Australian women's cricket team in India in 2017–18
India women | Australian women | ||
Dates | 6 – 18 March 2018 | ||
Captains | Mithali Raj[n 1] | Meg Lanning | |
One Day International series | |||
Results | Australian women won the 3-match series 3–0 | ||
Most runs | Smriti Mandhana (131) | Nicole Bolton (195) | |
Most wickets | Shikha Pandey (5) | Jess Jonassen (8) |
The Australia women's cricket team played the India women's cricket team in March 2018.[1] The tour consisted of three Women's One Day Internationals (WODIs) which formed part of the 2017–20 ICC Women's Championship.[2] Following the WODI matches, both teams played in a tri-series, with England women being the third team.[3] Australia Women won the series 3–0 and became the number one ranked side in WODIs.[4][5]
Squads
India[6] | Australia[7] |
---|---|
|
Tour matches
1st 50-over match: India A Women v Australia Women
6 March 2018 Scorecard |
v | ||
Beth Mooney 115 (83) Sarika Koli 3/67 (8 overs) |
Australia Women won by 321 runs Bandra Kurla Complex, Mumbai Umpires: Bhatt Milind (Ind) and Sandeep Chavan (Ind) |
- India A Women won the toss and elected to field.
- 14 players per side (11 batting, 11 fielding).
2nd 50-over match: India A Women v Australia Women
8 March 2018 Scorecard |
v | ||
Meg Lanning 63 (55) Kavita Patil 1/21 (5 overs) |
Australia Women won by 7 wickets Bandra Kurla Complex, Mumbai Umpires: Chandrakant Mhase (Ind) and Milind Pathak (Ind) |
- India A Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- 14 players per side (11 batting, 11 fielding).
WODI series
1st WODI
v | ||
Australia Women won by 8 wickets Reliance Stadium, Vadodara Umpires: Jayaraman Madanagopal (Ind) and Nitin Pandit (Ind) Player of the match: Nicole Bolton (Aus) |
- India Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- Jemimah Rodrigues (Ind) and Nicola Carey (Aus) both made their WODI debuts.
- Nicole Bolton (Aus) scored her fourth century in WODIs.[8]
- Shikha Pandey (Ind) took her 50th wicket in WODIs.[9]
- Meg Lanning (Aus) scored her 3,000th run in WODIs.[9]
- Points: Australia Women 2, India Women 0.
2nd WODI
v | ||
Australia Women won by 60 runs Reliance Stadium, Vadodara Umpires: Anil Dandekar (Ind) and Nand Kishore (Ind) Player of the match: Nicole Bolton (Aus) |
- India Women won the toss and elected to field.
- Points: Australia Women 2, India Women 0.
3rd WODI
v | ||
Australia Women won by 97 runs Reliance Stadium, Vadodara Umpires: Anil Dandekar (Ind) and Nand Kishore (Ind) Player of the match: Alyssa Healy (Aus) |
- Australia Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- Alyssa Healy (Aus) scored her first century in WODIs.[10]
- Points: Australia Women 2, India Women 0.
Notes
- ^ Harmanpreet Kaur captained India in their first WODI match.
References
- ^ "India to host Australia, England for women's T20 tri-series". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- ^ "Australia Women to tour India in March". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- ^ "Indian Women's Cricket Team to Host Australia And England in March-April 2018". India.com. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- ^ "Healy stars as Australia sweeps India". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ "Healy slams century as Australia complete clean sweep". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ "Injured Goswami out of India's women's ODI squad". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
- ^ "Lanning back; uncapped Molineux, Carey picked for India tour". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
- ^ "Bolton century guides Stars to emphatic win". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
- ^ a b "Jonassen, Bolton rout Mithali-less India Women". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
- ^ "Healy scores first international century". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
External links
- Series home at ESPNcricinfo
- v
- t
- e
- England 1937
- New Zealand 1947–48
- England 1951
- New Zealand 1960–61
- England 1963
- New Zealand 1974–75
- West Indies 1975–76
- England 1976
- India 1983–84
- New Zealand 1985–86
- Ireland 1987
- England 1987
- New Zealand 1987–88
- New Zealand 1989–90
- New Zealand 1993–94
- New Zealand 1994–95
- New Zealand 1996–97
- England/Ireland 1998
- New Zealand 1998–99
- England/Ireland 2001
- New Zealand 2001–02
- New Zealand 2003–04
- India 2004–05
- England 2005
- New Zealand 2007–08
- New Zealand 2008–09
- England 2009
- New Zealand 2009–10
- New Zealand 2011
- India 2011–12
- England 2013
- England 2015
- Ireland 2015
- New Zealand 2015–16
- New Zealand 2016–17
- Sri Lanka 2016–17
- India 2017–18
- Malaysia 2018–19
- England 2019
- West Indies 2019–20
- South Africa 2019–20
- New Zealand 2020–21
- India 2022–23
- England 2023
- Ireland 2023
- India 2023–24
- Bangladesh 2023–24
- England 1934–35
- England 1948–49
- New Zealand 1956–57
- England 1957–58
- England 1968–69
- New Zealand 1971–72
- India 1976–77
- New Zealand 1978–79
- England 1984–85
- New Zealand 1984–85
- New Zealand 1986–87
- New Zealand 1990–91
- India 1990–91
- England 1991–92
- New Zealand 1992–93
- New Zealand 1995–96
- Pakistan 1996–97
- New Zealand 1997–98
- South Africa 1998–99
- England 1999–2000
- New Zealand 1999–2000
- New Zealand 2001–02
- England 2002–03
- New Zealand 2003–04
- New Zealand 2004–05
- India 2005–06
- New Zealand 2006–07
- New Zealand 2007
- England 2007–08
- India 2008–09
- New Zealand 2008–09
- New Zealand 2009
- New Zealand 2009–10
- England 2010–11
- New Zealand 2011
- New Zealand 2011–12
- New Zealand 2012–13
- England 2013–14
- Pakistan 2014
- West Indies 2014–15
- India 2015–16
- New Zealand 2016–17
- South Africa 2016–17
- England 2017–18
- New Zealand 2018–19
- Sri Lanka 2019–20
- New Zealand 2020–21
- India 2021–22
- England 2021–22
- Pakistan 2022–23
- West Indies 2023–24
- South Africa 2023–24
The Ashes | |
---|---|
Rose Bowl | |
Tri-Nations | |
Quadrangular Series |
World Cup Finals | |
---|---|
T20 World Cup Finals |