Saturday, April 09, 2011

Bangladesh women's kabaddi


                                                                    Bangladesh kabaddi team
Bangladesh women's kabaddi team romped into the final of the XI South Asian Games with an emphatic 34-20 point win over Sri Lanka at the Kabaddi Ground adjacent to BNS in the city Monday, reports BSS.
The winners led by a comfortable margin of 14-10 at the breather.
Bangladesh eves came back strongly in the second half. They scored 20 points while Sri Lanka could manage 10 points.
The winner earned two 'lonas' on the way to the final.
Earlier, Bangladeshi girls won their first match against Nepal. This victory ensures their participation in the gold-deciding match on February 3 (Thursday).
The teams for the match: Bangladesh (women): Shahnaz Parvin ©, Maleka Parvin, Fatema Akter, Kazi Shahin Ara, Farzana Baby, Jony Chakma, Hasna Mariam, Fatema Akter 2, Raju Ahmed Poly, Doly Shefaly, Rupali Akter, Sharmin Sultana, Coach: Hakim, Manager:
Kamrun Nahar Dana.
Sri Lanka (women): Dillni Dilha Wirapperu ©, Dinushi Ma Hathurusin, Happuhen Fernando, Madushan Ranhote, Manoja Lal Maddumag, Nilusha Dil Sooriya Pal, Priyatha Skodagoda, Samadhi A Galagama, Suranga Sh Sumhasingh, Sanath Priyantha (coach), D. Hettiarachchi (manager).
                                                                           women's playing kabaddi
India win SA Games women's kabaddi gold, Bangladesh got silver
India won the gold medal of the 11th SA Games Women's Kabaddi beating hosts Bangladesh by 34-20 points with one creditable "lona" in the final at the Kabaddi Stadium in the city Thursday, reports UNB.
India dominated the first half by 23-8 points. Bangladesh got the event's silver medal.
Dhaka, Nov 25 (UNB) - Bangladesh Women’s Kabaddi team won the bronze medal in the 16th Asian Games Kabaddi losing to Thailand by 23-34 points in the semifinal at the Nansha Gymnasium in Guangzhou.
Thailand, which dominated the first half by 25-14 points, earned four creditable lonas.
In the women’s kabaddi final tomorrow Friday) afternoon, Thailand will play India, which eliminated Iran by 23-22 points in a keenly contested semis today (Thursday), while India will face Iran in the men’s kabaddi final, also on Friday afternoon at the same venue.
Earlier, Bangladesh Women’s Kabaddi team confirmed the Asian Games bronze beating Korea by 28-19 points as both the semifinalists get a bronze as per games rules.
This will be the 2nd medal for Bangladesh in the ongoing Asian Games after a silver medal won by Bangladesh Women’s Cricket team.

