New Zealand women's cricket team in the West Indies in 2013–14
New Zealand women's cricket team in the West Indies in 2013–14 | |||
---|---|---|---|
West Indies | New Zealand | ||
Dates | 6 – 10 October 2013 | ||
Captains | Merissa Aguilleira | Suzie Bates | |
One Day International series | |||
Results | West Indies won the 3-match series 2–1 | ||
Most runs | Stafanie Taylor (182) | Suzie Bates (114) | |
Most wickets | Stafanie Taylor (11) | Morna Nielsen (6) | |
Player of the series | Stafanie Taylor (WI) |
The New Zealand women's national cricket team toured the West Indies in October 2013. They played the West Indies in three One Day Internationals, losing the series 2–1. They then played in the 2013–14 West Indies Women T20 Tri-Series, against England and the West Indies, which was won by the West Indies.[1][2]
WODI Series
Squads
West Indies[3] | New Zealand[4] |
---|---|
|
1st ODI
6 October 2013 Scorecard |
v | ||
New Zealand Women won by 1 run Sabina Park, Kingston Umpires: Norman Malcolm (WI) and Verdayne Smith (WI) Player of the match: Suzie Bates (NZ) |
- New Zealand Women won the toss and elected to bat.
2nd ODI
8 October 2013 Scorecard |
v | ||
West Indies Women by 89 runs Sabina Park, Kingston Umpires: Patrick Gustard (WI) and Verdayne Smith (WI) Player of the match: Shaquana Quintyne (WI) |
- West Indies Women won the toss and elected to bat.
3rd ODI
10 October 2013 Scorecard |
v | ||
West Indies Women by 95 runs Sabina Park, Kingston Umpires: Norman Malcolm (WI) and Patrick Gustard (WI) Player of the match: Stafanie Taylor (WI) |
- West Indies Women won the toss and elected to bat.
See also
References
- ^ "England Women tour of West Indies 2013/14". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
- ^ "West Indies Tri-Nation Twenty20 Women's Series 2013/14". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
- ^ "New Zealand Women tour of West Indies 2013/14/West Indies Women Squad". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
- ^ "New Zealand Women tour of West Indies 2013/14/New Zealand Women Squad". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
External links
- New Zealand Women tour of West Indies 2013/14 from Cricinfo
- v
- t
- e
- England 1954
- Australia 1956–57
- England 1966
- Australia 1971–72
- South Africa 1971–72
- Australia 1978–79
- England/Netherlands 1984
- Australia 1984–85
- India 1984–85
- Australia 1986–87
- Australia 1990–91
- Australia 1992–93
- Australia 1995–96
- England/Ireland 1996
- Australia 1997–98
- Australia 1999–2000
- Australia 2001–02
- Ireland/Netherlands 2002
- India 2003–04
- Australia 2003–04
- England/Ireland 2004
- Australia 2004–05
- Australia 2006–07
- Australia 2007
- England 2007
- Australia 2008–09
- Australia 2009
- Australia 2009–10
- England 2010
- Australia 2011
- Australia 2011–12
- Australia 2012-13
- West Indies 2013–14
- West Indies 2014–15
- India 2015
- Australia 2016–17
- South Africa 2016–17
- Pakistan/UAE 2017–18
- England 2018
- Ireland 2018
- Australia 2018–19
- Australia 2020–21
- England 2021
- West Indies 2022–23
- Sri Lanka 2023
- South Africa 2023–24
- England 1934–35
- Australia 1947–48
- England 1948–49
- England 1957–58
- Australia 1960–61
- England 1968–69
- Australia 1974–75
- India 1976–77
- Australia in 1985–86
- Australia 1987–88
- Australia 1989–90
- England 1991–92
- Australia 1993–94
- India 1994–95
- Australia 1994–95
- Pakistan 1996–97
- Australia 1996–97
- South Africa 1998–99
- Australia 1998–99
- England 1999–2000
- England 2000–01
- Australia 2001–02
- Australia 2003–04
- India 2005–06
- Australia 2007–08
- England 2007–08
- Australia 2008–09
- Australia 2009–10
- Australia 2010–11
- England 2011–12
- West Indies 2013–14
- England 2014–15
- Sri Lanka 2015–16
- Australia 2015–16
- Australia 2016–17
- Pakistan 2016–17
- West Indies 2017–18
- India 2018–19
- South Africa 2019–20
- Australia 2020–21
- England 2020–21
- India 2021–22
- Bangladesh 2022–23
- Pakistan 2023–24
Rose Bowl | |
---|---|
Tri-Nations | |
Quadrangular Series |
World Cup finals |
---|