Prime Minister Cup Women's National Cricket Tournament
CountriesNepal
AdministratorCricket Association of Nepal
FormatTwenty20
First edition2015
Latest edition2023
Tournament formatRound-robin and Knockout
Number of teams8
Current championSudurpashchim
Most successfulAPF Club
(5 titles)
2023 PM Cup Women's Tournament

Prime Minister Cup Women's National Tournament is a twenty20 cricket tournament in Nepal organised by the Cricket Association of Nepal.[1] There are currently eight teams participating in the tournament. The inaugural edition was contested among 10 teams and six teams contested the tournament from 2016 to 2018.

Teams

Province/Department First season Titles Runner-up
Koshi 2019 1 1
Madhesh Province 2019 0 0
Bagmati 2019 0 0
Gandaki Province 2019 0 0
Lumbini Province 2019 0 0
Karnali Province 2019 0 0
Sudurpashchim Province 2019 1 1
Armed Police Force 2015 4 1

Defunct teams

Tournament season and results

Year Winner Runner-up Best batter Best bowler Player of the tournament Ref
2015 R-VII (Janakpur) APF Club Shobha Ale (Region-VII) Trishna Singh (Region-V) Anuradha Chaudhary (Region-VII) [2]
2016 APF Club Eastern Region Laxmi Chaudhary (Mid-Western) Santoshi Chaudhary (Eastern) Sarita Magar (APF) [3]
2017 APF Club Far-Western Region Rekha Rawal (Far-Western) Ritu Kanojiya (APF) Sita Rana Magar (APF) [4]
2018 APF Club Eastern Region Kajal Shrestha (Eastern) Rubina Chhetri (Eastern) Rubina Chhetri (Eastern) [5]
2019 APF Club Sudurpashchim Kabita Kunwar (APF) Khushi Dangol (Province 3) Sita Rana Magar (APF) [6]
2020 Province No.1 APF Club Jyoti Pandey (APF) Karuna Bhandari (APF) Sangita Rai (Province 1) [7]
2021 APF Club Province No. 1 Apsari Begum (Province 1) Alisha Khadiya (Province 1) Rubina Chhetri (Province 1) [8]
2023 Sudurpashchim Province No. 1 Kabita Kunwar (Sudurpaschim) Manisha Chaudhary (Sudurpashchim) Kabita Kunwar (Sudurpaschim) [9]

Team's performance

Legend
  • C – Champion
  • RU – Runner-up
  • SF – Semi-final
  • GS – Group stage
Season
(Teams)
2016
(6)
2017
(6)
2018
(6)
2019
(8)
2020
(8)
2021
(8)
2023
(8)
Armed Police Force Club C C C C RU C SF
Bagmati Province GS GS GS GS
Gandaki Province GS GS GS GS
Karnali Province GS GS GS GS
Lumbini Province GS SF SF GS
Province No. 1 SF C RU RU
Madhesh Province SF GS GS SF
Sudurpaschim Province RU SF SF C
Eastern Development Region RU GS RU
Central Development Region GS GS GS
Western Development Region GS GS GS
Mid-Western Development Region GS GS GS
Far Western Development Region GS RU GS

References

  1. "Tie-sheet for the PM Cup Women's National Cricket Tournament – Cricket Association of Nepal". Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  2. "Janakpur clinch low-scoring thriller in the final of PM Cup 2015 | Cricnepal.com". cricnepal.com. 18 June 2015. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  3. "APF claim women's national cricket title". The Himalayan Times. 26 July 2016. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  4. "Nepal APF outplay Far-west, claim PM Cup". The Himalayan Times. 9 March 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  5. Republica. "Armed Police Force lifts PM Cup Women's Cricket title". My Republica. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  6. "Nepal APF beat Farwest, win PM Cup title". The Himalayan Times. 27 June 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  7. "Full Scorecard of PROV-1 Women vs APF Women Final 2020 - Score Report | ESPNcricinfo.com". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 3 January 2021.
  8. "Final, Fapla Cricket Ground, Dec 26 2021, Prime Minister Cup Women's National Cricket Tournament (Jyoti Pandey 36*, Mamta Chaudhary 19*, Sabnam Rai 0/12) - RESULT, PV1-W vs APF-W, Final, live score, 2021". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
  9. "CAN National Women's Cricket Tournament [Jan 2023], CAN National Women's Cricket Tournament 2022/23 score, Match schedules, fixtures, points table, results, news". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.