International women's cricket


                                                         ICC Women's cricketer
History of women's cricket
Women's cricket is the form of the team sport of cricket that is played by women.
The history of women's cricket can be traced back to a report in The Reading Mercury on 26 July 1745 and a match that took place between the villages of Bramley and Hambledon near Guildford in Surrey.
The Mercury reported:
"The greatest cricket match that was played in this part of England was on Friday, the 26th of last month, on Gosden Common, near Guildford, between eleven maids of Bramley and eleven maids of Hambledon, all dressed in white. The Bramley maids had blue ribbons and the Hambledon maids red ribbons on their heads. The Bramley girls got 119 notches and the Hambledon girls 127. There was of bothe sexes the greatest number that ever was seen on such an occasion. The girls bowled, batted, ran and catches as well as most men could do in that game.
Early matches were not necessarily genteel affairs. Another match, on 13 July 1747, held at the Artillery Ground between a team from Charlton and another from Westdean and Chilgrove in Sussex spilled over into the following day after it was interrupted by crowd trouble. Contemporary records show that women's matches were played on many occasions between villages in Sussex, Hampshire and Surrey. Other matches, often held in front of large crowds with heavy betting on the side, pitted single women against their married counterparts. Prizes ranged from barrels of ale to pairs of lace gloves. The first county match was held in 1811 between Surrey and Hampshire at Ball's Pond in Middlesex. Two noblemen underwrote the game with 1,000 guineas and its participants ranged in age from 14 to 60.
                 The 2nd Women's Test match between Australia and England in Sydney in 1935.
Originally, cricket deliveries were bowled underarm. Legend has it that the roundarm bowling action was pioneered in the early 19th century by Christina Willes, sister of John Willes, to avoid becoming ensnared in her skirts. In fact, roundarm was devised by Tom Walker in the 1790s.
The first women's cricket club was formed in 1887 at Nun Appleton in Yorkshire and named the White Heather Club. In 1890, a team known as the Original English Lady Cricketers, toured England, playing in exhibition matches to large crowds. The team was highly successful until its manager absconded with the profits, forcing the ladies to disband. James Lillywhite's Cricketers' Annual for 1890 has a photograph of the team and short article on women's cricket. "As an exercise, cricket is probably not so severe as lawn tennis, and it is certainly not so dangerous as hunting or skating; and if, therefore, the outcome of the present movement is to induce ladies more generally to play cricket, we shall consider that a good result has been attained."
The Women's Cricket Association was founded in 1926. The England team first played against The Rest at Leicester in 1933 and undertook the first international tour to Australia in 1934–5, playing the first Women's Test match between England and Australia in December 1934. After winning two tests and drawing one. England travelled on to New Zealand where Betty Snowball scored 189 in the first Test in Christchurch.
In Australia, the Victoria Women's Cricket Association had been founded in 1905 and the Australian Women's Cricket Association in 1931. The current competition is run by the Women's National Cricket League. Pre-dating this, a women's league was formed in 1894 in southern Tasmania by, amongst other people, Lily Poulett-Harris, a young school teacher who both founded and went onto captain the Oyster Cove team. Lily's obituary, from her death a few years later, in 1897, states that her team was believed to be the first such to be formed in the colonies.
The International Women's Cricket Council was formed in 1958 to coordinate women's cricket which was now being played regularly in Australia, England, New Zealand, South Africa, the West Indies, Denmark and the Netherlands. Test cricket has now been played by Australia, England, India, Ireland, Netherlands, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka and the West Indies. 131 women's Test matches have been played to date, the majority featuring England or Australia. Originally these were three day matches, but since 1985 most have been played over four days. England have played 87 Test matches since their first in 1934, winning 19, losing 11 and drawing 57. Australia have played 67 in the same period, winning 18, losing 9 and drawing 40.
The highest total is Australia's 569 for 6 declared against England Women in 1998 and the highest individual score is the 242 recorded by Kiran Baluch for Pakistan Women against West Indies Women at the National Stadium, Karachi in 2003/04. 5 other women have scored double centuries. Neetu David of India took 8 wickets in an innings against England in 1995/56 and 7 wickets have fallen to the same bowler on 10 occasions. The best match figures, 13 for 226 were recorded by Shaiza Khan for Pakistan Women against West Indies Women in Karachi in 2003/04. Three English batsmen, Janet Brittin with 1935 runs at 49.61, Rachel Heyhoe-Flint with 1594 at 45.54 and Charlotte Edwards, 1317 at 45.41, head the all time run scoring lists while 6 other women have scored more than 1,000 Test runs. Mary Duggan of England took 77 Test wickets at 13.49 while Australia's Betty Wilson took 68 at 11.8. 7 other women have 50 or more victims to their name.
                                         The Original English Lady Cricketers 1890
Betty Wilson was the first player, male or female, to record a century and 10 wickets in a Test match, against England at the MCG in 1958. In a remarkable match Australia were bowled out for 38 but gained a first innings lead of 3 in dismissing England for 35 in reply, with Wilson taking 7 for 7. 35 remains the lowest total ever recorded in a women's Test. Australia, thanks to Wilson's century, set England 206 to win but the visitors held on for a draw. In 1985, Australia's Under-21 National Women's Cricket Championship was renamed the Betty Wilson Shield in her honour. Another phenomenal club performance saw right-hander Jan Molyneaux make a record 298 for Olympic v Northcote in Melbourne's A grade final in 1967.
Club and county cricket in England has undergone constant evolution. There is currently a National Knock-Out Cup and a league structure culminating in a Northern and Southern Premier league. The major county competition is the LV Women's County Championship, while Super Fours, featuring teams named after precious stones, bridges the gap for the elite players between domestic and international competition.
In April 1970, MCC's traditional Easter coaching classes at Lord's were attended by Sian Davies and Sally Slowe of Cheltenham Ladies' College breaking the 'gender barrier'. The first Women's Cricket World Cup was held in England in 1973, funded in part by businessman Jack Hayward, and won by the hosts at Lords in front of Princess Anne. Enid Bakewell and Lynne Thomas, making their international debuts for England, scored unbeaten hundreds against an International XI in Brighton in a stand of 246, a record which stood for a quarter of a century. Lord's staged its first women's Test match in 1979, between England and Australia.
One Day International cricket has been played by Australia, Denmark, England, India, Ireland, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand. Pakistan, Scotland, South Africa, Sri Lanka and the West Indies while Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago and International XIs have played in World Cups. 707 ODIs have been played up to the end of the 2009 World Cup. The 455 for 5 smashed by New Zealand Women against Pakistan Women at Hagley Oval, Christchurch in 1996/97 remains the highest team score while the Netherlands Women were bowled out for just 22 against West Indies Women at Sportpark Het Schootsveld in Deventer in 2008.
The Women's Cricket Association handed over the running of women's cricket in England to the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) in 1998. In 2005, after the eighth Women's World Cup, the International Women's Cricket Council was officially integrated under the umbrella of the International Cricket Council, and an ICC Women's Cricket Committee was formed to consider all matters relating to women's cricket.The 2009 World Cup, the first held under the auspices of the ICC was won by England, the first English team of either sex to win an ICC competition.
Women have beaten male teams to several milestones in one day cricket. They were the first to play an international Twenty/20 match, England taking on New Zealand at Hove in 2004. The first tie in a one day international was also between Women's teams, hosts New Zealand tying the first match of the World Cup in 1982 against England, who went on to record another tie against Australia in the same competition. Female wicket keepers were the first to record 6 dismissals in a one day international, New Zealand's Sarah Illingworth and India's Venkatacher Kalpana both accounting for 6 batsman on the same day in the 1993 World Cup and Belinda Clark, the former Australian captain, is the only female player to have scored a double hundred in an ODI, recording an unbeaten 229 in the 1997 World Cup against Denmark. She also holds the record for the most runs in a one day career with 4844. Pakistan's Sajjida Shah is the youngest player to appear in international cricket, playing against Ireland four months after her 12th birthday. She also holds the record for the best bowling figures in a one day international, taking 7 wickets for just 4 runs against Japan Women at the Sportpark Drieburg in Amsterdam in 2003. Fast bowler Cathryn Fitzpatrick of Australia took 180 wickets in her one day international career.
In 2009 England batsman Claire Taylor was named one of Wisden's five cricketers of the year, the first woman to be honoured with the award in its 120 year history.
                                                         Live International
Women's cricket
Women's cricket has been played internationally since the inaugural women's Test match between England women and Australia women in December 1934. The following year, New Zealand women joined them, and in 2007 Netherlands women became the tenth women's Test nation when they made their debut against South Africa women. Since 1973, women's One Day Internationals (ODIs) have also been contested, and these quickly became the focus of women's international cricket. In the years since the inception of women's ODIs more than eight times more of this format has been played than women's Test cricket. The Women's Cricket World Cup has been held nine times, with Australia, England and New Zealand sharing the titles. In 2004, a shorter format still was introduced, with the introduction of women's Twenty20 cricket. Initially, women's Twenty20 cricket was played little at international level, with only four matches played by the end of 2006. However, the following three years saw a rapid growth, with six matches been played in 2007, ten in 2008 and thirty in 2009, which also saw the first ICC Women's World Twenty20.

