A hat-trick in cricket is when a bowler takes three wickets from consecutive deliveries. It is a relatively rare feat,[1] and has occurred 28 times in the history of women's international cricket.[lower-alpha 1] The first hat-trick was taken in a Test match between Australia and England in February 1958, by Australia's Betty Wilson.[5] Two further hat-tricks have been taken in women's Tests; by Pakistan's Shaiza Khan in 2004, and Australia's Rene Farrell in 2011.[2] The first hat-trick in women's One Day Internationals was taken by Carole Hodges during the 1993 Women's Cricket World Cup.
Rene Farrell is the most recent bowler to have taken a hat-trick in a women's Test match.
In September 2019, against the West Indies, Megan Schutt became the first female bowler to take two hat-tricks in international cricket.[6]
The most recent bowler to achieve the feat was Nepal's Anjali Chand, against Maldives during a Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) in September 2019.[lower-alpha 1]
Key
Notation
Meaning
Inn.
The innings of the match in which the player took her hat-trick.
Dismissals
The three players dismissed by the bowler, with the method of dismissal in parentheses.
Date
The date on which the match began.
*
The match was part of the Women's Cricket World Cup or the ICC Women's World Twenty20.
S
The hat-trick was split over two overs.
Notation
Meaning
b
Bowled
lbw
Leg before wicket
c & b
Caught, by the bowler
c Player
Caught, by the fielder noted
c sub
Caught, by a substitute fielder
st Player
Stumped, by the fielder noted
†
Indicates that the noted fielder is the designated wicket-keeper
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