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The 2016 cricket season was the 117th in which the County Championship has been an official competition. The season began in March with a round of university matches, and continued until the conclusion of a round of County Championship matches in late September. Three major men's domestic competitions were contested: the 2016 County Championship, the 2016 Royal London One-Day Cup and the 2016 NatWest t20 Blast. Women's domestic cricket saw the launch of the Women's Cricket Super League, a new franchise competition, and the contesting of the Women's County Championship and Women's Twenty20 Cup.
County Championship | |
---|---|
Champions | Middlesex |
Runners-up | Somerset |
Most runs | Keaton Jennings (1,548) |
Most wickets | Jeetan Patel (69) |
Royal London One-Day Cup | |
Champions | Warwickshire |
Runners-up | Surrey |
Most runs | Sam Hain (540) |
Most wickets | Matt Coles (24) |
t20 Blast | |
Champions | Northamptonshire Steelbacks |
Runners-up | Durham Jets |
Most runs | Michael Klinger (548) |
Most wickets | Benny Howell (24) |
Women's Cricket Super League | |
Champions | Southern Vipers |
Runners-up | Western Storm |
Most runs | Stafanie Taylor (289) |
Most wickets | Stafanie Taylor (11) |
Women's County Championship | |
Champions | Kent |
Runners-up | Sussex |
Most runs | Kirstie White (337) |
Most wickets | Samantha Betts (18) |
Women's Twenty20 Cup | |
Champions | Kent |
Runners-up | Warwickshire |
Most runs | Laura Newton (272) |
Most wickets | Nicole Richards (15) |
PCA Player of the Year | |
Ben Duckett | |
Wisden Cricketers of the Year | |
Jonny Bairstow Brendon McCullum Steve Smith Ben Stokes Kane Williamson | |
← 2015 2017 → |
During the season, two men's Test teams toured England. Sri Lanka competed early in the summer, with Pakistan also touring later in the year.[1] Pakistan Women also toured, playing England in three WODIs and three WT20Is.[2]
Roll of honour
edit- Test series
- England v Sri Lanka: 3 Tests - England won 2–0
- England v Pakistan: 4 Tests - Series drawn 2–2
- ODI series
- England v Sri Lanka: 5 ODIs - England won 3–0
- England v Pakistan: 5 ODIs - England won 4–1
- Twenty20 International series
- England v Sri Lanka: Only T20I - England won by 8 wickets
- England v Pakistan: Only T20I - Pakistan won by 9 wickets
- WODI series
- England v Pakistan: 3 WODIs - England won 3–0
- Women's Twenty20 International series
- England v Pakistan: 3 WT20Is - England won 3–0
- Division One winners: Middlesex
- Division One runners-up: Somerset
- Division Two winners: Essex
- Relegated from Division One: Durham and Nottinghamshire
- Promoted from Division Two: Essex
- Winners: Warwickshire
- Runners-up: Surrey
- Winners: Northamptonshire Steelbacks
- Runners-up: Durham Jets
- Winners: Berkshire
- Runners-up: Lincolnshire
- Winners: Herefordshire
- Runners-up: Staffordshire
- Winners: Kent
- Runners-up: Warwickshire
- Winners: Southern Vipers
- Runners-up: Western Storm
- Wisden Cricketers of the Year (i.e., awarded in 2016 for the 2015 season)
- PCA Player of the Year
County Championship
editRoyal London One-Day Cup
editNatWest t20 Blast
editMinor Counties Championship
editWomen's County Championship
editKent won the 2016 Women's County Championship, the county's record seventh Championship title. The runners-up were Sussex.[3]
Women's Twenty20 Cup
editWomen's Super League
editReferences
edit- ^ "2016 international summer dates announced | England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) - The Official Website of the ECB". Archived from the original on 27 August 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
- ^ "Pakistan Women in England 2016". CricketArchive. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
- ^ a b Reid J (ed) (2016) 2016 Kent County Cricket Club Annual, p.3. Canterbury: Kent County Cricket Club.