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ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 Ultimate Guide: Everything you need to know

The ninth edition of the tournament features 10 teams battling it out in 23 matches across two venues in United Arab Emirates.

Ahead of the tournament, here's everything you need to know about the upcoming ICC Women's T20 World Cup.

The Groups

Group A: Australia, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka

Group B: Bangladesh, England, Scotland, South Africa, West Indies

Squads

Seven teams have announced their playing groups for the tournament thus far.

All the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 Squads named thus far

Stunning dives, one-handed blinders, spectacular running takes – the Women's T20 World Cup 2023 had them all! Sit back and enjoy the best catches from the tournament.

Format

The 10 teams are split into two groups of five, with teams meeting each other other once in a single round robin to decide the top two teams to progress to the semi-finals.

The top-spot finisher in the group will meet the second-place finisher in the two semi-finals, with the winners progressing to the final in Dubai.

Updated fixtures revealed for Women’s T20 World Cup 2024

Key Dates

After warm-up matches from 28 September to 1 October conclude, group action begins on 3 October. Group B foes Bangladesh and Scotland meet in the first of two matches on day one, with Pakistan and Sri Lanka facing off in the second.

With group play concluding on 15 October, attention turns to the semi-finals across 17 and 18 October. The winners of semi-final one and two meet to battle for the T20 World Cup trophy on 20 October.

UAE confirmed as new venue for ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024

Tournament history

Year

Host(s)

Winner

Runner-up

Player of the Tournament

2009

England

England

New Zealand

Claire Taylor (England)

2010

West Indies

Australia

New Zealand

Nicola Brown (New Zealand)

2012

Sri Lanka

Australia

England

Charlotte Edwards (England)

2014

Bangladesh

Australia

England

Anya Shrubsole (England)

2016

India

West Indies

Australia

Stafanie Taylor (West Indies)

2018

West Indies

Australia

England

Alyssa Healy (Australia)

2020

Australia

Australia

India

Beth Mooney (Australia)

2023

South Africa

Australia

South Africa

Ash Gardner (Australia)

Formerly known as the ICC Women’s World Twenty20, the Women’s T20 World Cup was first contested in 2009, with hosts England beating New Zealand by six wickets and with three overs to spare.

The defending champions are Australia, who have claimed tournament victory in the last three editions, and a total of six times across the eight editions.

Players from both teams spoke during the post-match presentation following the final of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2023 between Australia and South Africa.

How teams qualified

The top six teams from the 2023 edition received an automatic spot for the 2024 tournament (Australia, England, India, South Africa, New Zealand, West Indies), with Pakistan claiming their spot as the next highest ranked team at the February 2023 cut-off date. In spite of the tournament in 2024 being moved away from Bangladesh, Nigar Sultana Joty's side keep their spot as tournament hosts.

The final two spots were taken by Sri Lanka and Scotland via the ICC Women's T20 World Cup Qualifier held in UAE earlier in the year.

Leading ranking performers for each side in the Women’s T20 World Cup

Chamari Athapaththu backs youngsters to shine in Women's T20 World Cup

ICC Women's T20I Team Rankings (of teams at the tournament)

RankTeamRating
1Australia294
2England285
3India261
4New Zealand252
5South Africa243
6West Indies238
7Sri Lanka231
8Pakistan217
9Bangladesh199
12Scotland154

* Correct as of 3 September

Trophy Tour

The Women's T20 World Cup trophy embarked on a 24-hour journey across Dubai, with stops at several locations across the city, from Half Desert Dubai, Dubai Frame to the Museum of the Future.

From there, the trophy will continue it's journey across India from 6 September, to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, before returning to UAE.

Australian captain Meg Lanning and her team celebrated in style as they lifted the trophy at Newlands in Cape Town after beating South Africa in the final of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup.

Tickets

ICC has affordable match tickets starting at only five dirhams, with free entry for those under 18. To mark the announcement, ICC also released a video of a spectacular laser show on the tournament at the iconic Burj Khalifa.

Register your interest for ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2024 Tickets

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