the matches played between the associate teams after 1 July 2018. All the matches were played at the Gahanga International Cricket Stadium in Kigali. Kenya had previously won the title three times (2015, 2017, 2018) while Uganda had won it twice, the inaugural edition in 2014 and also in 2016. Tanzania Women won this year's edition by winning all of their matches and thus remaining unbeaten, while two Ugandan players, Rita Musamali and Joyce Apio became the highest run scorer and wicket taker respectively. In the 2nd match of the tournament, the Mali women's team was bowled out for six runs in nine overs by the hosts Rwanda, making it the lowest team total in a completed WT20I match. The Rwandan side chased down the target of seven runs in just four balls to win the match by ten wickets with 116 balls to spare. In the fifth match of the tournament against Mali, Uganda went on to score 314/2 in 20 overs, making it the highest team total in Women's Twenty20 internationals. It was the first time in a T20 international cricket match, male or female, that a team had scored 300 runs. The Mali team were bowled out for 10 runs in 11.1 overs, the second lowest team total in WT20Is. The margin of victory (304 runs) was also the biggest ever in a WT20I match. The seventh edition of the tournament was scheduled to take place in June 2020, but was postponed until the following year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
rdf:langString Fatuma Kibasu
rdf:langString Josiane Nyirankundineza
rdf:langString Marie Bimenyimana
rdf:langString Monica Pascal
rdf:langString Neema Pius
rdf:langString Nuru Tindo
rdf:langString Prosscovia Alako
rdf:langString Marie Bimenyimana
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 20855

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