Benoni and Potchefstroom will play host to the 2023 ICC Women’s U19 World Cup, featuring Indonesia and Rwanda for their debut global appearances, alongside Scotland, UAE and USA who qualified through regional qualifying rounds, as highlighted in the Women’s U19 Cricket World Cup 2023 Schedule Time Table.
| Date | Match | Venue | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 29 Jan 2023 | India U19 vs England U19 (Final) | Potchefstroom | India won by 7 wickets |
| 27 Jan 2023 | India U19 vs New Zealand U19 (Semi-final) | Potchefstroom | India won by 8 wickets |
| 27 Jan 2023 | England U19 vs Australia U19 (Semi-final) | Potchefstroom | England won by 3 runs |
| 25 Jan 2023 | India U19 vs Sri Lanka U19 (Super Six) | Potchefstroom | India won by 7 wickets |
| 25 Jan 2023 | West Indies U19 vs Rwanda U19 (Super Six) | Potchefstroom | West Indies won by 1 wicket |
Group Stage
The inaugural ICC U19 Women’s World Cup 2023 will showcase future stars of international cricket at venues in Benoni and Potchefstroom, South Africa from 14 – 29 January. Group Stage matches will see future superstars of the game compete to build girls and women participation in cricket – for instance Indonesia and Rwanda are debuting as full member nations and Scotland, United Arab Emirates and USA are full member nations joining this diverse event as full participant nations for this inaugural ICC U19 Women’s World Cup tournament ever!
Super Six
Women’s ICC U19 World Cup 2023 final six teams will play over four days to crown one team as champions at JB Marks Oval in Benoni and Potchefstroom at JB Marks Oval for four-day matches beginning Friday, April 4.
Indonesia, Rwanda and Scotland qualified for their inaugural ICC World Cup thanks to winning African Qualifiers; United Arab Emirates and USA will also debut at an ICC World Cup for the first time! 41 matches will take place between Benoni, Gqeberha and Potchefstroom with entry fee being free for spectators!
Semi-Finals
The inaugural ICC Women’s U-19 World Cup will take place in January 2023 after originally scheduled for 2021 but postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic. 16 teams will participate and the top three from each group will advance to Super Six stage; those finishing first and second will then meet in semi-finals, with eventual champion advancing into final.
Benoni and Potchefstroom will host this tournament, where future cricket stars will compete over 41 matches within just under one month.
Indonesia and Rwanda will make history by becoming the first non-full members to ever take part at a World Cup event; Scotland and United Arab Emirates also qualified as first time participants at any level of competition.
On 29 January, the final will take place at JB Marks Oval in Potchefstroom with free entry for all matches and an endowment that will increase girls and women participation across South Africa.
