2018 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup

http://dbpedia.org/resource/2018_Women's_Twenty20_Asia_Cup

The 2018 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup was the seventh edition of the ACC Women's Asia Cup, organized by the Asian Cricket Council (ACC). It took place between 3 and 10 June 2018 in Malaysia, and was the third edition played as a 20-over tournament. The tournament was contested between Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Thailand. India were the defending champions. A month after the conclusion of the tournament, the International Cricket Council (ICC) retrospectively gave all the fixtures full Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) status. rdf:langString
rdf:langString 2018 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup
xsd:integer 2018
xsd:integer 57254400
xsd:integer 1116200931
xsd:integer 2022
xsd:integer 2016
rdf:langString India Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Pakistan Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Sri Lanka Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Sri Lanka Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Bangladesh Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Bangladesh Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Thailand Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Thailand Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Malaysia Women won the toss and elected to field.
rdf:langString Malaysia Women won the toss and elected to bat.
rdf:langString Buddhi Pradhan and Sarika Prasad
rdf:langString Ranmore Martinesz and Buddhi Pradhan
rdf:langString Ranmore Martinesz and Masudur Rahman
rdf:langString Viswanadan Kalidas and Narayanan Sivan
rdf:langString Batumalai Ramani and Narayanan Sivan
rdf:langString Buddhi Pradhan and Shozab Raza
rdf:langString Masudur Rahman and Sarika Prasad
rdf:langString Masudur Rahman and Shozab Raza
rdf:langString Nitin Menon and Masudur Rahman
rdf:langString Nitin Menon and Sarika Prasad
rdf:langString Nitin Menon and Shozab Raza
rdf:langString Shozab Raza and Batumalai Ramani
rdf:langString Viswanadan Kalidas and Batumalai Ramani
rdf:langString Viswanadan Kalidas and Ranmore Martinesz
rdf:langString Tournament logo
xsd:integer 1
xsd:date 2018-06-03
xsd:date 2018-06-04
xsd:date 2018-06-06
xsd:date 2018-06-07
xsd:date 2018-06-09
xsd:date 2018-06-10
xsd:integer 16
xsd:integer 2022
rdf:langString Aina Najwa made her WT20I debut.
rdf:langString Dhanusri Muhunan made her WT20I debut.
rdf:langString Wongpaka Liengprasert became the first cricketer from Thailand to take a WT20I five-wicket haul.
rdf:langString Onnicha Kamchompu made her WT20I debut.
rdf:langString Wan Julia made her WT20I debut.
rdf:langString Nattaya Boochatham, Naruemol Chaiwai, Natthakan Chantam, Nannapat Koncharoenkai, Suleeporn Laomi, Wongpaka Liengprasert, Ratanaporn Padunglerd, Sirintra Saengsakaorat, Sainammin Saenya, Chanida Sutthiruang and Sornnarin Tippoch all made their WT20I debuts.
rdf:langString Nida Dar took her first five-wicket haul and the best bowling figures by a Pakistan woman in WT20Is.
rdf:langString Sasha Azmi, Zumika Azmi, Christina Baret, Winifred Duraisingam, Mas Elysa, Ainna Hamizah Hashim, Jamahidaya Intan, Mahirah Izzati Ismail, Nur Nadihirah, Yusrina Yaakop and Noor Hayati Zakaria all made their WT20I debuts.
rdf:langString Malsha Shehani made her WT20I debut. *''Mithali Raj became the first cricketer to score 2,000 runs in WT20Is.
xsd:integer 6
xsd:integer 2016
rdf:langString Sri Lanka Women won by 6 wickets
rdf:langString India Women won by 7 wickets
rdf:langString Pakistan Women won by 8 wickets
rdf:langString Bangladesh Women won by 9 wickets
rdf:langString India Women won by 142 runs
rdf:langString Bangladesh Women won by 7 wickets
rdf:langString Bangladesh Women won by 3 wickets
rdf:langString Bangladesh Women won by 70 runs
rdf:langString India Women won by 66 runs
rdf:langString Pakistan Women won by 147 runs
rdf:langString Pakistan Women won by 23 runs
rdf:langString Sri Lanka Women won by 90 runs
rdf:langString Thailand Women won by 4 wickets
