Dubai, Nov 27 (IBNS) : Captain Harmanpreet Kaur leads a bunch of India batters making notable advances in the MRF Tyres ICC Women’s T20I Player Rankings while players from Australia and England have unsurprisingly made rapid gains in the latest update following the ICC Women’s World T20 2018.
Kaur, who was the second highest run-maker during the 10-team event after Australia opener Alyssa Healy, has gained three slots to reach third position. Kaur aggregated 183 runs including a match-winning 103 in the tournament opener against New Zealand.
Jemimah Rodrigues (up nine places to a career-best sixth) and left-handed opener Smriti Mandhana (up seven places to a career-best 10th) are the others from her team to move up after contributing in their team’s campaign in the Caribbean, which ended against England in the semi-finals.
Healy has gained four slots to reach eighth position for her player of the tournament effort, which saw her score 225 runs. Other batters to gain in the latest rankings update include Javeria Khan of Pakistan, who has gained seven places to reach a career-best 14th position, and Clare Shillington of Ireland, who has gained one slot to take the 19th slot.
In the bowlers’ list led by Australia’s Megan Schutt, New Zealand spinner Leigh Kasperek’s seven wickets have lifted her seven places to third position while finalists England’s Sophie Ecclestone has moved from 16th to fourth and fast bowler Anya Shrubsole from 12th to sixth place after a seven-wicket effort, which included a hat-trick against South Africa.
Other bowlers to improve their rankings include New Zealand leg-spinner Amelia Kerr (up 15 places to a career-best seventh), Delisa Kimmince of Australia (up 10 places to eighth), South Africa’s Shabnim Ismail (up 11 places to 10th), Pakistan’s Nashra Sandhu (up 25 places to a career-best 10th), Shashikala Siriwardene of Sri Lanka (up six places to 17th) and Salma Khatun of Bangladesh (up two places to 14th).
Windies’ Deandra Dottin has shot up from fourth to second in the list of all-rounders. She has overtaken Australia’s Ellyse Perry and compatriot Hayley Mathews after finishing with 121 runs and 10 wickets in the tournament. South Africa captain Dane van Niekerk has advanced one slot to reach fifth position among all-rounders.
Meanwhile, in the MRF Tyres ICC Women’s T20I Team Rankings, England have overtaken New Zealand to second position in the list which continues to be topped by Meg Lanning-led Australia with 283 points after their fourth ICC Women’s World T20 title.
MRF Tyres ICC Women’s T20I Team Rankings (top 10 as of 27 November):
Rank Team Points
1 Australia 283
2 England 274
3 New Zealand 273
4 Windies 265
5 India 256
6 South Africa 242
7 Pakistan 225
8 Sri Lanka 208
9 Bangladesh 191
10 Ireland 185
MRF Tyres ICC Women’s T20I Player Rankings (as on 27 November, after the ICC Women’s World T20 2018):
BATTERS (TOP 20)
Rank (+/-) Player Team Points Avge S/R Highest Rating
1 ( - ) Suzie Bates NZ 694 30.68 112 699 v Pak at Guyana 2018
2 ( - ) Stafanie Taylor Win 656 35.68 105 770 v NZ at St Lucia 2010
3 (+3) H. Kaur Ind 632 29.01 105 635 v Aus at Guyana 2018
4 (-1) Meg Lanning Aus 623 34.04 117 721 v Win at Melbourne 2014
