2009–10 Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup

Cricket tournament

2009–10 Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup
Dates23 October 200923 January 2010
Administrator(s)Cricket Australia
Cricket formatTwenty20
Tournament format(s)Single round-robin and final
Champions Victoria (1st title)
Runners-up New South Wales
Participants7
Matches22
Player of the seriesNew South Wales Alex Blackwell
Most runsNew South Wales Leah Poulton (201)
Most wicketsVictoria (state) Sarah Elliott (13)
Official websitecricket.com.au

The 2009–10 Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup was the first formal season of the Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup, which was the premier domestic women's Twenty20 cricket competition in Australia prior to the inception of the Women's Big Bash League in 2015. The tournament started on 23 October 2009 and finished on 23 January 2010. Victorian Spirit won the tournament after finishing second in the group stage and beating New South Wales Breakers in the final.[1]

Ladder

As of 17 January 2010
Pos Team Pld W L T NR Pts NRR
1  New South Wales 6 5 1 0 0 10 2.443
2  Victoria 6 5 1 0 0 10 1.580
3  Australian Capital Territory 6 3 3 0 0 6 0.224
4  Queensland 6 3 3 0 0 6 −0.813
5  South Australia 6 2 4 0 0 4 −0.319
6  Western Australia 6 2 4 0 0 4 −1.062
7  Tasmania 6 1 5 0 0 2 −1.668
Updated to match(es) played on 17 January 2010. Source: [2]
Rules for classification: The top two ranked teams qualified for the final.
  • Points system: 2 for a win, 1 each for a tie, no result or abandonment, 0 for a loss.

Fixtures

Final


23 January 2010
Scorecard
Victoria 
5/127 (20 overs)
v
 New South Wales
75 (16 overs)
Elyse Villani 29 (27)
Sarah Andrews 1/12 (4 overs)
Sarah Andrews 15 (11)
Julie Hunter 2/7 (2 overs)
Victoria won by 52 runs.
Adelaide Oval
Umpires: Andrew Collins and Andrew Willoughby
Player of the match: Clea Smith
  • Victoria won the toss and elected to bat.
  • Victoria won the 2009–10 Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup.

Statistics

Highest totals

Team[3] Score Against Venue Date
 South Australia 3/151  Western Australia St Peter's College, Adelaide 13 November 2009
 Victoria 7/146  Queensland Junction Oval, Melbourne 20 November 2009
 Western Australia 8/140  Australian Capital Territory Trinity College Oval, Perth 11 December 2009
 Queensland 6/139  Tasmania Allan Border Field, Brisbane 31 October 2009
 New South Wales 138  Australian Capital Territory Manuka Oval, Canberra 20 November 2009

Most runs

Player[4] Team Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50
Leah Poulton  New South Wales 7 7 0 201 58 28.71 162 124.07 0 1
Elyse Villani  Victoria 7 7 0 200 57 28.57 198 101.01 0 1
Alex Blackwell  New South Wales 7 7 3 191 41 47.75 157 121.65 0 0
Julie Woerner  South Australia 6 6 1 190 54* 38.00 178 106.74 0 1
Leonie Coleman  Australian Capital Territory 6 6 1 183 70* 36.60 151 121.19 0 1

Most wickets

Player[5] Team Mat Inns Overs Runs Wkts BBI Ave Econ SR 4WI
Sarah Elliott  Victoria 7 7 24.4 112 13 3/11 8.61 4.54 11.3 0
Julie Hunter  Victoria 7 7 23.0 91 12 3/5 7.58 3.95 11.5 0
Kris Britt  Australian Capital Territory 6 5 17.0 106 12 4/36 8.83 6.23 8.5 1
Jess Moyes  Western Australia 5 5 19.0 105 9 3/19 11.66 5.52 12.6 0
Erin Osborne  New South Wales 7 7 26.0 133 8 3/16 16.62 5.11 19.5 0

References

  1. ^ "Women's National Cricket League Twenty20 2009/10". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Women's National Cricket League Twenty20 2009/10 Table". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Records / Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup, 2009/10 / Highest totals". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  4. ^ "Records / Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup, 2009/10 / Most runs". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  5. ^ "Records / Australian Women's Twenty20 Cup, 2009/10 / Most wickets". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 30 November 2021.

External links

  • Series home at ESPNcricinfo
Portals:
  •  Cricket
  • flag Australia
  •  Sports
  • v
  • t
  • e
Australian cricket seasons
Teams
National
State-level
Notes
  • Italics indicate that the team no longer competes in state cricket.
BBL/WBBL
  • Adelaide Strikers
  • Brisbane Heat
  • Hobart Hurricanes
  • Melbourne Renegades
  • Melbourne Stars
  • Perth Scorchers
  • Sydney Sixers
  • Sydney Thunder
First-class
Sheffield Shield
List A
One-day league
WNCL
Twenty20
KFC T20 Big Bash
BBL
Women's T20 Cup
WBBL