Ireland women's cricket team in the Netherlands in 2011
Ireland women's cricket team in the Netherlands in 2011 | |||
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Netherlands | Ireland | ||
Date | 20 August 2011 | ||
Captains | Helmien Rambaldo | Isobel Joyce | |
Twenty20 International series | |||
Results | Ireland won the 2-match series 2–0 | ||
Most runs | Esther Lanser (77) | Cecelia Joyce (64) | |
Most wickets | Esther de Lange (2) | Kim Garth (3) Elena Tice (3) Isobel Joyce (3) |
The Ireland women's cricket team toured the Netherlands in August 2011. They played the Netherlands in 2 Twenty20 Internationals, winning the series 2–0. The series followed the 2011 Women's European Championship, which was also held in the Netherlands.[1][2]
Squads
Netherlands[3] | Ireland[4] |
---|---|
|
WT20I Series
1st T20I
20 August 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
Ireland Women won by 8 wickets Sportpark Maarschalkerweerd, Utrecht Umpires: Ashraf Din (Net) and Bart Hartong (Net) |
- Ireland Women won the toss and elected to field.
2nd T20I
20 August 2011 Scorecard |
v | ||
Ireland Women won by 13 runs Sportpark Maarschalkerweerd, Utrecht Umpires: Ashraf Din (Net) and Bart Hartong (Net) |
- Ireland Women won the toss and elected to bat.
References
- ^ "Ireland Women tour of Netherlands 2011". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
- ^ "Ireland Women in Netherlands 2011". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
- ^ "Netherlands Women Squad/Ireland Women tour of Netherlands 2011". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
- ^ "Ireland Women Squad/Ireland Women tour of Netherlands 2011". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
External links
- Ireland Women tour of Netherlands 2011 from Cricinfo
- v
- t
- e
Ireland women's cricket team
- Australia 1987
- England 1990
- New Zealand 1996
- South Africa 1997
- Australia 1998
- Pakistan 2000
- Australia 2001
- New Zealand 2002
- India 2002
- New Zealand 2004
- India 2006
- Netherlands 2006
- West Indies 2008
- Pakistan 2009
- Bangladesh 2012
- Pakistan 2012
- Pakistan 2013
- Australia 2015
- South Africa 2016
- Bangladesh 2016
- Bangladesh 2018
- New Zealand 2018
- West Indies 2019
Zimbabwe 2019- Scotland 2021
- Netherlands 2021
- South Africa 2022
- Australia 2023
Europe | |
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Tri-Nations | |
Quadrangular Series | |
Challenge Series | |
See also |