Caribbean National Weekly

ICC Announces Women’s World Cup Qualifier 2021 Schedule

By Sheri-kae McLeod··1 min read
ICC Announces Women’s World Cup Qualifier 2021 Schedule
Key Points(5)
  • The International Cricket Council (ICC) has released its Women’s World Cup <a href="https://www.cricketworldcup.com/news/2325733">Qualifier 2021 schedule</a> which sees West Indies Women having their first match, on the opening day, against Papua New Guinea.
  • The qualifiers will be played across four venues in Zimbabwe from November 21 to December 5.
  • The 10-team tournament gets off with a set of warm-up matches on November 19, after which four teams will play concurrently on November 21.
  • West Indies will play Papua New Guinea at Sunrise Cricket Club, Asian rivals Pakistan and Bangladesh will play at the Old Hararians Club, Thailand face hosts Zimbabwe at the Harare Sports Club and Ireland play Netherlands at the Takashinga Cricket Club.
  • There is no knockout stage in the competition, with the preliminary league, consisting of five teams each in two groups, followed by a Super Six stage to decide the final positions at the end of 29 matches.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) has released its Women’s World Cup Qualifier 2021 schedule which sees West Indies Women having their first match, on the opening day, against Papua New Guinea.

The qualifiers will be played across four venues in Zimbabwe from November 21 to December 5.

The 10-team tournament gets off with a set of warm-up matches on November 19, after which four teams will play concurrently on November 21.

West Indies will play Papua New Guinea at Sunrise Cricket Club, Asian rivals Pakistan and Bangladesh will play at the Old Hararians Club, Thailand face hosts Zimbabwe at the Harare Sports Club and Ireland play Netherlands at the Takashinga Cricket Club.

The match between the 2016 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup champions West Indies and Sri Lanka will be another high-profile match during the preliminary league of the tournament which sees the West Indies, Sri Lanka, Ireland, Papua New Guinea and the Netherlands in Group A, and Pakistan, Bangladesh, Thailand, Zimbabwe and the United States in Group B.

There is no knockout stage in the competition, with the preliminary league, consisting of five teams each in two groups, followed by a Super Six stage to decide the final positions at the end of 29 matches.

The Zimbabwe tournament is an important one on the calendar as it decides three qualifiers for the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2022 to be held in New Zealand from March 4 to April 3, joining five teams who have already qualified through the ICC Women’s Championship – Australia, England, India, South Africa and hosts New Zealand.

The three qualifiers as well as the next two teams will also ensure places in the next ICC Women’s Championship (IWC) along with the top five from last time, as the number of teams in the third cycle of the IWC goes up from eight to 10 teams.

CMC/ed/2021

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