Women's One Day International

Women's One Day International (ODI) is the limited overs form of women's cricket. Matches are scheduled for 50 overs, equivalent to the men's game. The first women's ODIs were played in 1973, as part of the first Women's World Cup which was held in England. The first ODI saw the hosts beat an International XI. The 1,000th women's ODI took place between South Africa and New Zealand on 13 October 2016.

Women's ODI status is determined by the International Cricket Council (ICC) and was restricted to full members of the ICC. In May 2022, the ICC awarded ODI status to five more teams.

Involved nations

In 2006 the ICC announced that only the top-10 ranked sides would have Test and ODI status. During the 2011 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier Netherlands lost its ODI status by virtue of not finishing in the top 6 placings. As the top 4 teams with ODI status were not required to take part in this qualifying tournament, the top 6 in this tournament constituted the top 10 overall placings. Bangladesh replaced the Netherlands as one of the ten countries which currently have ODI status.

In September 2018, ICC chief executive Dave Richardson announced that all matches at ICC World Cup Qualifiers would be awarded ODI status. However, in November 2021, the ICC reversed this decision and determined that all fixtures in the Women's World Cup Qualifier featuring a team without ODI status would be recorded as a List A match. This followed an announcement retrospectively applying first-class and List A status to women's cricket.

In April 2021, the ICC awarded permanent Test and ODI status to all full member women's teams. Afghanistan and Zimbabwe gained ODI status for the first time as a result of this decision. In May 2022, the ICC awarded WODI status to the Netherlands, Papua New Guinea, Scotland, Thailand and the United States; all of these nations other than Scotland had qualified for the abandoned 2021 Women's Cricket World Cup Qualifier (although PNG withdrew from the qualifier due to COVID-19).

The following teams have also played ODIs, but currently do not have ODI status, although they may qualify to regain that status in the future.

There are also four other teams which once had ODI status, but either no longer exist or no longer play international cricket. Three appeared only in the 1973 Women's Cricket World Cup. The four former ODI teams are:

Rankings

Before October 2018, ICC did not maintain a separate Twenty20 ranking for the women's game, instead aggregating performance over all three forms of the game into one overall women's teams ranking. In January 2018, ICC granted international status to all matches between associate nations and announced plan to launch separate T20I rankings for women. In October 2018 the T20I rankings were launched with separate ODI rankings for Full Members.

ICC women's ODI rankings
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1 Australia 21 3,429 163
2 England 23 2,991 130
3 South Africa 24 2,737 114
4 India 18 1,745 97
5 New Zealand 24 2,262 94
6 West Indies 20 1,768 88
7 Bangladesh 17 1,365 80
8 Sri Lanka 9 714 79
9 Thailand 11 753 68
10 Pakistan 27 1,843 68
11 Ireland 16 571 36
12 Netherlands 9 94 10
13 Zimbabwe 7 0 0
Reference: ICC Women's ODI rankings, Updated on 27 December 2023

Team statistics

Team Span Matches Won Lost Tied NR % Won
Australia 1973– 358 283 66 2 7 79.05
Bangladesh 2011– 63 17 39 2 5 26.98
Denmark 1989–1999 33 6 27 0 0 18.18
England 1973– 383 227 142 2 12 59.26
India 1978– 304 165 133 2 4 54.27
International XI 1973–1982 18 3 14 0 1 17.64
Ireland 1987– 170 47 116 0 7 27.64
Jamaica 1973 5 1 4 0 0 20.00
Japan 2003 5 0 5 0 0 0.00
Netherlands 1984– 110 20 89 0 1 18.18
New Zealand 1973– 379 186 182 3 8 49.07
Pakistan 1997– 203 59 138 3 3 29.06
Scotland 2001– 11 2 9 0 0 18.18
South Africa 1997– 236 124 97 5 10 52.54
Sri Lanka 1997– 181 60 114 0 7 33.14
Thailand 2022– 9 8 1 0 0 100.00
Trinidad and Tobago 1973 6 2 4 0 0 33.33
West Indies 1979– 215 93 110 3 9 43.25
Young England 1973 6 1 5 0 0 16.66
Zimbabwe 2021– 11 1 10 0 0 9.09
Source: Cricinfo, as 24 December 2023. The result percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win.

Records

As of December 2023.

Batting

Record First Second Ref
Most runs Mithali Raj 7805 Charlotte Edwards 5992
Highest average (Min 20 innings) Rachael Heyhoe-Flint 58.45 Lindsay Reeler 57.44
Highest score Amelia Kerr 232* Belinda Clark 229*
Most centuries Meg Lanning 15 Suzie Bates 12
Most 50s (and over) Mithali Raj 71 Charlotte Edwards 55

Bowling

Record First Second Ref
Most Wickets Jhulan Goswami 255 Shabnim Ismail 191
Best Average (min. 1000 balls bowled) Gill Smith 12.53 Lyn Fullston 13.26
Best Economy rate (min. 1000 balls bowled) Sue Brown 1.81 Sharon Tredrea 1.86
Best bowling figures Sajjida Shah vs Japan (2003) 7/4 Jo Chamberlain vs Denmark (1991) 7/8

See also