A women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) is an international cricket match between two teams, each having WT20I status, as determined by the International Cricket Council (ICC), the sport's world governing body. [2] In a women's Twenty20 match, the two teams play a single innings, each of which is restricted to a maximum of 20 overs. [3] The Twenty20 format was originally introduced by the England and Wales Cricket Board for the men's county cricket competition with the first matches contested on 13 June 2003 between the English counties in the Twenty20 Cup. [4] The first women's Twenty20 International match took place on 5 August 2004 when New Zealand defeated England by nine runs at the County Cricket Ground in Hove. [5] [6] This match was held six months before the first men's Twenty20 International, contested between Australia and New Zealand in February 2005. [7]
A five-wicket haul (also known as a "five-for" or "fifer") [8] [9] refers to a bowler taking five or more wickets in a single innings. This is regarded as a notable achievement, [10] especially in the Twenty20 format, as bowlers can bowl no more than four overs in an innings. [11] The first five-wicket haul in a WT20I match was taken by New Zealand's Amy Satterthwaite against England in August 2007. [1] Satterthwaite took six wickets for 17 runs, [12] the first six-wicket haul in the international format. On 24 April 2024, Indonesia's Rohmalia Rohmalia took 7 wickets for 0 runs, the best bowling figures in an innings, surpassing Netherlands' Frederique Overdijk (7 wickets for 3 runs against France) and Nepal's Anjali Chand (6 for 0 against the Maldives). [13] [14] Tanzania's Nasra Saidi also conceded no runs in her five-wicket haul against Mali during the 2019 Kwibuka Women's T20 Tournament in Rwanda making all three figures the most economical with an economy rate of zero. [15] Shabnim Ismail of South Africa took the least economical five-wicket haul, bowling with an economy rate of 7.82 against India in February 2018. [16] At the age 49 years and 168 days, Joanne Hicks of Isle of Man is the oldest player to take five wickets in an innings [17] while Botsogo Mpedi of Botswana who returned figures of 6 for 8 against Lesotho during the Botswana 7s tournament in Gaborone in August 2018, is the youngest at 15 years and 198 days. [18] [19] Mpedi alongside Chand, Indonesia's Dara Paramitha, Zimbabwe's Esther Mbofana, Samoa's Teinemane Faimalo and Rohmalia are the only bowlers to take a five-wicket haul on WT20I debut. [20] There have been 11 occurrences which did not result in a victory to the team taking the five-wicket haul. [21]
As of March 2025 [update] , 114 five-wicket hauls have been taken by 100 different players. [22] Anisa Mohammed of West Indies and Kary Chan of Hong Kong have taken three five-wicket hauls each in WT20Is. [23] [a]
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
Bowler | The bowler who took the five-wicket haul |
† | The bowler was named player of the match |
↑ | The bowler's debut match |
♣ | The bowler took a hat-trick as part of the five-wicket haul |
Wkts | Number of wickets taken |
Runs | Number of runs conceded |
Overs | Number of overs bowled |
Econ | Economy rate (runs conceded per over) |
Inn | Innings in which the five-wicket haul was taken |
Team | The team the bowler was representing |
Opposition | The team the bowler was playing against |
Venue | The cricket ground where the match was played |
Date | Day on which the match was held |
Batters | Batters whose wickets were taken |
Result | Result for the team for which the five-wicket haul was taken |