List of New Zealand Women's Twenty20 International cricket records

This is a List of New Zealand Women's Twenty20 International cricket records, that is record team and individual performances in by the New Zealand women's national cricket team in Twenty20 International (T20I) cricket. This list is based on the List of Women's Twenty20 International records

Key edit

The top ten records are listed for each category. Tied records for the tenth place are listed as well. Explanations of the general symbols and cricketing terms used in the list are given below. Specific details are provided in each category where appropriate.

Symbol Meaning
Player is currently active in WT20I cricket
* Player remained not out or partnership remained unbroken
World record


ICC Women's T20I Rankings
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   Australia 34 9,982 294
2   England 35 9,875 282
3   India 43 11,252 262
4   New Zealand 32 8,163 255
5   South Africa 32 7,736 242
6   West Indies 27 6,340 235
7   Sri Lanka 34 7,773 229
8   Pakistan 33 7,279 221
9   Bangladesh 33 6,613 200
10   Ireland 32 5,783 181
11   Papua New Guinea 26 4,088 157
12   Zimbabwe 33 5,157 157
13   Thailand 39 6,064 155
14   Scotland 22 3,206 146
15   Netherlands 25 3,073 123
16   United Arab Emirates 47 5,718 122
17   Namibia 33 3,649 111
18   Uganda 48 5,263 110
19   Tanzania 34 3,468 102
20   Indonesia 20 1,955 98
21     Nepal 32 3,101 97
22   Hong Kong 41 3,691 90
23   United States 13 1,054 81
24   Malaysia 43 3,225 75
25   Kenya 39 2,903 74
26   Nigeria 38 2,676 70
27   Rwanda 42 2,874 68
28   Italy 20 1,319 66
29   Jersey 13 839 65
30   Vanuatu 23 1,627 58
31   Canada 9 513 57
32   Greece 11 613 56
33   Germany 15 766 51
34   Isle of Man 11 549 50
35   Spain 6 256 43
36   France 23 973 42
37   Brazil 20 846 42
38   Sweden 16 586 37
39   Sierra Leone 21 632 30
40   Myanmar 13 334 26
41   Botswana 25 641 26
42   Bhutan 12 302 25
43   China 12 294 25
44   Kuwait 21 487 23
45   Samoa 21 386 18
46   Singapore 27 485 18
47   Mozambique 9 154 17
48   Malta 6 100 17
49   Romania 13 207 16
50   Japan 24 363 15
51   Guernsey 8 95 12
52   Bahrain 11 123 11
53   Cook Islands 11 108 10
54   Cameroon 12 111 9
55   Argentina 20 150 8
56   Qatar 20 126 6
57   Denmark 5 29 6
58   Austria 21 46 2
59   Cambodia 13 28 2
60   Oman 7 11 2
61   Norway 11 3 0
62   Eswatini 9 0 0
63   Serbia 7 0 0
64   Philippines 12 0 0
65   Ghana 7 0 0
66   Fiji 21 0 0
References: ICC Women's T20I Rankings, Updated on 4 April 2024

Team records edit

Team wins, losses, and ties edit

Matches played (total) edit

Mat Won Lost Tied NR Win %
121 73 45 2 1 61.66
Note: Win percentage excludes no result matches and counts ties as half wins i.e. [won÷(matches – noresult)×100]. Source: Cricinfo. Last updated: 24 February 2020.

Matches played (by country) edit

Team First Match Mat Won Lost Tied NR Win %
  Australia 1973 123 31 90 0 2 25.61
  Denmark 1993 1 1 0 0 0 100.00
  England 1973 70 34 34 1 1 50.00
  India 1978 48 28 19 1 0 59.37
International XI 1973 4 3 1 0 0 75.00
  Ireland 1988 20 18 0 0 2 100.00
  Netherlands 1984 9 9 0 0 0 100.00
  Pakistan 1997 13 12 1 0 0 92.30
  South Africa 1999 13 11 2 0 0 84.61
  Sri Lanka 1997 10 10 0 0 0 100.00
  Trinidad and Tobago 1973 1 1 0 0 0 100.00
  West Indies 1993 19 11 7 0 1 61.11
Young England 1973 1 1 0 0 0 100.00
Source: Cricinfo. Last updated: 6 February 2019.

Individual records edit

Individual records (batting) edit

Most career runs edit

Runs Batter Innings Average T20I career span
3208 ♠ Suzie Bates 113 30.84 2007-present
2327 Sophie Devine 85 31.87 2006-present
1526 Amy Satterthwaite 89 21.19 2007-2019
1164 Sara McGlashan 73 18.18 2004-2016
819 Rachel Priest 61 16.71 2007-present
Source: Cricinfo. Last updated: February 24, 2020.

Individual records (bowling) edit

Most career wickets edit

Wickets Bowler Matches Bowling average T20I career span
84 Sophie Devine 87 16.82 2006-present
60 Leigh Kasperek 36 13.11 2015-present
49 Suzie Bates 115 25.46 2007-present
47 Nicola Browne 54 17.31 2002-2014
46 Lea Tahuhu 53 21.15 2011-present
Source: Cricinfo. Last updated: February 22, 2020.

See also edit

References edit