2017–18 Senior Women's T20 League
Dates | 12 – 27 January 2018 |
---|---|
Administrator(s) | BCCI |
Cricket format | Twenty20 |
Tournament format(s) | Round-robin |
Champions | Delhi (1st title) |
Runners-up | Maharashtra |
Participants | 27 |
Most runs | Neha Tanwar (189) |
Most wickets | Keerthi James (17) |
Official website | bcci.tv |
2017–18 Indian domestic cricket season |
---|
Men |
Women |
The 2017–18 Senior Women's T20 League was the 10th edition of the women's Twenty20 cricket competition in India. It was held from 12 January to 27 January 2018.[1] Railways were the defending champions, who were eliminated at the Elite Group stage. Delhi won the tournament, their first, by topping the Elite Group Super League.
Competition format
[edit]The 27 teams competing in the tournament were divided into the Elite Group and the Plate Group, with the 10 teams in the Elite Group further divided into Groups A and B and the 17 teams in the Plate Group into Groups A, B and C. The tournament operated on a round-robin format, with each team playing every other team in their group once. The top two sides from each Elite Group progressed to the Elite Group Super League, which was a further round-robin group, with the winner of the group being crowned Champions. The bottom side from each Elite Group was relegated to the Plate Group for the following season. Meanwhile, the top two from each Plate Group progressed to a knockout stage, with the two teams that reached the final being promoted for the following season, as well as playing off for the Plate Group title. Matches were played using a Twenty20 format.
The groups worked on a points system with positions with the groups being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:[2]
Win: 4 points.
Tie: 2 points.
Loss: 0 points.
No Result/Abandoned: 2 points.
If points in the final table are equal, teams are separated by most wins, then head-to-head record, then Net Run Rate.
Participants
[edit]27 teams participated in the tournament. The teams were divided in 2 tiers, Elite and Plate, with the Elite level divided into Groups A and B and the Plate level divided into Groups A, B and C.
Elite Group | Plate Group | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Group A | Group B | Group A | Group B | Group C | ||
Venues
[edit]Venue | City | Country |
---|---|---|
Saurashtra Cricket Association Stadium | Rajkot | India |
Barsapara Stadium | Guwahati | India |
Goa Cricket Association Academy Ground | Goa | India |
Alur Cricket Ground | Alur | India |
Sharad Pawar Cricket Academy BKC | Mumbai | India |
T I Murugappa Ground | Chennai | India |
M. A. Chidambaram Stadium | Chennai | India |
Goa Cricket Association Academy Ground | Goa | India |
Sachin Tendulkar Gymkhana | Mumbai | India |
Just Cricket | Bangalore | India |
Elite Super League
[edit]Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | Pts | NRR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Delhi (C) | 3 | 2 | 1 | 8 | +1.105 |
2 | Maharashtra | 3 | 2 | 1 | 8 | +0.689 |
3 | Baroda | 3 | 2 | 1 | 8 | –0.083 |
4 | Goa | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | –1.583 |
- Source: BCCI[3]
Delhi
109/7 (20 overs) |
v
|
Baroda
110/2 (19.1 overs) |
Priya Punia 20 (21)
S R Sharma 3/27(4 overs) |
P A Patel 47* (56)
Mandeep Kaur 1/12 (4 overs) |
- Baroda won the toss and elected to field.
Maharashtra
107/7 (20 overs) |
v
|
Goa
56/9 (20 overs) |
Shweta 40 (34)
Sanjula Naik 2/12(3 overs) |
Yetrekar Sunanda 11 (18)
D P Vaidya 3/8 (3 overs) |
- Maharashtra won the toss and elected to bat.
Goa
104/8 (20 overs) |
v
|
Baroda
105/9 (19.3 overs) |
Sugandha Ghadi 31 (28)
Mohite 2/6 (2 overs) |
B D Surti 32 (22)
Yetrekar Sunanda 2/8 (4 overs) |
- Baroda won the toss and elected to field.
Maharashtra
58/9 (20 overs) |
v
|
Delhi
59/3 (14.4 overs) |
S R Mane 22 (36)
R A Dhar 4/14 (4 overs) |
Neha Tanwar 22 (21)
M R Magre 1/12 (4 overs) |
- Maharashtra won the toss and elected to bat.
Maharashtra
109/5(20 overs) |
v
|
Baroda
95/9 (20 overs) |
Shweta 34(34)
Radha Yadav 2/22(4 overs) |
Yastika Bhatia 24(32)
D P Vaidya 4/11 (4 overs) |
- Baroda won the toss and elected to field.
Goa
96/5 (20 overs) |
v
|
Delhi
100/1(13.5 overs) |
Sanjula Naik 34* (31)
Ankita Sinha 2/11(4 overs) |
- Delhi won the toss and elected to field.
Plate playoffs
[edit]Quarter-finals
[edit]Chhattisgarh
71 (19.2 overs) |
v
|
Jharkhand
75/3 (14.5 overs) |
Shivi Pandey 27 (46)
Niharika 3/4 (3.2 overs) |
Kavita Roy 38 (52)
Urmila Harina 1/10 (4 overs) |
- Chhattisgarh women won the toss and elected to bat.
Karnataka
127/3 (20 overs) |
v
|
Himachal Pradesh
87 (19 overs) |
S Shubha 61 (59)
N S Chauhan 1/23 (4 overs) |
N S Chauhan 30 (27)
Chandu V 4/18 (3 overs) |
- Karnataka won the toss and elected to bat.
Semi-finals
[edit]Kerala
132/6 (20 overs) |
v
|
Jharkhand
90 (18.3 overs) |
Sajana S 46 (23)
Niharika 3/30 (4 overs) |
Kavita Roy 32 (43)
Shani T 3/12 (4 overs) |
- Jharkhand won the toss and elected to field.
Karnataka
85 (18.1 overs) |
v
|
Odisha
89/2 (19 overs) |
G Divya C 32 (27)
Priyanka Priyadarshini 5/12 (4 overs) |
Pragyan P Mohanty 31 (32)
Sahana S Pawar 1/12 (4 overs) |
- Karnataka won the toss and elected to bat.
Final
[edit] 27 January 2018
Scorecard |
Odisha
108/5 (20 overs) |
v
|
Kerala
100 (19.2 overs) |
Madhuri Mehta 28 (35)
Keerthi James 2/21 (4 overs) |
Thayyil Shani 48 (48)
Sujata Mallik 2/21 (4 overs) |
- Odisha won the toss and elected to bat.
References
[edit]- ^ "fixtures". bcci.tv. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
- ^ "Inter State Women's Twenty20 Competition 2017/18 Points Tables". CricketArchive. Retrieved 24 August 2021.
- ^ "Standings". Board of Control for Cricket in India. Archived from the original on 16 January 2018. Retrieved 6 January 2018.