Bangladesh women's cricket


 The Bangladesh national women’s cricket team represents the nation of Bangladesh in women’s cricket matches held internationally. The Bangladesh Cricket Board formed the team in 2007 under the leadership of veteran cricket coach Altaf Hossain. The players were selected on the basis of performance in the country’s first ever National Women’s Cricket Championship held in 2007.
Bangladesh has been relatively backward in women’s cricket mostly due to the lack of interest by organizers and also on account of cultural difficulties. Finally after the team was formed certain religious groups tried to create obstructions but unsuccessfully.
The women’s team made their international debut against Thailand in 2007 and won both matches played with the same side.
The Bangladesh women’s team is also the winner of ACC Women’s Tournament which was held in Malaysia in 2007. They overcame experienced sides like China, Singapore and the UAE to get to the finals.
Prominent players: Tajkia Akhter (c), Panna Ghosh.
Major achievements
Winners of ACC Women’s Tournament 2007 and 4th runners up at the Women’s Asia Cup 2008
Bangladesh win the final match against Nepal, ACC tournament, Johor, July 18, 2007.
Captain -Tajkia Akhter
First recorded match-6 July 2007 v Thailand.
Images for bangladesh women's cricket team photo -
 
 
 
 

Bangladesh Women's football


 In a country whose population is predominantly Muslim and there is some resistance towards women’s football. The women’s game has struggled to gain a foothold in Bangladesh in the past and many tournaments dedicated to women have failed. Women's football finally saw light in Bangladesh when the first ever women's football tournament was staged under the Vision Asia programme in November 2007. Eight teams especially from different district's all over the country took part in the tournament and made it a success amidst security threats.
In October 2008, first women's school football tournament was held under the Vision Bangladesh programme with BFF hopeful of continuing and developing the women's game in the country.
Women's football was included in the South Asian Games 2010 hosted in Dhaka while the first Women's SAFF Championship is to be held in December in the country. Bangladesh had their first team in the AFC U-19 Women's Championship qualifiers with India, Jordan and Iran in their group.
 Bangladesh women's football team to tour South Asian countries               
The women's football committee of Bangladesh Football Federation (BFF) has planned a series of programmes to popularise the game in the country as well as to improve its standard, reports UNB.
The newly formed women's football committee in its first meeting at the BFF Bhaban Monday with Sirajul Islam Bachchu in the chair decided to hold a series of tournaments and foreign trips after Ramadan.
BFF President Kazi Salahuddin was present at the meeting.
The meeting decided to send the Bangladesh women's team on a tour of some South Asian countries in December.
As per the decision, the Dhaka Metropolis Girls' Football Tournament will be held in the second week of October, National Women's Football Championship to be held October-November, Club-based Football Tournament in January and Inter-District Women's Football in February-March next year.