Twenty20 Cricket Shows valuable Role by Spinners

September 28, 2007

The World Twenty20, which concluded in Johannesburg earlier this week, showed that not only could spinners hold their own, they could also outdo the fast bowlers in a format where taking pace off the ball is the smartest thing to do.

Daniel Vettori, the master of change of pace, finished with 11 wickets - an impressive haul - but even more astoundingly, he had an economy-rate of 5.33, the best among all bowlers in the tournament. Add a strike-rate of 11.63 and you have a bowler whose average figures during the tournament were 2 for 21 from four overs - even in one-day cricket they’re excellent numbers; in Twenty20 they’re quite unbelievable.

Overall, the spinners had a good time in the tournament. Their wickets tally only amounted to a little over a third of what the fast bowlers took, but there was hardly anything to choose in terms of the average and the economy-rates between both.

Fast bowlers v spinners in World Twenty 20
Wickets Average Econ rate
Fast bowlers 226 25.26 7.78
Spinners 81 24.70 7.90

The lack of pace on the track at Johannesburg - which was especially prominent during the final - was perfect for the slow bowlers, and they did very well there, taking 35% of the total wickets taken by all bowlers, and at an average that was much better than what the pace bowlers managed. The spinners didn’t bowl as much as Durban, taking less than 20% of the total wickets, but they didn’t do a bad job there either, with their wickets costing them 21 apiece at an economy-rate of 7.82. At Cape Town they picked up 24% of all wickets to fall to bowlers, but it cost them more - almost 30 runs per wicket.

Fast bowlers v spinners at each venue
Venue Fast - wickets Average Econ rate Spin - wickets Average Econ rate
Johannesburg 69 30.21 8.51 37 23.11 8.26
Durban 79 24.62 7.70 19 21.00 7.82
Cape Town 78 21.53 7.13 25 29.88 7.57

This tournament was supposed to be tailormade for Shahid Afridi the batsman; instead it was Afridi the legspinner who shone. As a batsman he scored at a phenomenal strike-rate of 198 - the highest for any batsman who faced at least 25 balls - but he only managed 91 runs in the seven innings in which he batted, at a poor average of 15.16.

With the ball, though, Afridi was outstanding, taking 12 wickets at an economy-rate of less than seven runs per over, figures which were enough to win him the Man-of-the-Series award. Daniel Vettori finished with the second-highest haul of wickets, though his average and economy-rate were both better than Afridi’s.

Best spinners in the tournament
Bowler Wickets Average Econ rate Strike rate
Shahid Afridi 12 15.66 6.71 14.00
Daniel Vettori 11 11.63 5.33 13.00
Abdur Razzak 7 17.28 6.36 16.2
Harbhajan Singh 7 26.00 7.91 19.7
Shakib Al Hasan 6 19.33 6.82 17.0
Mohammad Hafeez 5 32.60 8.57 22.8

You’d have thought the spinners would have struggled to keep the runs in check during the slog, but they haven’t done badly on this count either: in the 223 balls they have bowled in the last five overs of an innings, the slow bowlers have gone at 9.04 an over, compared to 8.51 for pace, but spin has succeeded in getting batsmen out regularly - the average for spinners is marginally less than for fast bowlers.

Pace and spin in the last five overs in the World Twenty20
Type of bowler Wkts Average Economy rate Strike rate
Pace 72 16.06 8.51 11.32
Spin 23 14.61 9.04

 

Source:  CricInfo

India Wins Twenty20 World Cup Title

September 25, 2007

India wins T20 World Cup FinalMen in Blue won the twenty20 cricket world cup final yesterday night. It was like a dream come true for the Indians around the world. A victory of Indian Cricket Team in the Grand Finale of Twenty Twenty World Cup gave the Indian cricket fans a rush of enjoyment. Not only did Indian Team win the world cup, but they also defeated their arch-rivals the Pakistan in a closely contested match.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s young and fearless squad focussed like a hawk to achcieve a win and what a win it was! After being restricted to 157 for five, India’s chances were slim as India’s only strength - batting - had failed to deliver. Apart from Gautam Gambhir who scored a superb 75 off 54 balls and later Rohit Sharma showed some good hands with 30 from 16 balls. Once again India’s big shots had failed to perform.

Cut to Pakistan Inninngs. The beginning was bad and pakistan had lost two important wickets within 3 overs. The wickets kept on falling but Misbah-ul-Haq proved to be tough nut to crack. As a matter of fact, Misbah-ul-Haq could have turned the tide had he not been caught by Sreesanth at short fine leg.

Many-2 congratulation to Indian Team!!!!

