Team1 Image: | WestIndiesCricketFlagPre1999.svg |
Team1 Name: | West Indies women |
Team2 Image: | Flag_of_Australia.svg |
Team2 Name: | Australia women |
From Date: | 5 |
To Date: | 18 September 2019 |
Team1 Captain: | Stafanie Taylor |
Team2 Captain: | Meg Lanning[1] |
No Of Odis: | 3 |
Team1 Odis Won: | 0 |
Team2 Odis Won: | 3 |
Team1 Odis Most Runs: | Stafanie Taylor (114) |
Team2 Odis Most Runs: | Alyssa Healy (241) |
Team1 Odis Most Wickets: | Afy Fletcher (2) Shamilia Connell (2) Chinelle Henry (2) |
Team2 Odis Most Wickets: | Georgia Wareham (6) |
Player Of Odi Series: | Ellyse Perry (Aus) |
No Of Twenty20s: | 3 |
Team1 Twenty20s Won: | 0 |
Team2 Twenty20s Won: | 3 |
Team1 Twenty20s Most Runs: | Britney Cooper (68) |
Team2 Twenty20s Most Runs: | Alyssa Healy (108) |
Team1 Twenty20s Most Wickets: | Afy Fletcher (3) |
Team2 Twenty20s Most Wickets: | Jess Jonassen (7) |
Player Of Twenty20 Series: | Alyssa Healy (Aus) |
The Australia women's cricket team played the West Indies women's cricket team in September 2019. The tour consisted of three Women's One Day Internationals (WODIs), which formed part of the 2017–20 ICC Women's Championship, and three Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) matches.[2] [3] The first fixture of the tour, at the Coolidge Cricket Ground in Antigua, was the Australia's first ever WODI match in the Caribbean.[4] Australia won the WODI series 3–0,[5] their fifth-consecutive series sweep and their fifteenth win in WODIs in a row.[6] As a result, they became the first team to qualify for the 2021 Women's Cricket World Cup.[7] Australia also won the WT20I series 3–0.[8]
Ahead of the tour, Hayley Matthews was withdrawn from the West Indies' squad after breaching Cricket West Indies' code of conduct.[13] She was replaced by Sheneta Grimmond.[14] Britney Cooper was added to the West Indies' squad for the third WODI match, replacing Kycia Knight, who was ruled out due to an injury.[15]