The International Cricket Council (ICC) has announced the qualifying pathway for the 2023 Women's T20 World Cup which will he held in South Africa.
The 10-team tournament which has now been rescheduled to February 9-26, 2023 will see the hosts South Africa and the seven top teams on the ICC rankings as of November 30, 2021 -- from the teams that competed at the Australia 2020 event -- qualify automatically for the 2023 edition.
The remaining two spots will be determined through a qualification process which is scheduled to start at regional level in August 2021 and includes 37 teams. This is an increase of 10 teams from the Women's T20 World Cup 2020 qualification.
Eight teams Bhutan, Botswana, Cameroon, France, Malawi, Myanmar, Philippines and Turkey are all competing in an ICC women's event for the first time, a nod to the growth within women's cricket around the globe in emerging markets. Argentina and Brazil will return to ICC women's competition for the first time since 2012.
The five regions will host a regional qualifying event with the top team from each region joining the bottom two ranked teams in the Women's T20I rankings as of November 30, 2021 - from the teams that competed at the Australia 2020 event - into the eight-team ICC Women's T20 World Cup Qualifier 2022.
The final position will be filled by the highest-ranked team in the regional qualifiers on the November cut-off date, who missed out on topping their regional event table.
Across the qualification pathway there will be 115 women's T20Is played in the ICC events. Alongside more regular women's international cricket it also provides teams with the opportunity to move up the ICC rankings
"Sustaining and then building on the momentum from February is key and the start of the next Women's T20 World Cup qualifying pathway is a great place to start," said ICC Women's Cricket Manager, Holly Colvin.
"There is lots to look forward to in the cricket scheduled with 115 women's T20Is due to be played over seven months and five teams competing in their first ever ICC Women's Qualifier," Colvin added.
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(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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