Personal information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full name | Winifred Anne Duraisingam | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | Malaysia | 6 April 1993||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Batting | Right-handed | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling | Right-arm medium | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Role | All-rounder | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
International information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
National side | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
T20I debut(cap 3) | 3 June 2018 v India | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Last T20I | 21 September 2023 v India | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career statistics | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Source: ESPNCricinfo, 29 November 2023 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
|
Winifred Anne Duraisingam (born 6 April 1993) is a Malaysian cricketer [1] and the current captain of the women's national cricket team. [2] A right-handed all-rounder, she opens the batting, and is also an opening medium pace bowler. [3]
Duraisingam started playing cricket when she was eight years old, in the backyard of her home and in the nearby streets. Her brother, Derek, played street cricket with other boys. One day, she asked them whether she could join in and bat. They refused, because she was a small girl, and they were scared she would get hurt. Her uncle, David, then offered to teach her how to bowl. Although she accepted that offer, she also considered batting to be more appealing. He therefore suggested a rule that anyone taking a wicket would be next to bat. [2] [4] [5]
With the benefit of the bowling tuition, and practice, Duraisingam eventually renewed her request to join in with the street cricket. Surprised and impressed by her action and pace, the boys had no option but to relent. [4] In 2021, Duraisingam told SpogoNews:
"It felt really fun when I started to bowl and take wickets. The boys ended up keeping quiet and felt shy because a girl was taking their wickets. From there onwards, I enjoyed bowling more and the fire to continue bowling kept increasing." [2]
At the age of 13, and with her uncle's encouragement, Duraisingam began playing for the Kuala Langat Club, as the only girl in the team. Before long, while playing in an interclub tournament match for Kuala Langat against Royal Selangor Club, she took the wicket of a former captain of the Malaysia men's national team, Hector Durairatnam, [2] [4] [5] who has been described as "Malaysian cricket's living treasure". [6] After the match, Durairatnam approached her uncle and asked who was the "small boy" who had bowled against him. Her uncle replied, "that's my niece". Duraisingam was then invited to participate in a selection process for the national team. [2] [4] [5]
Duraisingam was a fan of Australian bowler Brett Lee from an early age. Later, when she became more serious about her batting, she gained inspiration from Kumar Sangakkara of Sri Lanka. She also credits her uncle for teaching her the game. [4] She found the task of juggling cricket with her schooling a challenge, but says that she succeeded "... by God’s grace and of course my family's support." [4]
In 2014, Duraisingam played a season of club cricket in Adelaide, Australia. [4]
In July 2019, she participated in the MCA 3rd Womens T20 Championship, as a member of the Rmaf Tudm team. [7] The following April, she played in the 4th Championship, for the same team (rebadged as the Tentera Udara Diraja Malaysia team). [8] On 29 April 2019, in her team's match against Negeri Sembilan, she took 4/3, to help the team to victory by nine wickets. [9]
In December 2019/January 2020, Duraisingam led the Northern Queens team to victory in the Malaysian Super Women League (MSWL) tournament. [10] [11] In particular, she scored 61 runs, in an innings she considers to be her best ever, in the final against Eastern Lionesses. [5] [11]
In 2020, Duraisingam was one of the eight women who took the field in the Men's MCA T20 Super Series, which she has said gave her "... a new sight on how to become a better cricketer." [2]
Duraisingam first participated in national team selection matches, and represented Malaysia, in 2007, at the age of 14. [2] [4] [5] That year, she was selected in both the U-19 and senior national teams. [5] Initially, she played only as an opening bowler, a role she has continued to play. However, at the age of 15 she went to Australia for a training camp, watched how the female cricketers batted there, and was motivated to improve her batting skills. Since then, she has also batted in the middle order, [4] and, more recently, in the top order. [5]
In December 2008, Duraisingam was part of a Malaysian U-19 team that finished as runner-up in the ACC Under-19 Women's Championship in Chiang Mai, Thailand. [5] The team defeated Hong Kong in the semi-final by two runs, but lost to Nepal in the final by seven wickets. [12] In mid-2010, she was appointed as the U-19 captain. [5]
In 2014, Duraisingam became the captain of the national team. [4] In 2017, she played in the Malaysian T20 Women Quadrangual Series, but did not captain the team. [13] The other teams competing in the series were the national teams from Tanzania and Thailand, and a team representing the Sri Lanka Army. In the match against Sri Lanka Army, Duraisingam top scored with 36, but Sri Lanka Army won by seven wickets. [14] In the match against Tanzania, which Malaysia won, she top scored with 45*. [15] Malaysia finished third in the series, which was won by Sri Lanka Army. [16]
In August 2017, Duraisingam captained Malaysia in the Women's twenty20 tournament at the 2017 Southeast Asian Games. [5] The tournament matches were held at Kinrara Oval in Selangor, Malaysia. [17] During the tournament, Duraisingam batted at number three in the batting order, and top-scored in consecutive games, with 25* against Singapore and 23* against Thailand. [5]
On 3 June 2018, Duraisingam made her Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) debut for, and also captained, Malaysia against India at the Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur, in the first match of the 2018 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup. [18] [19] The match was also Malaysia's first ever WT20I. [20] Duraisingham later told Female Cricket that the tournament had been "a great learning experience" for the whole of her team. [4]
In January 2019, Duraisingam was Malaysia's captain in the 2019 Thailand Women's T20 Smash in Bangkok, Thailand. On 16 January 2019, she led the team to its first ever WT20I victory, against China, by 6 wickets. [21] Her highest score in the tournament was 56*, in a match against Thailand A that did not have full T20I status. [22] [23] The following month, she again captained Malaysia, in the 2019 ICC Women's Qualifier Asia, also held in Bangkok. In that tournament, she took nine wickets, the most for Malaysia, with a best performance of 3/10 against Hong Kong. [24] [25]
Duraisingam's and Malaysia's final WT20Is in 2019 were played against Singapore at the Indian Association Ground in Singapore, for the annual Saudari Cup. In that series, Duraisingam led her team to a 3–0 clean sweep. [26] In the second and third matches of the series, she also top scored for Malaysia, and was player of the match, with 40* and 66*, respectively. [27] [28]
In April 2021, Duraisingam was one of 15 players to be awarded a contract by the Malaysian Cricket Association, the first time female cricketers for the Malaysian team had been granted contracts. [29] "Here on, there will be no time to relax," she told the ICC. [30]
In November 2021, she was named as the captain of Malaysia's side for the 2021 ICC Women's T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier tournament in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. [31] She led Malaysia to fourth place in the tournament, with wins against Kuwait and Bhutan. [32] Her best batting performance was 44 in 40 balls against Kuwait. [18] [33] Her best bowling figures, 2/15, were against Hong Kong, [18] and included a double-wicket maiden in the first over of Hong Kong's innings. [5]
Two months later, in January 2022, she was the home team's captain when Malaysia hosted the 2022 Commonwealth Games Cricket Qualifier in Kuala Lumpur. During that tournament, she top scored for Malaysia with 42* in 54 balls in the team's loss to Sri Lanka. [34] [35] More importantly, in Malaysia's final match of the tournament, against Kenya, on what has been described as "... one of the biggest days in the history of Malaysian cricket ...", [5] she led the team to an upset victory, [36] [37] [38] an outcome that made the front pages of newspaper sport sections in Malaysia. [5]
In September 2023, she was selected in Malaysia's 2023 Asian Games squad. [39]
In March 2022, Duraisingam was recruited by FairBreak Global to play in its privately-run 2022 FairBreak Invitational T20 in Dubai. [40] She was allocated to the Tornadoes team. [41]
The Nepal men's national cricket team represents the country of Nepal in International cricket and is governed by the Cricket Association of Nepal (CAN). They are Associate Member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) since 1996. Nepal were awarded Twenty20 International (T20I) status by the ICC in June 2014 until the 2015 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier and earned One Day International (ODI) status in 2018.
Andre Fletcher is a Grenadian cricketer who plays internationally for the West Indies. He is a right-handed batsman and often keeps wicket. He played domestic cricket for Windward Islands and Grenada. He was one of the few international cricketers to have come from Grenada. Fletcher was a member of the West Indies team that won the 2016 T20 World Cup.
Sophie Frances Monique Devine is a New Zealand sportswoman, who has represented New Zealand in both cricket for the New Zealand national women's cricket team, and in field hockey as a member of the New Zealand women's national field hockey team. She has since focused on cricket. She is known for not wearing a helmet when batting, a rarity in 21st century cricket. In December 2017, she was named as one of the players in the ICC Women's T20I Team of the Year.
Hettimulla Appuhamilage Shashikala Dedunu Siriwardene, known as Shashikala Siriwardene, is a Sri Lankan former cricketer who captained the Sri Lankan women's cricket team in WODIs. She is the only woman cricketer to take 100 wickets in WODIs for Sri Lanka, and the only female Sri Lankan to combine this with 1,000+ runs. She is also the all-time leading wicket taker for Sri Lanka in WT20I with 77 scalps. She played for Sri Lanka internationally in a career spanning 17 years, from 2003 to 2020.
Rachael Louise Haynes is an Australian former international cricketer who has won six world championships as a member of the national women's team. A left-handed batter, Haynes was vice-captain of Australia from 2017 to 2022. Domestically, she achieved prolonged success in the Women's National Cricket League (WNCL) and the Women's Big Bash League (WBBL), winning seven titles with New South Wales and two with the Sydney Thunder.
Heather Clare Knight is an English cricketer who is captain of the England women's cricket team. She is a right-handed batter and right arm off spin bowler. Knight played in her 100th Women's One Day International match for England in December 2019.
Meghann Moira Lanning is an Australian cricketer who formerly captained the national women's team. Lanning has been a member of seven successful world championship campaigns, winning two Women's Cricket World Cup and five ICC Women's World Twenty20 titles. She holds the record for the most Women's One Day International centuries and is the first Australian to score 2,000 Twenty20 International runs.
Gyanendra Malla is a Nepalese former professional cricketer and the former captain of the Nepal national team. He is a right-handed batsman and an occasional wicket-keeper. He made his debut against Namibia in March 2006. He was one of the cricketers who played in Nepal's first One Day International (ODI) match, against the Netherlands, in August 2018.
Jessica Louise Jonassen is an Australian cricketer from Rockhampton, Queensland. A left-arm orthodox bowler, Jonassen has been a member of the national women's team since 2012, going on to win four ICC T20 World Cups while becoming the fourth woman to have taken 100 One Day International wickets for Australia. Domestically, she is the current captain of both the Queensland Fire in the Women's National Cricket League (WNCL) and the Brisbane Heat in the Women's Big Bash League (WBBL).
Atapattu Mudiyanselage Chamari Jayangani is a Sri Lankan cricketer and the current captain of the women's Twenty20 International team of Sri Lanka. Chamari was the tenth captain for Sri Lanka women's national cricket team. In November 2017, she was named the Women's Cricketer of the Year for the 2016–17 season at Sri Lanka Cricket's annual awards. She is the first Sri Lankan woman to play in franchise cricket. In November 2023, it was announced that a special dedicated seating zone at the Sydney Cricket Ground would be named after her as the Chamari Bay.
Kariyawasam Indipalage Charith Asalanka is a Sri Lankan professional cricketer who plays all three formats of the game for the national team and also serves as the vice-captain of the national team in T20I. A left-handed batsman, Asalanka made his international debut for Sri Lanka in June 2021. At No. 5 he's a destructive and efficient batter.
Deepti Bhagwan Sharma is an Indian cricketer who plays for Bengal, Birmingham Phoenix and India. She is an all-rounder who bats left-handed and bowls right-arm off break and is currently ranked 3rd in the top all-rounders in the ICC Cricket Rankings. She is also the current third highest individual scorer by a woman cricketer in ODIs.
Sarah Jennifer Bryce is a Scottish cricketer who plays for the national cricket team as a wicket-keeper-batter. At the domestic level, she plays for the Watsonian cricket club, for English teams The Blaze and Kent, and for Welsh Fire.
Kathryn Emma Bryce is a Scottish cricketer and the current captain of the national women's cricket team. An all-rounder, she plays at the domestic level for the Watsonian cricket club, and for English teams The Blaze and Derbyshire; she has also been drafted by Manchester Originals. Previously, she has taken the field for English teams Warwickshire, Loughborough Lightning, Lincolnshire and Trent Rockets. She also plays for the Warriors team in FairBreak Invitational T20 tournaments.
Sita Rana Magar is a Nepali cricketer who plays for the women's national cricket team as a left-handed batting all-rounder. She has also been the vice captain of the team.
Yasmeen Khan is a Namibian cricketer and a former captain of the women's national cricket team. Currently the vice captain, she plays as a right-handed batter, right-arm medium pace bowler, and occasional wicket-keeper.
Theertha Satish is an Indian-born cricketer who plays for the United Arab Emirates national cricket team as a left-handed top order batter and wicket-keeper.
Diviya G K, often referred to (erroneously) as GK Diviya, is a Singaporean businesswoman and cricketer who plays for the women's national cricket team as a right handed all-rounder. She has also captained the team.
Queentor Abel is a Kenyan cricketer and the current captain of the women's national cricket team. An all-rounder, Abel bats right-handed and is a right-arm offbreak bowler.
Fatuma Omari Kibasu is a Tanzanian cricketer who plays for the Tanzania women's national cricket team and also served as a former captain of the national side. She is the all-time leading runscorer for Tanzania in WT20I with 855 runs. She remains the only Tanzanian woman to score century at international level. She is also the only Tanzanian woman to have a scored a century in WT20I and the only Tanzanian to have scored multiple centuries in T20I cricket. She holds the current record for the highest individual score for Tanzania in WT20Is.