rdf:langString Thailand Women won by 9 wickets
xsd:integer 27 30 36 37 46 60 62 63 64 66 67 70 72 75 95 96 104 105 107 110 112 113 130 132 136 141 142 169 177
<second> 570.0 840.0
rdf:langString Harmanpreet Kaur
rdf:langString Nida Dar
rdf:langString Group stage with finals
rdf:langString Nigar Sultana 27
rdf:langString Anushka Sanjeewani 32
rdf:langString Ayasha Rahman 11
rdf:langString Ayasha Rahman 25*
rdf:langString Bismah Maroof 60*
rdf:langString Bismah Maroof 62
rdf:langString Christina Baret 14
rdf:langString Fargana Hoque 52*
rdf:langString Harmanpreet Kaur 42
rdf:langString Harmanpreet Kaur 56
rdf:langString Hasini Perera 46*
rdf:langString Mithali Raj 97*
rdf:langString Mona Meshram 32
rdf:langString Nahida Khan 38*
rdf:langString Naruemol Chaiwai 20*
rdf:langString Naruemol Chaiwai 43
rdf:langString Nattaya Boochatham 15
rdf:langString Nattaya Boochatham 21
rdf:langString Nigar Sultana 25*
rdf:langString Nipuni Hansika 23
rdf:langString Sana Mir 20*
rdf:langString Sana Mir 21
rdf:langString Sasha Azmi 9
rdf:langString Sasha Azmi 9*
rdf:langString Shamima Sultana 31
rdf:langString Shamima Sultana 43
rdf:langString Smriti Mandhana 38
rdf:langString Sornnarin Tippoch 17
rdf:langString Veda Krishnamurthy 29*
rdf:langString Winifred Duraisingam 11
rdf:langString Winifred Duraisingam 17
rdf:langString Yasoda Mendis 25
rdf:langString Yasoda Mendis 36
rdf:langString Anam Amin 1/9
rdf:langString Sana Mir 2/7
rdf:langString Ainna Hamizah Hashim 1/29
rdf:langString Ainna Hamizah Hashim 1/30
rdf:langString Anam Amin 2/10
rdf:langString Chanida Sutthiruang 1/14
rdf:langString Ekta Bisht 2/15
rdf:langString Ekta Bisht 3/14
rdf:langString Harmanpreet Kaur 3/11
rdf:langString Khadija Tul Kubra 3/13
rdf:langString Nahida Akter 2/23
rdf:langString Nida Dar 4/5
rdf:langString Nida Dar 5/21
rdf:langString Nilakshi de Silva 1/12
rdf:langString Nilakshi de Silva 2/17
rdf:langString Nilakshi de Silva 3/13
rdf:langString Noor Hayati Zakaria 1/30
rdf:langString Pooja Vastrakar 3/6
rdf:langString Poonam Yadav 1/21
rdf:langString Poonam Yadav 4/9
rdf:langString Rumana Ahmed 2/22
rdf:langString Rumana Ahmed 3/21
rdf:langString Rumana Ahmed 3/8
rdf:langString Salma Khatun 2/6
rdf:langString Sasha Azmi 1/12
rdf:langString Sasha Azmi 1/8
rdf:langString Sornnarin Tippoch 1/9
rdf:langString Sugandika Kumari 2/18
rdf:langString Sugandika Kumari 3/17
rdf:langString Winifred Duraisingam 2/19
rdf:langString Wongpaka Liengprasert 2/10
rdf:langString Wongpaka Liengprasert 2/16
rdf:langString Wongpaka Liengprasert 5/12
xsd:integer 3
xsd:date 2018-06-10
rdf:langString The 2018 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup was the seventh edition of the ACC Women's Asia Cup, organized by the Asian Cricket Council (ACC). It took place between 3 and 10 June 2018 in Malaysia, and was the third edition played as a 20-over tournament. The tournament was contested between Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Thailand. India were the defending champions. On 6 June 2018, during the group stage, Bangladesh beat India by seven wickets. This was Bangladesh's first win against India in a women's international cricket match, and India's first ever loss in the Asia Cup. On 9 June 2018, Thailand beat Sri Lanka by four wickets to register their first ever win against a Full Member side. India were the first team to advance to the final, after they beat Pakistan by seven wickets in their final group game. They were joined by Bangladesh, who beat Malaysia by 70 runs in their final match. It was India's seventh consecutive Asia Cup final and the first for Bangladesh. Bangladesh beat India by three wickets in the final to win their first Asia Cup title, and became the only other team to win the title besides India. A month after the conclusion of the tournament, the International Cricket Council (ICC) retrospectively gave all the fixtures full Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) status.
rdf:langString Harmanpreet Kaur
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 26287

data from the linked data cloud