England women's cricket team in Sri Lanka in 2016–17
International cricket tour
England women's cricket team in Sri Lanka in 2016–17 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Sri Lanka women | England women | ||
Dates | 9 – 17 November 2016 | ||
Captains | Inoka Ranaweera | Heather Knight (1st, 2nd & 4th WODI) Danielle Hazell (3rd WODI)[1] | |
One Day International series | |||
Results | England women won the 4-match series 4–0 | ||
Most runs | Nipuni Hansika (93) | Nat Sciver (185) | |
Most wickets | Inoka Ranaweera (8) | Danielle Hazell (9) |
England women's cricket team toured Sri Lanka in November 2016. The tour consisted of a series of four One Day Internationals, in which the final three were part of the 2014–16 ICC Women's Championship.[2] England women won the series 4–0.
Squads
Sri Lanka | England[3] |
---|---|
|
|
ODI series
1st ODI
9 November 2016 Scorecard |
v | ||
Dilani Manodara 27 (46) Heather Knight 2/29 (8 overs) |
England Women won by 8 wickets Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo Umpires: Rohitha Kottahachchi (SL) and Pradeep Udawatta (SL) |
- Sri Lanka Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- Beth Langston (England Women) made her ODI debut.
2nd ODI
v | ||
Heather Knight 53 (58) Inoka Ranaweera 3/48 (10 overs) |
England Women won by 122 runs R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo Umpires: Hemantha Boteju (SL) and Lyndon Hannibal (SL) |
- Sri Lanka Women won the toss and elected to field.
- Play was suspended after 10.3 overs of England Women's innings due to rain but no overs were lost.
- ICC Women's Championship points: England Women 2, Sri Lanka Women 0.
- By winning this match, England Women qualified for the 2017 Women's Cricket World Cup.[4]
3rd ODI
v | ||
Nipuni Hansika 29 (66) Alex Hartley 2/23 (6 overs) |
England Women won by 5 wickets R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo Umpires: Deepal Gunawardene (SL) and Raveendra Wimalasiri (SL) |
- Sri Lanka Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- This was Danielle Hazell's first match as England Women's captain.
- ICC Women's Championship points: England Women 2, Sri Lanka Women 0.
4th ODI
v | ||
England Women won by 162 runs R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo Umpires: Nilan De Silva (SL) and Ruchira Palliyaguruge (SL) |
- England Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- Rain stopped play after England Women's innings; no further play was possible on 17 November. Play resumed on 18 November.[5]
- Nat Sciver and Danielle Hazell's 104-run partnership was the highest by England Women for the seventh wicket and equalled the overall highest for the seventh wicket in Women's One Day International cricket.
- Laura Marsh (Eng) took her 100th WODI wicket.[6]
- ICC Women's Championship points: England Women 2, Sri Lanka Women 0.
References
- ^ a b "England v Sri Lanka: Heather Knight & Katherine Brunt miss third ODI". BBC Sport. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
- ^ "England women confirm Sri Lanka ODI tour". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
- ^ "England Women's squad named for Sri Lanka tour". England & Wales Cricket Board. 4 September 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
- ^ "ICC Women's World Cup 2017: England qualify after beating Sri Lanka in Colombo". BBC Sport. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
- ^ "England v Sri Lanka: Nat Sciver and Danielle Hazell star before rain". BBC Sport. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
- ^ "England women win series 4-0 as Sri Lanka collapse to 78 all out". BBC Sport. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
External links
- Series home at ESPN Cricinfo
- v
- t
- e
- Australia/New Zealand 1934–35
- Australia/New Zealand 1948–49
- Australia/New Zealand 1957–58
- South Africa 1960–61
- Australia/New Zealand 1968–69
- Australia 1984–85
- Ireland 1990
- Australia/New Zealand 1991–92
- India 1995–96
- Australia/New Zealand 1999–2000
- New Zealand 2000–01
- India 2001–02
- Australia 2002–03
- South Africa 2003–04
- South Africa 2004–05
- India/Sri Lanka 2005–06
- Australia/New Zealand 2007–08
- West Indies 2009–10
- India 2009–10
- Sri Lanka 2010–11
- Australia 2010–11
- South Africa 2011–12
- New Zealand 2011–12
- West Indies 2013–14
- Australia 2013–14
- New Zealand 2014–15
- South Africa 2015–16
- Sri Lanka 2016–17
- West Indies 2016–17
- India 2017–18
- Australia 2017–18
- India 2018–19
- Sri Lanka 2018–19
- Pakistan 2019–20
- New Zealand 2020–21
- Pakistan 2021–22
- Australia 2021–22
- West Indies 2022–23
- India 2023–24
- Australia 1937
- Australia 1951
- New Zealand 1954
- Australia 1963
- New Zealand 1966
- Australia 1976
- West Indies 1979
- New Zealand 1984
- India 1986
- Australia 1987
- New Zealand 1996
- South Africa 1997
- Australia 1998
- India 1999
- South Africa 2000
- Australia 2001
- India 2002
- South Africa 2003
- New Zealand 2004
- Australia 2005
- India 2006
- South Africa 2007
- New Zealand 2007
- West Indies 2008
- South Africa 2008
- India 2008
- Australia 2009
- Ireland 2010
- New Zealand 2010
- Ireland 2012
- India 2012
- Pakistan 2012
- West Indies 2012
- Pakistan 2013
- Australia 2013
- India 2014
- South Africa 2014
- Australia 2015
- Pakistan 2016
- South Africa 2018
- New Zealand 2018
- West Indies 2019
- Australia 2019
- West Indies 2020
- India 2021
- New Zealand 2021
- South Africa 2022
- India 2022
- Australia 2023
- Sri Lanka 2023
- Pakistan 2024
The Ashes | |
---|---|
Europe | |
Tri-Nations | |
Quadrangular Series | |
Commonwealth Games |
World Cup finals | |
---|---|
T20 World Cup finals |