Women's County Championship

Women's County Championship
Administrator England and Wales Cricket Board
Format Limited overs cricket
First tournament 1997
Tournament format League system in three divisions
Number of teams 38
Current champion Hampshire (2018)
Most successful Kent (7 titles)
2018 Women's County Championship

The Women's County Championship, known since 2014 as the Royal London Women’s One-Day Cup,[1] is a women's cricket competition organised by the England and Wales Cricket Board. It is the women's equivalent of the County Championship, although it operates as a 50-over limited overs cricket competition with teams organised into a number of divisions. It was introduced in 1997 to replace the Women's Area Championship.

The teams competing in the Championship are drawn mostly from the historic counties of England, with 34 teams representing these. The Scottish national side has competed in the competition since 2007, the Wales women's national cricket team since 2008 and the Netherlands joined in 2009.[2] The Ireland national team played in the competition between 2009 and 2015 before withdrawing in early 2016, causing fixtures for the 2016 season to be rescheduled and one fewer team to compete in Division 2 during the 2016 season.[3][4]

The competition is the longest established women's cricket competition in England and Wales. It operates alongside the Women's Twenty20 Cup, established in 2009,[5] and the Women's Cricket Super League, a franchise league with six teams initially playing Twenty20 cricket.[6]

The current champions are Hampshire. Kent is the most successful county in the history of the Championship with seven titles as of June 2018. Sussex and Yorkshire have both won six titles.

History

The inaugural Women's County Championship took place in 1997, with 16 teams competing in three divisions.[7] This first tournament was organised and run by the Women's Cricket Association, which voted to merge with the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) on 29 March 1998.[8] As such, the ECB has administered the competition since 1998.[8]

Structure

The 36 teams that make up the Championship are split into three divisions, with the bottom division split into five groups. The top two divisions are each made up of eight teams, with the bottom two teams relegated from Division One at the end of the season and the top two teams in Division Two taking their place. Previously a four division system had been used with the bottom division split into two groups, but this was replaced with the present structure ahead of the 2017 Championship.[9]

The top two divisions for the 2018 season were each made up of eight teams.

In 2017, Division Four was abolished, with all its teams promoted to Division Three. The new Division Three is split into five groups of four teams arranged on a general geographical basis to reduce travelling. The groups for the 2018 season were:[10]

Division Three - Group A Scotland Cumbria Durham Northumberland
Division Three - Group B Cornwall Dorset Netherlands Wiltshire
Division Three - Group C Buckinghamshire Gloucestershire Hertfordshire Oxfordshire
Division Three - Group D Cambridgeshire and
Huntingdonshire
Lincolnshire Norfolk Suffolk
Division Three - Group E Leicestershire
and Rutland
Shropshire Staffordshire Worcestershire

Roll of honour

Year Champions Runners-up Leading run-scorer Leading wicket-taker Refs
2018HampshireYorkshireKezia Hassall (Hertfordshire) 620Kirstie Gordon (Nottinghamshire) 35
2017LancashireYorkshireSonia Odedra (Nottinghamshire) 253Sophie Ecclestone (Lancashire) 27
2016KentSussexKirstie White (Surrey) 337Megan Belt (Kent) 16
2015YorkshireKentHeather Knight (Berkshire) 305Sarah Clarke (Surrey) 23
2014KentSurreyCharlotte Edwards (Kent) 642Erin Bermingham (Kent) 16[11]
2013SussexYorkshireHeather Knight (Berkshire 604)Thea Brookes (Worcs), Jenny Withers (Somerset), Anje Lague (Herts) 18
2012KentEssexSarah Taylor (Sussex, 345)Isobelle Watson (Warwickshire, 18)[12][13][14]
2011KentSussexCharlotte Edwards (Kent, 541)Jane Riddell (Durham, 28)[15][16][17]
2010SussexKentLydia Greenway (Kent, 628)Danielle Wyatt (Staffordshire, 24)[18][19][20]
2009KentSussexHeather Knight (Devon, 622)Charlotte Anneveld (Kent, 24)[21][22][23]
2008SussexKentHeather Knight (Devon, 390)Sonia Odedra (Nottinghamshire, 10)[24][25][26]
2007KentSussexEmily Drumm (Kent, 222)Lynsey Askew (Kent, 13)[27][28][29]
2006KentSussexJenny Gunn (Nottinghamshire, 356)Charlotte Edwards (Kent, 12)[30][31][32]
2005SussexKentCharlotte Edwards (Kent, 302)Judith Turner (Berkshire, 10)[33][34][35]
2004SussexKentCharlotte Edwards (Kent, 308)Heather Booth (Berkshire, 12)[36][37][38]
2003SussexNottinghamshireTaryn Keir (Warwickshire, 303)Lynne Spooner (Derbyshire, 12)[39][40][41]
2002YorkshireBerkshireCharlotte Edwards (Kent, 233)Vicky Borman (Hertfordshire, 14)[42][43][44]
2001YorkshireBerkshireArran Brindle (Lancashire, 274)Yvonne Craven (Berkshire, 13)[45][46][47]
2000YorkshireNottinghamshireCharlotte Edwards (Kent, 374)Nicky Myers (Nottinghamshire, 13)[48][49][50]
1999East MidlandsYorkshireJane Smit (East Midlands, 335)Janet Tedstone (Yorkshire Seconds, 13)[51][52][53]
1998YorkshireSurreyCharlotte Edwards (East Anglia, 394)Sarah Clarke (Surrey Seconds, 12)[54][55][56]
1997YorkshireWest MidlandsJane Smit (East Midlands, 429)Helen Pack (West Midlands, 11)[7][57][58]

See also

References

  1. Royal London Women’s One-Day Cup, England and Wales Cricket Board. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  2. Dutch join women's championship, England and Wales Cricket Board, 2009-01-29. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  3. EXCLUSIVE: Ireland Cut Costly County Cricket, Crickether, 2016-01-12. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  4. Ireland women to play South Africa in seven-match series, BBC Sport, 2016-01-13. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  5. England to introduce women's Twenty20 Cup, CricInfo, 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  6. Super League: Franchise cricket gets set for launch in England, BBC Sport, 2016-07-28. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  7. 1 2 "Women's County Championship 1997 Points Table". CricketArchive. Retrieved 15 July 2009.
  8. 1 2 "A History of Women's Cricket". Yorkshire Cricket Board. Retrieved 10 August 2009.
  9. Berry, Scyld (ed.). "English women's cricket, 2008". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (146th ed.). John Wisden & Co. p. 947. ISBN 978-1-905625-16-1.
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