 

India Oust South Africa To Reach T20 Semis

September 21, 2007

For many others though, it was a confusing win. Most wanted both India and South Africa to get through, and as one placard stated, ‘South Africa, please get 126′. For, towards the end of this game, as a young, shining India rocked towards an improbable win in Kingsmead, a ground where they had played eight other international games, lost six and won none till Thursday, everyone knew the target of 154 would be too much for South Africa. All they wanted was for the Proteas to get to 126 and ensure that they went through to the last four, past the waiting Kiwis, on a better Net Run Rate.

It has been heartening for Indian fans and all those who wonder what after the Big Three, to see young Indian after young Indian stand up and be counted when it matters.

But, as Graeme Smith later stated self-deprecatingly, South Africa seem to have a way of messing up crucial big encounters and they did exactly that, ending their innings at 116-9 and losing by 37 runs.

From the beginning of the tournament, skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni has been talking about the need for the bowling and batting departments to click together. And when it was mattered most - irrespective of the margin of victory, India had to win the match to make the semis - both did. After young Rohit Sharma, catapulted into the hot seat, and Dhoni ensured that India registered what would prove a fighting total of 153/5 under testing conditions for batting, the bowlers reduced South Africa to 31 for five in the sixth over to virtually seal the match for India.

It has been heartening for Indian fans and all those who wonder what after the Big Three, to see young Indian after young Indian stand up and be counted when it matters. In this case, both RPs, Rohit Padbanaban Sharma and Rudra Pratap Singh, came up with something special. After Sharma started scratchily and then blossomed when India batted, RP’s double whammy at the start of the South African innings was a blow the Proteas never really recovered from. India now play Australia in the semis in Durban on Saturday, while New Zealand take on Pakistan in Cape Town earlier on the same day.

Source: http://www.hindustantimes.com

Twenty20 Cricket World Cup: Schedule For The Remainig Matches

September 18, 2007

Twenty20 World cup is proved very much interesting till now. According to Mike Atherton "Twenty20 is a threat to the ODIS". Little minnows are also performing very good in this Twenty20 world cup. Some big teams are already out of the tournament. Everybody is enjoying these matches and super eight matches already started.  Lets see what happen in the upcoming matches. There is schedule for the  super eight matches.

T20 remaining fixtures

Tuesday:

Durban: New Zealand vs England (10am),
Johannesburg: Australia vs Pakistan (2pm),
Bangladesh vs Sri Lanka (6pm)

Wednesday:

Durban: South Africa vs New Zealand (2pm)
England vs India (6pm)

Thursday:

Newlands: Australia vs Sri Lanka (10am), Bangladesh vs Pakistan (2pm),
Durban: South Africa vs India (6pm)

Saturday:

Newlands: Semifinal 1 (1pm),
Durban: Semifinal 2 (6pm)

Monday: Johannesburg:

Final (2pm).

Source: Iol.ca 

Twenty20 World Cup: New Zealand Crush Kenya

September 12, 2007

Mark Gillespie had proved their worth why is the best bowler of New Zealand cricket team in both version game ODI as well as in test matches. In todays match with Kenya, Gillespie picked up 4-7 in 2.5 overs to send Kenya crashing for 73 all out, the lowest Twenty20 international total, which the Kiwis surpassed easily in the eighth over to begin their campaign on a rousing note.

Daniel Vettori celebrated his elevation as New Zealand’s Test captain earlier in the day by winning the toss and asking Kenya to bat first at a sun-baked Kingsmead.

Kenya lost the first three wickets without a run on the board, slipped to 4-1 before Collins Obuya and Thomas Odoyo put on 36 for the fifth wicket.

Both batsmen made 18 runs each but it was not enough to help the Africans put up a reasonable total to challenge New Zealand in the group C match.

Vettori, who already captains New Zealand in one-day and Twenty20 cricket, replaced the long-serving Stephen Fleming as Test skipper earlier on Wednesday.

As expected, it was a cakewalk for New Zealand. After losing Lou Vincent, who made 27 off 20 balls including four boundaries and a six, at the team total of 40, the Kiwis had no further problems.

Brendon Mc Cullum (16 off 13 balls, 1x4, 1x6) and Peter Fulton (21 off 14 balls, 1x4, 2x6) put on an unbeaten stand of 34 runs for the second wicket to see their team through.

 

 

Twenty20 World Cup Teams and Schedule

September 11, 2007

Twenty20 World Cup, is the first time ICC has organized. Twenty20 World Championship tournament to be played in South Africa. This Twenty20 World Cup championship will be played between all the test playing nations and other qualifiers and it will contested among total 12 teams.

