New Zealand to introduce Debbie H. Medal to honour women cricketers

Debbie H. Medal: The inaugural Debbie Hockley Medal will be given to one outstanding women’s cricket player at this year’s annual cricket awards ceremony, according to New Zealand Cricket (NZC). Debbie, regarded as one of the world’s best batters during her playing days and one of the finest to have played the game, played 118 ODIs and 19 Tests for New Zealand from 1979 to 2000. She will present the new award in person on the awards night. In ODIs, she amassed 4064 runs at 41.89, including four hundreds and 34 half-centuries, while she took 54 wickets. She was the first woman to play 100 ODIs and the first to surpass 4,000 ODI runs. She captained New Zealand on 33 occasions in both formats.

January 2023 Current Affairs Quiz

About the Debbie Hockley

  • Debbie is the only woman to have won the supreme New Zealand Cricketer of the Year Award, having been honoured in 1998, 13 years before it was changed to the Sir Richard Hadlee Medal. She expressed her delight at having her name associated with the new award.
  • Debbie joined Rachael Heyhoe-Flint, Enid Bakewell, and Belinda Clark (all of Australia) as the fourth woman to be inducted into the ICC Hall of Fame (England). In the Test arena, she scored 1301 runs at an average of 52.04, including four centuries, seven half-centuries and a top score of 126 not out against Australia, at Auckland in 1990.
  • Debbie was also the first woman to be elected President of NZC, also the first to aggregate 1500 World Cup runs, and the first to play more than 40 World Cup matches. She played in the 2000 ODI World Cup championship match between New Zealand and Australia at Lincoln before calling it quits on international cricket. In the 1999 New Year’s Honours, she was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to cricket and, in 2021, a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, also for services to cricket.
  • Debbie was also the first woman to be elected President of NZC, also the first to aggregate 1500 World Cup runs, and the first to play more than 40 World Cup matches. She retired from international cricket after playing in New Zealand’s victorious ODI World Cup final against Australia, at Lincoln in 2000.
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