5 ( - ) Deandra Dottin Win 614 25.40 127 651 v Eng at Bridgetown 2013
6 (+9) J. Rodriques Ind 607! 32.92 129 607 v Eng at Antigua 2018
7 (-3) Beth Mooney Aus 601 31.69 120 673 v Ind at Mumbai 2018
8 (+4) Alyssa Healy Aus 575! 22.80 122 575 v Eng at Antigua 2018
9 (-2) Mithali Raj Ind 570 37.42 100 731 v Win at Ahmedabad 2011
10 (+7) Smriti Mandhana Ind 567! 22.73 114 567 v Eng at Antigua 2018
11 (-2) Sophie Devine NZ 560 26.89 125 569 v Aus at Sydney 2018
12 (-2) Natalie Sciver Eng 553 23.72 110 562 v Ind at Antigua 2018
13 (-5) Elyse Villani Aus 542 28.52 118 597 v Ire at Dublin 2015
14 (+7) Javeria Khan Pak 526! 21.55 92 526 v NZ at Guyana 2018
15 (-3) Hayley Matthews Win 520 19.54 110 539 v SL at St Lucia 2018
16 ( - ) Lizelle Lee SA 516 23.30 102 520 v Win at Trinidad 2018
17 (-3) D. van Niekerk SA 514 28.30 93 558 v Eng at Taunton 2018
18 (+1) Bismah Maroof Pak 511 25.01 89 581 v Ban at Karachi 2015
19 (+1) Clare Shillington Ire 508 18.52 98 613 v Pak at Dublin 2013
20 (-2) Mignon du Preez SA 504 22.01 98 556 v Eng at Johannesburg 2016
BOWLERS (top 20)
Rank (+/-) Player Team Points Avge Eco. Highest Rating
1 ( - ) Megan Schutt Aus 728 15.45 5.76 736 v Pak at Guyana 2018
2 ( - ) Poonam Yadav Ind 662 13.62 5.56 672 v Ire at Guyana 2018
3 (+7) Leigh Kasperek NZ 647 12.37 5.99 653 v Ire at Dublin 2018
4 (+12) S. Ecclestone Eng 643! 19.91 6.60 643 v Aus at Antigua 2018
5 (+4) Ellyse Perry Aus 641 19.19 5.90 687 v NZ at Nelson 2010
6 (+6) Anya Shrubsole Eng 638 13.70 5.53 690 v Win at Dharamsala 2016
7 (+15) Amelia Kerr NZ 612! 22.78 5.78 612 v Ire at Guyana 2018
8 (+10) D. Kimmince Aus 606! 19.00 6.54 606 v Eng at Antigua 2018
9 (-1) Nida Dar Pak 596 16.96 5.04 635 v SA at Doha 2014
10= (+11) Shabnim Ismail SA 587 19.07 6.03 642 v Aus at Nagpur 2016
(+25) Nashra Sandhu Pak 587*! 17.94 5.01 587 v NZ at Guyana 2018
12 (+24) Sophie Molineux Aus 581*! 20.06 5.84 581 v Eng at Antigua 2018
13 (-7) Rumana Ahmed Ban 579 19.34 5.37 617 v Win at Guyana 2018
14= (+2) Salma Khatun Ban 576 18.08 4.88 655 v Ire at Sylhet 2014
(-11) Hayley Matthews Win 576 16.39 5.83 648 v SA at Trinidad 2018
16 (+8) Lea Tahuhu NZ 569 20.70 5.87 606 v Pak at Sharjah 2017
17 (+6) S. Siriwardene SL 567 19.76 5.55 627 v Eng at Sylhet 2014
18 (-13) Danielle Hazell Eng 562 20.75 5.55 687 v NZ at Chelmsford 2011
19 (-15) Anam Amin Pak 553 21.05 5.03 656 v Ban at Delhi 2016
20 (-6) Anuja Patil Ind 552 22.07 5.96 582 v SA at Potchefstroom 2018
ALL-ROUNDERS (top five)
Rank (+/-) Player Team Points Highest Rating
1 ( - ) Stafanie Taylor Win 353 429 v SL at Bridgetown 2012
2 (+2) Deandra Dottin Win 321 330 v Eng at St Lucia 2018
3 ( - ) Ellyse Perry Aus 310 321 v NZ at Nagpur 2016
4 (-2) Hayley Matthews Win 299 330 v NZ at Bay Oval 2018
5 (+1) D. van Niekerk SA 276 317 v Aus at Nagpur 2016
Support Our Journalism
We cannot do without you.. your contribution supports unbiased journalism
IBNS is not driven by any ism- not wokeism, not racism, not skewed secularism, not hyper right-wing or left liberal ideals, nor by any hardline religious beliefs or hyper nationalism. We want to serve you good old objective news, as they are. We do not judge or preach. We let people decide for themselves. We only try to present factual and well-sourced news.