2009 Women's Cricket World Cup


The 2009 ICC Women's Cricket World Cup was the ninth edition of the tournament and was held in Australia from 7 to 22 March 2009, using the sport's One Day International format.

Teams

Host selection and venues

The ICC, along with Cricket Australia, announced in July 2008 that six venues in New South Wales would host the tournament. The venues chosen were North Sydney Oval, Bankstown Oval and Drummoyne Oval, Manuka Oval in Canberra, No. 1 Sports Ground in Newcastle and Bradman Oval in Bowral. In addition, four grounds in Sydney hosted the nine warm-up matches for the tournament.

Qualification

Six of the eight teams involved in the tournament qualified through finishing in the top six in the previous tournament; Australia, India, England, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and West Indies therefore qualified automatically for the tournament. The final two places were awarded to Pakistan and South Africa; the two finalists of the 2008 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier.

Rules and regulations

Matches

All matches started at 10am local time and were played to standard One Day International playing conditions. All matches were to be 50 overs a side unless stated otherwise by the umpires or match referee, with each bowler entitled to bowl a maximum of 10 overs per match.
In the event of bad weather, the side batting second must have batted a minimum of 20 overs for a result to be declared. In the event of interrupted matches, the Duckworth-Lewis method was applied to determine the result or revised target.

Tournament points and format

Throughout the group and Super Six stages, two points were awarded to teams for a win, one point for a tie or matches that ended with no result, and no points were awarded for a defeat.
At the conclusion of the group stage, the three teams in each group with the most points advanced to the Super Six stage of the tournament, while the two teams eliminated played in a 7th/8th place playoff. Points from matches between teams both qualifying for the Super Six stage were carried forward, therefore all six teams to advance began the Super Sixes with two games played. Following the conclusion of the Super Sixes, the top two teams contested the final, third and fourth contested a third-place play-off, while fifth and sixth played each other for fifth place.

Results

Group Stage

The eight qualifying teams were split into two groups for the group stage, with traditional rivals Australia and New Zealand drawn together in Group A alongside South Africa and the West Indies, while India and Pakistan were drawn together in Group B along with England and Sri Lanka. The group stage took place between 7 and 12 March 2009.

Group A

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Group B

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Super Sixes

The top three teams in each group moved on to the Super Six stage which is scored as a complete round-robin. But each of the six teams played only three new matches, rather than five—each group's three representatives carried forward their result against each other rather than play again. Thus the table, showing five matches for each team, covers all matches between the Super Six qualifiers, including those from the group stage.
The top two teams in the final table qualified for the final.
The Super Six stage of the tournament took place between 14 and 19 March 2009.
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Play-Offs

3rd place playoff

5th place playoff

7th place playoff

Final

Awards

Team of the tournament

The day after the final, the ICC announced its World Cup XI, as selected by a panel led by Belinda Clark. The eleven included five members of England's tournament-winning squad, with three coming from India and two coming from runners-up New Zealand.
  1. Suzie Bates
  2. Shelley Nitschke
  3. Claire Taylor
  4. Mithali Raj
  5. Charlotte Edwards
  6. Kate Pulford
  7. Sarah Taylor
  8. Amita Sharma
  9. Katherine Brunt
  10. Priyanka Roy
  11. Laura Marsh
New Zealand's Sophie Devine was named as the side's twelfth man.

Player of the tournament

The award for player of the tournament was selected by the same panel that chose the team of the tournament, and was awarded to the leading run-scorer Claire Taylor.