Twenty20 World Cup Schedule

Group Matches Schedule
Time Teams Location Results
11/9 16:00 GMT A - South Africa v West Indies New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
12/9 08:00 GMT C - Kenya v New Zealand Kingsmead, Durban  
12/9 12:00 GMT D - Pakistan v Scotland Kingsmead, Durban  
12/9 16:00 GMT B - Australia v Zimbabwe Newlands, Cape Town  
13/9 08:00 GMT A - Bangladesh v West Indies New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
13/9 12:00 GMT B - England v Zimbabwe Newlands, Cape Town  
13/9 16:00 GMT D - India v Scotland Kingsmead, Durban  
14/9 08:00 GMT C - Kenya v Sri Lanka New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
14/9 12:00 GMT B - Australia v England Newlands, Cape Town  
14/9 16:00 GMT D - India v Pakistan Kingsmead, Durban  
15/9 12:00 GMT C - New Zealand v Sri Lanka New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
15/9 16:00 GMT A - South Africa v Bangladesh Newlands, Cape Town  
Super Eight Schedule
16/9 08:00 GMT C1 v D2 New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
16/9 12:00 GMT B1 v A2 Newlands, Cape Town  
16/9 16:00 GMT A1 v B2 Newlands, Cape Town  
17/9 16:00 GMT D1 v C2 New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
18/9 08:00 GMT C1 v B2 Kingsmead, Durban  
18/9 12:00 GMT B1 v D1 New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
18/9 16:00 GMT A2 v C2 New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  
19/9 12:00 GMT A1 v C1 Kingsmead, Durban  
19/9 16:00 GMT B2 v D2 Kingsmead, Durban  
20/9 08:00 GMT B1 v C2 Newlands, Cape Town  
20/9 12:00 GMT A2 v D1 Newlands, Cape Town  
20/9 16:00 GMT A1 v D2 Kingsmead, Durban  
Semi Finals And The Final Schedule
22/9 11:00 GMT 1st Semi Final Newlands, Cape Town  
22/9 16:00 GMT 2nd Semi Final Kingsmead, Durban  
24/9 12:00 GMT Final New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg  

Twenty20 World Cup Groups

All the teams playing in this Twenty20 World Cup tournament are divided into 4 groups 3 teams each. The top 2 finishing teams in each group will be advanced to the super eight format group E and F. Finally the teams finishing first and second will play in semi finals.

Groups
Group Teams
A (A1) South Africa, (A2)West Indies, Bangladesh
B (B1) Australia, (B2)England, Zimbabwe
C (C1) New Zealand, (C2)Sri Lanka, Kenya
D (D1) Pakistan, (D2)India, Scotland
Super Eight Stage Groups
E A1, B2, C1, D2
F A2, B1, C2, D1

Twenty20 World Cup Teams

Following are the 12 teams taking part in this inaugural ICC Twenty20 Cricket World Cup tournament.

