West Indies women's cricket team in India in 2010–11
West Indies women's cricket team in India in 2010–11 | |||
---|---|---|---|
India | West Indies | ||
Dates | 8 – 24 January 2011 | ||
Captains | Jhulan Goswami | Merissa Aguilleira | |
One Day International series | |||
Results | India won the 5-match series 3–2 | ||
Most runs | Mithali Raj (171) | Stafanie Taylor (220) | |
Most wickets | Gouher Sultana (7) Priyanka Roy (7) Diana David (7) | Stafanie Taylor (9) | |
Twenty20 International series | |||
Results | India won the 3-match series 2–1 | ||
Most runs | Mithali Raj (86) | Shanel Daley (64) | |
Most wickets | Priyanka Roy (8) | Shemaine Campbelle (4) |
The West Indies women's cricket team toured India in January 2011. They played against India in five One Day Internationals and three Twenty20 Internationals, losing the ODI series 3–2 and losing the T20I series 2–1.[1][2]
Squads
India[3] | West Indies[4] |
---|---|
Tour Match: Indian Board President's XI v West Indies
8 January 2011 Scorecard |
Indian Board President's XI 183/9 (50 overs) | v | |
West Indies Women won by 5 wickets Bandra Kurla Complex Ground, Mumbai Umpires: Rajesh Deshpande (Ind) and Sameer Bandekar (Ind) |
- Indian Board President's Women XI won the toss and elected to bat.
WODI Series
1st ODI
10 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
West Indies Women won by 9 wickets Bandra Kurla Complex Ground, Mumbai Umpires: Ganesh Iyer (Ind) and Vishwas Nerurkar (Ind) |
- India Women won the toss and elected to bat.
2nd ODI
13 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
India Women won by 10 runs IPCL Sports Complex Ground, Vadodara Umpires: Ravi Deshmukh (Ind) and Vishwas Nerurkar (Ind) |
- West Indies Women won the toss and elected to field.
- June Ogle (WI) made her WODI debut.
3rd ODI
15 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
West Indies Women won by 3 wickets IPCL Sports Complex Ground, Vadodara Umpires: Ravi Deshmukh (Ind) and Vishwas Nerurkar (Ind) |
- India Women won the toss and elected to bat.
4th ODI
18 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
India Women won by 10 runs Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Ground, Rajkot Umpires: Darabshah Doodhwala (Ind) and Piyush Khakhar (Ind) |
- West Indies Women won the toss and elected to field.
- Samantha Lobatto and Neha Tanwar (Ind) both made their WODI debuts.
5th ODI
19 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
India Women won by 57 runs Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Ground, Rajkot Umpires: Darabshah Doodhwala (Ind) and Piyush Khakhar (Ind) |
- India Women won the toss and elected to bat.
WT20I Series
1st T20I
22 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
India Women won by 6 wickets Sarder Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad Umpires: Adil Palia (Ind) and Darabshah Doodhwala (Ind) |
- West Indies Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- Samantha Lobatto (Ind) made her WT20I debut.
2nd T20I
23 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
West Indies Women won by 3 runs Sarder Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad Umpires: Adil Palia (Ind) and Darabshah Doodhwala (Ind) |
- West Indies Women won the toss and elected to bat.
3rd T20I
24 January 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
India Women won by 15 runs Sarder Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad Umpires: Adil Palia (Ind) and Piyush Khakhar (Ind) |
- India Women won the toss and elected to bat.
References
- ^ "West Indies Women tour of India 2010/11". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
- ^ "West Indies Women in India 2010/11". CricketArchive. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
- ^ "West Indies Women tour of India 2010/11/India Women One-Day Squad". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
- ^ "West Indies Women tour of India 2010/11/West Indies Women Squad". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
External links
- West Indies Women tour of India 2010/11 from Cricinfo
- v
- t
- e
India women's national cricket team
- Australia/New Zealand 1976–77
- England 1986
- Australia 1990–91
- New Zealand 1994–95
- England 1999
- South Africa 2001–02
- England/Ireland 2002
- Australia/New Zealand 2005–06
- England/Ireland 2006
- England 2008
- Australia 2008–09
- West Indies 2011–12
- England 2012
- Bangladesh 2013–14
- England 2014
- Australia 2015–16
- South Africa 2017–18
- Sri Lanka 2018–19
- New Zealand 2018–19
- West Indies 2019–20
- England 2021
- Australia 2021–22
- New Zealand 2021–22
- Sri Lanka 2022
- England 2022
- Bangladesh 2023
- West Indies 1976–77
- Australia 1983–84
- New Zealand 1984–85
- England 1995–96
- England 2001–02
- New Zealand 2003–04
- West Indies 2003–04
- Australia 2004–05
- England 2005–06
- England 2009–10
- West Indies 2010–11
- Australia 2011–12
- Bangladesh 2012–13
- Sri Lanka 2013–14
- South Africa 2014–15
- New Zealand 2015
- Sri Lanka 2015–16
- West Indies 2016–17
- Australia 2017–18
- England 2017–18
- England 2018–19
- South Africa 2019–20
- South Africa 2020–21
- Australia 2022–23
- England 2023–24
- Australia 2023–24
Women's Asia Cup | |
---|---|
Tri-Nations | |
Quadrangular Series |
World Cup finals |
---|