2014–15_Women's_National_Cricket_League_season

2014–15 Women's National Cricket League season

2014–15 Women's National Cricket League season

Cricket tournament


The 2014–15 Women's National Cricket League season was the 19th season of the Women's National Cricket League, the women's domestic limited overs cricket competition in Australia. The tournament started on 11 October 2014 and finished on 25 January 2015. For the second (after 2012–13) and last time, the tournament included semi-finals, with the top four teams on the ladder advancing. New South Wales Breakers won the tournament for the 17th time after finishing only fourth on the ladder and beating South Australian Scorpions in the final.[1][2][3] Jess Jonassen was named player of the series in recognition of her fine early season performance, before she was sidelined for the second half of the season by a knee injury.[4]

Quick Facts Dates, Administrator(s) ...

Ladder

As of 11 January 2015
More information Pos, Team ...
Updated to match(es) played on 11 January 2015. Source: [1]
Rules for classification: The top four ranked teams qualified for the semi-finals.
  • Points system: 4 for a win, 2 each for a tie or a no result, 0 for a loss, 1 each for an abandoned match.
  • Bonus point system: 2 for win with a run rate twice that of the opposition, 1 for win with a run rate 1.25 times that of the opposition.

Fixtures

Round-robin phase



Match 2
11 October 2014
Scorecard
(H) Victoria 
v



Match 5
25 October 2014
Scorecard
v

Match 6
25 October 2014
Scorecard
v

Match 7
29 November 2014
Scorecard
v
 Tasmania (H)

Match 8
29 November 2014
Scorecard
(H) Victoria 
v


Match 10
13 December 2014
Scorecard
v
 Tasmania (H)


Match 12
13 December 2014
Scorecard
v


Match 14
20 December 2014
Scorecard
v


Match 16
1 January 2015
Scorecard
v


Match 18
4 January 2015
Scorecard
v
 Victoria (H)


Match 20
10 January 2015
Scorecard
v


Knockout phase


Overview


Semifinals Finals
      
1  Victoria 175
4  New South Wales 3/179
4  New South Wales 4/279
3  South Australia 135
2  Queensland 90
3  South Australia 7/91

Semi-final 1


23 January 2015
Scorecard
Victoria 
175 (49.2 overs)
v
 New South Wales
3/179 (46.3 overs)
Meg Lanning 41 (76)
Sarah Coyte 3/33 (9.2 overs)
Alex Blackwell 73 (121)
Emma Kearney 1/14 (10 overs)
New South Wales won by 7 wickets (with 21 balls remaining)
Blacktown International Sportspark, Sydney
Umpires: Greg Davidson and Phillip Gillespie
Player of the match: Ellyse Perry (New South Wales)
  • Victoria won the toss and elected to bat
  • New South Wales qualified for the final

Semi-final 2


23 January 2015
Scorecard
Queensland 
90 (28.4 overs)
v
 South Australia
7/91 (30 overs)
Jodie Fields 29 (61)
Megan Schutt 4/20 (8.2 overs)
Sarah Taylor 21* (50)
Holly Ferling 2/15 (5 overs)
South Australia won by 3 wickets (with 120 balls remaining)
Bankstown Oval, Sydney
Umpires: Damien Mealey and Tony Wilds
Player of the match: Megan Schutt (South Australia)
  • Queensland won the toss and elected to bat
  • South Australia qualified for the final

Final


25 January 2015
Scorecard
New South Wales 
4/279 (50 overs)
v
 South Australia
135 (44.5 overs)
Rachael Haynes 79 (89)
Samantha Betts 2/44 (7 overs)
Bridget Patterson 26 (58)
Erin Osborne 3/33 (7.5 overs)
New South Wales won by 144 runs
Blacktown International Sportspark, Sydney
Umpires: Damien Mealey and Greg Davidson
Player of the match: Rachael Haynes (New South Wales)
  • South Australia won the toss and elected to field.
  • New South Wales won the 2014–15 Women's National Cricket League.

Statistics

Highest totals

More information Team, Score ...

Most runs

More information Player, Team ...

Most wickets

More information Player, Team ...

References

Notes

  1. "Women's National Cricket League Table 2014/15 Table". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  2. Cricket Network (13 August 2014). "Women's cricket partners with BBL: WNCL, WT20 domestic schedules released". cricket.com.au. Cricket Australia. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  3. Sthalekar, Lisa (28 January 2015). "Experience the difference for NSW". cricket.com.au. Cricket Australia. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  4. Trehan, Dev (21 July 2015). "Australians to watch ahead of Women's Ashes with England". Sky Sports. Retrieved 8 June 2018.

Bibliography


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