Teams
Team Players
Australia Ricky Ponting, Nathan Bracken, Stuart Clark, Michael Clarke, Adam Gilchrist, Brad Haddin, Matthew Hayden, Brad Hodge, Bradley Hogg, Michael Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Andrew Symonds, Shaun Tait, Shane Watson.
Bangladesh Mohammad Ashraful, Aftab Ahmed, Nadif Chowdhury, Shakib Hasan Tamim Iqbal, Alok Kopali, Mashrafe Mortaza, Mushfiqur Rahim, Ziaur Rahman, Syed Rasel, Abdur Razzak, Farhad Reza, Zunaed Siddique, Nazim Uddin, Mahmud Ullah
England Paul Collingwood, Ravi Bopara, Stuart Broad, Andrew Flintoff, James Kirtley, Darren Maddy, Kevin Pietersen, Matt Prior, Chris Schofield, Owais Shah, Ryan Sidebottom, Jeremy Snape, Vikram Solanki, Chris Tremlett, Luke Wright
India Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Ajit Agarkar, Piyush Chawla, Gautam Gambhir, Dinesh Karthik, Irfan Pathan, Yusuf Pathan, Virender Sehwag, Joginder Sharma, Harbhajan Singh, Rohit Sharma, RP Singh, Yuvraj Singh, Shanthakumaran Sreesanth, Robin Uthappa
Kenya Steve Tikolo, Rajesh Bhudiya, Jimmy Kamande, Tanmay Mishra, Lameck Ngoche, Nehemiah Ngoche, Alex Obanda, Collins Obuya, David Obuya, Thomas Odoyo, Peter Ongondo, Elijah Otieno, Morris Ouma, Ondik Suji, Hiren Varaiya
New Zealand Daniel Vettori, Shane Bond, Peter Fulton, Mark Gillespie, Gareth Hopkins, Chris Martin, Craig McMillan, Brendon McCullum, Nathan McCullum, Jacob Oram, Jeetan Patel, Bradley Scott, Scott Styris, Ross Taylor, Lou Vincent
Pakistan Shoaib Malik, Shahid Afridi, Shoaib Akhtar, Kamran Akmal, Fawad Alam, Yasir Arafat, Mohammad Asif, Salman Butt, Umar Gul, Mohammad Hafeez, Misbah-ul-Haq, Rao Iftikhar, Younis Khan, Imran Nazir, Abdul Rehman
Scotland Ryan Watson, Fraser Watts, Dougie Brown, John Blain, Gavin Hamilton, Navdeep Poonia, Gregor Maiden, Neil McCallum, Qasim Sheikh, Colin Smith, Craig Wright, Dewald Nel, Gordon Drummond, Ross Lyons, Majid Haq
South Africs Graeme Smith, Gulam Bodi, Loots Bosman, Mark Boucher, AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Herschelle Gibbs, Justin Kemp, Albie Morkel, Morne Morkel, Makhaya Ntini, Vernon Philander, Shaun Pollock, Thandi Tshabalala, Johan van der Wath,
Sri Lanka Mahela Jayawardena, Dilhara Fernando, Hasantha Fernando, Kaushal Lokuarachchi, Sanath Jayasuriya, Farveez Maharoof, Lasith Malinga, Jehan Mubarak, Muttiah Muralidaran, Kumara Sangakkara, Chamara Silva, Upul Tharanga, Dilshan Tilakarathne, Chaminda Vaas, Gayan Wijekoon
West Indies Ramnaresh Sarwan, Dwayne Bravo, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Pedro Collins, Narsingh Deonarine, Fidel Edwards, Chris Gayle, Runako Morton, Daren Powell, Denesh Ramdin, Ravi Rampaul, Darren Sammy, Marlon Samuels, Devon Smith, Dwayne Smith
Zimbabwe Prosper Utseya, Gary Brent, Chamunorwa Chibhabha, Elton Chigumbura, Keith Dabengwa, Tymsen Maruma, Hamilton Masakadza, Stuart Matsikinyeri, Johnson Marumisa, Christopher Mpofu, Tawanda Mupariwa, Vusimusi Sibanda, Tatenda Taibu, Brendon Taylor, Shaun Williams

 

Source: Hindustantimes

 

Results For The Twenty20 Warm Up Matches

September 10, 2007

The Twenty20 World Cup begins on Tuesday with South Africa against West Indies in Johannesburg in Group A. Twenty 20 world cup is about to start. Every cricket fan, lover is very eagerly waiting for the start of world cup. Preparation is going on by all the teams. Teams are playing warm up matches against each other. Yesterday some warm up matches played between teams like South Africa vs Australia, Kenya vs Bangladesh, Pakistan vs Sri Lanka. South Africa swept to a rousing eight-wicket win over Australia while Pakistan, West Indies and Kenya also tasted victory in Sunday’s final round of warm-up matches before the Twenty20 World Cup.

AB de Villiers partnered Smith in a second wicket stand of 116 in just 12 overs which effectively ended the game, played in Centurion.

In the morning game played at the same venue, Pakistan soundly beat Sri Lanka by five wickets with seven balls to spare after an opening stand of 94 between Salman Butt (51) and Mohammad Hafeez (45).

Jehan Mubarak (42) top scored for Sri Lanka in a modest total of 162-7 but off-spinner Hafeez claimed figures of 2-18 in four overs to prove the worth of clever slow bowling in the shortest version of the game. Kenya produced the first raised eyebrows of the warm-up weekend with a convincing six-wicket triumph over Test nation Bangladesh after bowling the senior team out for a miserable 116 with 21 balls left of their 20 overs.

BLUSHES SPARED

Opener Tamim Iqbal spared some of Bangladesh’s blushes with 56 from 41 balls but veteran Steve Tikolo’s carefully paced 36 from 28 deliveries saw the African nation win with a ball to spare.

 

All Speculation of Retirment Dismissed By Sachin Tendulkar

September 7, 2007

Hello Friends, Good news for the fan of Sachin Tendulkar. He is descarding all the rumours related to retirements. Right now master blaster is not of any mood to retire from the Cricket.  

Sachin Tendulkar has dismissed speculation about his retirement from one-day cricket, saying he was "batting brilliantly" at the moment and that the thought of quitting had not even crossed his mind.


"The thought of retirement has not crossed my mind," I am still enjoying the game very much and want to play for as long as I can. Cricket means a lot to me." 

Tendulkar’s clarification sought to end speculation over his retiring from one-day cricket after India’s home engagements against Pakistan and Australia later this season. 

Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome
Theme designed by Viewfinder Design

  • Categories:
  • Other:
  • Meta: