ICC Women's Quadrangular Series in India in 2006/07

The ICC Women's Quadrangular Series in India in 2006/07 was a four team One Day International tournament involving the national teams of Australia, England, India and New Zealand. All of the matches are to be played in Chennai, at the IIT Chemplast Ground and the MA Chidambaram Stadium, between 21 February and 5 May 2007.

Teams

Australia England India New Zealand

Karen Rolton (c)
Sarah Andrews
Alex Blackwell
Kate Blackwell
Melissa Bulow
Sarah Edwards
Cathryn Fitzpatrick
Shelley Nitschke
Kirsten Pike
Leah Poulton
Jodie Purves
Emma Sampson
Clea Smith
Lisa Sthalekar

Charlotte Edwards (c)
Lynsey Askew
Caroline Atkins
Holly Colvin
Lydia Greenway
Isa Guha
Jenny Gunn
Laura Marsh
Beth Morgan
Laura Newton
Ebony-Jewel Rainford-Brent
Jane Smit
Claire Taylor
Sarah Taylor

Mithali Raj (c)
Nooshin Al Khadeer
Anjum Chopra
Rumeli Dhar
Preeti Dimri
Jhulan Goswami
Karu Jain
Hemlata Kala
Thirush Kamini
Devika Palshikar
Sunetra Paranjpe
Rajeshwari Goel
Amita Sharma
Jaya Sharma

Haidee Tiffen (c)
Suzie Bates
Nicola Browne
Sarah Burke
Selena Charteris
Sophie Devine
Maria Fahey
Sara McGlashan
Aimee Mason
Rowan Milburn
Louise Milliken
Rebecca Rolls
Sarah Tsukigawa
Helen Watson

Group Stage Table

ICC Women's Quadrangular Series after 12 matches[1]
Pos Team P W L NR T BP Points NRR For Against
1 New Zealand 6 5 1 0 0 1 21 +0.432 1476 / 292.1 1386 / 300
2 Australia 6 4 2 0 0 2 18 +0.293 1422 / 286.3 1373 / 294
3 India 6 3 3 0 0 1 13 -0.111 1202 / 287.5 1274 / 297.1
4 England 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 -0.647 1352 / 300 1419 / 275.2

Points System

Win = 4 points Tie or No Result = 2 points Bonus = 1 point Loss = 0 points

If the team batting first wins the match and restricts its opponents to 80% of its total, it gains a bonus point. If the team batting second wins the match in 40 overs, it gains a bonus point.

A team's run rate will be calculated by reference to the runs scored in an innings divided by the number of overs faced.

In the event of teams finishing on equal points, the right to play in the final will be determined as follows:

- The team with the most number of wins.

- If still equal, the team with the most number of wins over the other team(s) who are equal on points and have the same number of wins.

- If still equal, the team with the highest number of bonus points.

- If still equal, the team with the highest net run rate.

Group Stage Matches

Match 1: Australia Women v New Zealand Women, 21 February

v

Match 2: India Women v England Women, 21 February

v

Match 3: England Women v New Zealand Women, 23 February

v

Match 4: India Women v Australia Women, 23 February

v

Match 5: Australia Women v England Women, 25 February

v

Match 6: India Women v New Zealand Women, 25 February

v

Match 7: Australia Women v New Zealand Women, 28 February

v

Match 8: India Women v England Women, 28 February

v

Match 9: Australia Women v England Women, 1 March

England
268/8 (50 overs)
v
Australia
269/4 (46.4 overs)
SJ Taylor 101 (111)
KE Pike 2/35 (8)
LC Sthalekar 77 (82)
HL Colvin 2/45 (9)
Australia Women won by 6 wickets[2]
IIT-Chemplast Ground, Chennai, India
Umpires: KG Lakshminarayan (Ind) and R Sundar (Ind)
Player of the match: LC Sthalekar (Aus)

Match 10: India Women v New Zealand Women, 1 March

New Zealand
272/7 (50 overs)
v
India
181/8 (50 overs)
SW Bates 122 (134)
J Goswami 2/43 (10)
M Raj 31 (54)
AL Mason 3/36 (10)
New Zealand Women won by 91 runs[3]
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai, India
Umpires: S Ravi (Ind) and K Srinivasan (Ind)
Player of the match: SW Bates (NZ)

Match 11: England Women v New Zealand Women, 3 March

New Zealand
267/9 (50 overs)
v
England
240 (45.2 overs)
AL Mason 48 (51)
HL Colvin 3/37 (10)
LRF Askew 68 (71)
LE Milliken 4/42 (10)
New Zealand Women won by 27 runs[4]
IIT-Chemplast Ground, Chennai, India
Umpires: S Ravi (Ind) and K Srinivasan (Ind)
Player of the match: LE Milliken (NZ)

Match 12: India Women v Australia Women, 3 March

India
230/9 (50 overs)
v
Australia
231/6 (50 overs)
KV Jain 75 (119)
LC Sthalekar 3/64 (10)
MJ Bulow 85 (91)
N Al Khadeer 2/48 (10)
Australia Women won by 4 wickets[5]
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai, India
Umpires: GA Pratapkumar (Ind) and SM Raju (Ind)
Player of the match: MJ Bulow (Aus)

Third Place Play-Off, India Women v England Women, 5 March

India
219 (49.2 overs)
v
England
220/4 (46.2 overs)
R Dhar 74 (87)
HL Colvin 3/50 (10)
SC Taylor 77 (98)
R Dhar 1/32 (9)
England Women won by 6 wickets[6]
IIT-Chemplast Ground, Chennai, India
Umpires: TR Kashyappan (Ind) and SV Ramani (Ind)
Player of the match: JL Gunn (Eng)

Final, Australia Women v New Zealand Women, 5 March

New Zealand
177 (50 overs)
v
Australia
181/4 (46.2 overs)
NJ Browne 41 (80)
KE Pike 3/21 (10)
S Nitschke 81 (81)
SJ Tsukigawa 2/20 (8)
Australia Women won by 6 wickets[7]
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai, India
Umpires: GA Pratapkumar (Ind) and S Ravi (Ind)
Player of the match: S Nitschke (Aus) and KE Pike (Aus)

References

  1. Cricinfo. "Points table". Retrieved 23 February 2007.
  2. England v Australia, scorecard of match 9, from Cricinfo, retrieved 4 April 2007
  3. India v New Zealand, scorecard of match 10, from Cricinfo, retrieved 4 April 2007
  4. England v New Zealand, scorecard of match 11, from Cricinfo, retrieved 4 April 2007
  5. India v Australia, scorecard of match 12, from Cricinfo, retrieved 4 April 2007
  6. 3rd Place Playoff: England v India, scorecard, from Cricinfo, retrieved 4 April 2007
  7. Final: Australia v New Zealand, scorecard, from Cricinfo, retrieved 4 April 2007
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