New Zealand women's cricket team in South Africa in 2016–17
International cricket tour
New Zealand women's tour of South Africa in 2016–17 | |||
---|---|---|---|
South Africa women | New Zealand women | ||
Dates | 6 – 24 October 2016 | ||
Captains | Dane van Niekerk | Suzie Bates | |
One Day International series | |||
Results | New Zealand women won the 7-match series 5–2 | ||
Most runs | Mignon du Preez (232) | Amy Satterthwaite (344) | |
Most wickets | Ayabonga Khaka (11) | Amy Satterthwaite (11) | |
Player of the series | Amy Satterthwaite (New Zealand Women) |
New Zealand women's cricket team toured South Africa in October 2016. The tour consisted of a series of seven One day internationals and a warm-up match. Three of the seven WODIs were part of the ongoing 2014–16 ICC Women's Championship.[1][2]
The third match of the series was the 1,000th women's ODI match.[3] New Zealand won the series 5–2.[4]
Squads
South Africa[5] | New Zealand[6] |
---|---|
|
Tour match
One day: South Africa Emerging Players Women vs New Zealand Women
4 October Scorecard |
v | South Africa Emerging Players Women 161/9 (50 overs) | |
New Zealand Women won by 137 runs Senwes Park, Potchefstroom Umpires: Allahudien Paleker (SA) and Brad White (SA) |
- New Zealand Women won the toss and elected to bat.
ODI series
1st ODI
v | ||
New Zealand Women won by 12 runs Diamond Oval, Kimberley Umpires: Allahudien Paleker (SA) and Brad White (SA) Player of the match: Amy Satterthwaite (New Zealand Women) |
- South Africa Women won the toss and elected to field.
- ICC Women's Championship points: South Africa Women 0, New Zealand Women 2
2nd ODI
v | ||
South Africa Women won by 4 wickets Diamond Oval, Kimberley Umpires: Ryan Hendricks (SA) and Allahudien Paleker (SA) Player of the match: Mignon du Preez (South Africa Women) |
- South Africa Women won the toss and elected to field.
- This was South Africa's first win against New Zealand in a women's ODI.[7]
- ICC Women's Championship points: South Africa Women 2, New Zealand Women 0
3rd ODI
v | ||
New Zealand Women won by 9 wickets Diamond Oval, Kimberley Umpires: Allahudien Paleker (SA) and Brad White (SA) Player of the match: Holly Huddleston (New Zealand Women) |
- South Africa Women won the toss and elected to bat.
- ICC Women's Championship points: South Africa Women 0, New Zealand Women 2
4th ODI
17 October Scorecard |
v | ||
New Zealand Women won by 8 wickets Boland Park, Paarl Umpires: Ryan Hendricks (SA) and Brad White (SA) Player of the match: Amy Satterthwaite (NZ) |
- New Zealand Women won the toss and elected to field.
5th ODI
19 October Scorecard |
v | ||
New Zealand Women won by 95 runs Boland Park, Paarl Umpires: Allahudien Paleker (SA) and Brad White (SA) Player of the match: Natalie Dodd (New Zealand Women) |
- New Zealand Women won the toss and elected to bat.
6th ODI
22 October Scorecard |
v | ||
South Africa Women won by 5 wickets Boland Park, Paarl Umpires: Ryan Hendricks (SA) and Allahudien Paleker (SA) Player of the match: Masabata Klaas (South Africa Women) |
- South Africa Women won the toss and elected to field.
- Sinalo Jafta (South Africa Women) made her ODI debut.
7th ODI
24 October Scorecard |
v | ||
New Zealand Women won by 126 runs Boland Park, Paarl Umpires: Allahudien Paleker (SA) and Brad White (SA) Player of the match: Katey Martin (New Zealand Women) |
- New Zealand Women won the toss and elected to bat.
References
- ^ "New Zealand Women tour of South Africa". Cricinfo.
- ^ "Inaugural ICC Women's Championship to commence in August". www.icc-cricket.com. Archived from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- ^ "South Africa and New Zealand to feature in 1000th women's ODI". ICC. 12 October 2016. Archived from the original on 13 October 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
- ^ "Martin, spinners thrash SA for 5-2". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
- ^ "Van Niekerk set for first series as SA Women captain". Cricinfo. 7 October 2016.
- ^ "New Zealand Women squad". Cricinfo.
- ^ "Du Preez fifty gives SA Women historic win". ESPN Cricinfo. 11 October 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
External links
- Series Home on ESPN
- v
- t
- e
- England 1954
- Australia 1956–57
- England 1966
- Australia 1971–72
- South Africa 1971–72
- Australia 1978–79
- England/Netherlands 1984
- Australia 1984–85
- India 1984–85
- Australia 1986–87
- Australia 1990–91
- Australia 1992–93
- Australia 1995–96
- England/Ireland 1996
- Australia 1997–98
- Australia 1999–2000
- Australia 2001–02
- Ireland/Netherlands 2002
- India 2003–04
- Australia 2003–04
- England/Ireland 2004
- Australia 2004–05
- Australia 2006–07
- Australia 2007
- England 2007
- Australia 2008–09
- Australia 2009
- Australia 2009–10
- England 2010
- Australia 2011
- Australia 2011–12
- Australia 2012-13
- West Indies 2013–14
- West Indies 2014–15
- India 2015
- Australia 2016–17
- South Africa 2016–17
- Pakistan/UAE 2017–18
- England 2018
- Ireland 2018
- Australia 2018–19
- Australia 2020–21
- England 2021
- West Indies 2022–23
- Sri Lanka 2023
- South Africa 2023–24
- England 1934–35
- Australia 1947–48
- England 1948–49
- England 1957–58
- Australia 1960–61
- England 1968–69
- Australia 1974–75
- India 1976–77
- Australia in 1985–86
- Australia 1987–88
- Australia 1989–90
- England 1991–92
- Australia 1993–94
- India 1994–95
- Australia 1994–95
- Pakistan 1996–97
- Australia 1996–97
- South Africa 1998–99
- Australia 1998–99
- England 1999–2000
- England 2000–01
- Australia 2001–02
- Australia 2003–04
- India 2005–06
- Australia 2007–08
- England 2007–08
- Australia 2008–09
- Australia 2009–10
- Australia 2010–11
- England 2011–12
- West Indies 2013–14
- England 2014–15
- Sri Lanka 2015–16
- Australia 2015–16
- Australia 2016–17
- Pakistan 2016–17
- West Indies 2017–18
- India 2018–19
- South Africa 2019–20
- Australia 2020–21
- England 2020–21
- India 2021–22
- Bangladesh 2022–23
- Pakistan 2023–24
Rose Bowl | |
---|---|
Tri-Nations | |
Quadrangular Series |
World Cup finals |
---|
This article about an international cricket tour of South Africa is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e