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All Time Great Championship: World Cup of World Cups

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  • #16
    Game 13A: West Indies '75 vs Pakistan '92
    West Indies '75 XI: R Fredericks, G Greenidge, A Kallicharran, R Kanhai, C Lloyd*, V Richards, K Boyce, B Julien, D Murray, V Holder, A Roberts
    Pakistan '92 XI: A Sohail, R Raja, I Khan*, J Miandad, I ul-Haq, S Malik, I Ahmed, M Khan+, W Akram, M Ahmed, A Javed

    West Indies '75 won the toss and elected to bat.

    West Indies
    C Lloyd 33(44), R Fredericks 25(28)
    W Akram 3-23, I Ahmed 2-25

    154 (33.1 overs)

    Pakistan '92
    R Raja 51(65), J Miandad 46(54)
    B Julien 2-26, V Richards 1-32

    3-157 (37.2 overs)

    Pakistan won by 7 wickets
    W Akram was awarded Man of the Match.

    Game 13B: Pakistan '92 vs West Indies '75
    Pakistan '92 XI: A Sohail, R Raja, I Khan*, J Miandad, I ul-Haq, S Malik, I Ahmed, M Khan+, W Akram, M Ahmed, A Javed
    West Indies '75 XI: R Fredericks, G Greenidge, A Kallicharran, R Kanhai, C Lloyd*, V Richards, K Boyce, B Julien, D Murray, V Holder, A Roberts
    West Indies '75 won the toss and elected to bat.

    West Indies '75
    G Greenidhe 77(96), C Lloyd 72(62)
    I Khan 3-51, A Javed 1-42

    7-293 (50 overs)

    Pakistan '92
    R Raja 121(115), J Miandad 121(117)
    A Roberts 2-54, B Julien 1-46

    5-294 (48.84)

    Pakistan won by 5 wickets
    R Raja was awarded Man of the Match.

    Comment


    • #17
      Game 14A: South Africa '98 vs India '83
      South Africa '98 XI: D Cullinan, M Rindel, M Boucher+, J Kallis, H Cronje*, J Rhodes, D Benkenstein, D Crookes, N Boje, P Symcox, S Elworthy
      India '83 XI: S Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Y Sharma, S Patil, K Dev*, K Azad, R Binny, M Lal, S Kirmani+, B Sandhu

      South Africa '86 won the toss and elected to bat.

      South Africa '98
      M Rindel 126(136), J Kallis 58(77)
      K Azad 3-49, M Lal 1-47

      8-300 (50 overs)

      India '83
      K Srikkanth 144(127, S Gavaskar 61(95)
      S Elworthy 2-63, N Boje 1-50

      6-301 (47.1 overs)

      India won by 4 wickets
      K Srikkanth was awarded Man of the Match.

      Game 14B: India '83 vs South Africa '98
      India '83 XI: S Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Y Sharma, S Patil, K Dev*, K Azad, R Binny, M Lal, S Kirmani+, B Sandhu​​
      South Africa '98 XI: D Cullinan, M Rindel, M Boucher+, J Kallis, H Cronje*, J Rhodes, D Benkenstein, D Crookes, N Boje, P Symcox, S Elworthy
      India won the toss and elected to bat.

      India '83
      K Srikkanth 116(100), M Amarnath 83(99)
      J Kallis 3-48, P Symcox 3-98

      7-322 (50 overs)

      South Africa '98
      D Cullinan 60(94), M Rindel 47(75)
      M Lal 4-41, K Azad 3-57

      239 (47.2 overs)

      India won by 83 runs
      K Srikkanth was awarded Man of the Match.

      Once again, South Africa '98 were unable to record a win. India '83 was dominant in both matches with both bat and ball. K Srikkanth led the way with two big hundred scored at a fast strike rate. South Africa's lack of bowling depth will hinder the South Africans in this tournament. On the other hand, India has shown remarkable batting depth, which allows their top order to bat aggressively. Their bowlers have also stood up, especially their all-rounders who have alleviated the load from their front-line quicks.

      Comment


      • #18
        Game 15A: England '19 vs India '11
        England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, J Buttler+, C Woakes, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood
        India '11 XI: V Sehwag, S Tendulkar, G Gambhir, V Kohli, M Dhoni*+, Y Singh, S Raina, H Singh, Z Khan, M Patel, S Sreesanth

        England '19 won the toss and elected to bowl first.

        India '11
        M Dhoni 58(55), G Gambhir 56(62)
        L Plunkett 4-34, C Wokes 3-54

        266 (48.4 overs)

        England '19
        J Buttler 124(121), B Stokes 47(62)
        Z Khan 3-51, S Sreesanth 2-52

        7-267 (48 overs)

        England won by 3 wickets
        L Plunkett was awarded Man of the Match.

        Game 15B: India '11 vs England '19
        England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, J Buttler+, C Woakes, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood
        India '11 XI: V Sehwag, S Tendulkar, G Gambhir, V Kohli, M Dhoni*+, Y Singh, S Raina, H Singh, Z Khan, M Patel, S Sreesanth


        India '11
        V Sehwag 126(106), G Gambhir 72(74)
        A Rashid 5-57, L Plunkett 4-73

        331 (49.3 overs)

        England '19
        J Buttler 90(56), B Stokes 63(55)
        S Sreesanth 3-76, Z Khan 1-52

        6-332 (47.3 overs)

        England won by 4 wickets
        J Buttler was awarded Man of the Match.

        The Indian batters struggled to get ahold of the English bowlers, particularly Woakes as he picked up three top-order wickets in his opening spell. Gambhir and Dhoni both made fifties to guide India to a respectable total. Both half-centurions were picked up by Plunkett who also tore through the lower order to bowl India out. The Indian quicks were all over the English batsmen and looked to be striding towards a win but Buttler produced a huge ton, batting mainly with Plunkett to guide the English to their third straight win.

        The Indians were all over the English to begin with, sending the required run rate to above eight runs per over at the 25-over mark. The middle-lower order consisting of Morgan, Stokes, Buttler and Woakes went ballistic. Buttler once again led the way with a captain's knock of 90 off 56 while Woakes finished things off with a blistering, unbeaten 48 off 25. Deep batting and bowling in the English XI have given them the perfect start to their tournament.

        Comment


        • #19
          Game 16A: West Indies '79 vs Sri Lanka '96
          West Indies '79 XI: G Greenidge, D Haynes, V Richards, A Kallicharran, C Lloyd*, C King, D Murray, A Roberts, J Garner, M Holding, C Croft
          Sri Lanka '96 XI: S Jayasuriya, R Kaluwitharana+, A de Silva, A Ranatunga*, H Tillakaratne, R Mahanama, K Dharmasena, C Vaas, P Wickramasinghe, M Muralitharan

          Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat.

          Sri Lanka '96
          R Kaluwitharana 95(126), A de Silva 22(43)
          M Holding 4-33, C Croft 2-27

          179 (47.2)

          West Indies '79
          V Richards 104*(109), G Greenidge 51(72)
          M Muralitharan 1-22, P Wickramasinghe 1-57

          2-181 (33.4 overs)

          West Indies won by 8 wickets
          V Richards was awarded Man of the Match.

          Game 16B: Sri Lanka '96 vs West Indies '79
          Sri Lanka '96 XI: S Jayasuriya, R Kaluwitharana+, A de Silva, A Ranatunga*, H Tillakaratne, R Mahanama, K Dharmasena, C Vaas, P Wickramasinghe, M Muralitharan​​
          West Indies '79 XI: G Greenidge, D Haynes, V Richards, A Kallicharran, C Lloyd*, C King, D Murray, A Roberts, J Garner, M Holding, C Croft
          West Indies won the toss and elected to bowl.

          Sri Lanka '96
          Mahanama 77(68), C Vaas 36(54)
          J Garner 4-39, M Holding 2-47

          238 (47.4 overs)

          West Indies '79
          G Greenidge 81(115), V Richards 79(89)
          K Dharmasena 2-49, M Muralitharan 1-18

          5-239 (47.3 overs)

          West Indies '79 won by 5 wickets
          J Garner was awarded Man of the Match.

          Holding and the rest of the West Indies fast-bowling cartel were unplayable for the Sri Lankans. Only two batsmen made it past 20 and only Kaluwitharana seemed comfortable against the pace with a 95. He was also the only batsman with a strike rate over 50. The West Indies easily chased down the total needed for victory. Richards scored most of the runs and reached his ton just before the match ended.

          Sri Lanka batted first again and things looked dire again as the fast bowling quartet ripped through their top order. Some middle and lower-order partnerships steered them to a respectable total, mainly thanks to Mahanama's 77 off 68. As it turned out, 238 was a competitive score. At one stage, it looked as if the West Indies would struggle to reach the total but Richards and Lloyd turned up the heat in the last 10 or so overs of the match to bring a second victory of the round home.

          Comment


          • #20
            Game 17A: Australia '99 vs Australia '87
            Australia '99 XI: M Waugh, A Gilchrist+, R Ponting, D Lehmann, S Waugh*, M Bevan, T Moody, S Warne, P Reiffel, D Fleming, G McGrath​​
            Australia '87 XI: D Boon, G Marsh, D Jones, A Border*, M Veletta, S Waugh, S O'Donnell, G Dyer+, T May, C McDermott, B Reid
            Australia '99 won the toss and elected to bat.

            Australia '99
            S Waugh 100(103), M Bevan 69(73)
            T May 5-53, C McDermott 3-51

            9-260 (50 overs)

            Australia '87
            M Veletta 74(63), D Jones 62(47)
            T Moody 3-63, S Warne 2-49

            7-261 (46.5 overs)

            Australia '87 won by 3 wickets
            T May was awarded Man of the Match.

            Game 17B: Australia '87 vs Australia '99
            Australia '87 XI: D Boon, G Marsh, D Jones, A Border*, M Veletta, S Waugh, S O'Donnell, G Dyer+, T May, C McDermott, B Reid
            Australia '99 XI: M Waugh, A Gilchrist+, R Ponting, D Lehmann, S Waugh*, M Bevan, T Moody, S Warne, P Reiffel, D Fleming, G McGrath

            Australia '99 won the toss and elected to bat.

            Australia '99
            R Ponting 60(86), M Waugh 41(78)
            C McDermott 4-47, B Reid 2-63

            8-268 (50 overs)

            Australia '87
            A Border 81(88), D Boon 45(57)
            P Reiffel 2-41, S Warne 2-65

            6-271 (47.5 overs)

            Australia '87 won by 4 wickets
            C McDermott was awarded Man of the Match.

            After McDermott ripped through the top order, it looked like the '87 Aussies would roll through the '99 Aussies. Steve Waugh and Bevan held on for one partnership that included some glorious hitting managed to scrape a decent total for their team. They would've put on much more but May came into the attack and was able to pick off Steve Waugh and the rest of the middle order. In reply, '87 had a similar innings but pulled it off just a bit better, led by an explosive partnership between Veletta and Jones for a solid win.

            Two of Australia's most respected captains met for a second time in a bit more of a subdued affair. None of the '99 batsmen were able to get ahold of the '87 bowlers and it hurt them when it came to finishing the innings and McDermott was able to capitalise with a few soft wickets late in the innings. The '87s were a bit more proactive with their run-scoring, which meant O'Donnell was free to launch some big hits to close out the match with litte risk.

            Comment


            • #21
              Game 18A: Australia '23 vs Australia '15
              Australia '23 XI: D Warner, T Head, M Marsh, S Smith, M Labuschagne, G Maxwell, J Inglis+, M Starc, P Cummins*, A Zampa, J Hazelwood
              Australia '15 XI: D Warner, A Finch, S Smith, M Clarke*, S Watson, G Maxwell, J Faulkner, B Haddin+, M Johnson, M Starc, J Hazelwood

              Australia '15 won the toss and elected to bat.

              Australia '15
              D Warner 69(83), M Clarke 64(51)
              M Starc 2-33, J Hazelwood 2-70

              8-298 (50 overs)

              Australia '23
              M Marsh 103(78), G Maxwell 55(62)
              J Faulkner 3-59, M Johnson 3-71

              8-301 (45.1 overs)

              Australia '23 won by two wickets
              M Marsh was awarded Man of the Match.

              Game 18B: Australia '15 vs Australia '23
              Australia '15 XI: D Warner, A Finch, S Smith, M Clarke*, S Watson, G Maxwell, J Faulkner, B Haddin+, M Johnson, M Starc, J Hazelwood
              Australia '23 XI: D Warner, T Head, M Marsh, S Smith, M Labuschagne, G Maxwell, J Inglis+, M Starc, P Cummins*, A Zampa, J Hazelwood

              Australia '23 won the toss and elected to bowl.

              Australia '15
              A Finch 102(96), M Clarke 62(83)
              M Starc 3-50, M Marsh 3-104

              335 (50 overs)

              Australia '23
              G Maxwell 84(58), T Head 57(69)
              S Watson 4-59, G Maxwell 2-32

              9-338 (49.2 overs)

              Australia '23 won by 1 wicket
              G Maxwell was awarded Man of the Match.

              The 2015 Australian team was the beginning of what would soon become the champion 2023 team. With Clarke and Watson the only remaining members of the 'golden decade' of Australian cricket, the next generation got their first taste of World Cup glory. Young guns such as Warner, Smith, Maxwell, Starc and Hazelwood went toe-to-toe against their future selves. A mix of experience and youth, led by Warner and Clarke got the 2015s to a solid 298. A wisened Starc was almost unplayable and played a major role in keeping a lid on things. A blistering century from Marsh ended up getting the current champions over the line. It was touch and go for a while as Faulkner looked to rip through the tail in the final over of the match.

              Two wickets from Starc in the first over got the current champions off to the best start possible. A 100 from Finch got things back on track for the 2015s while some lower-order slogging from Maxwell, Faulkner and Johnson got them to 335. A slow start from the 23s saw the required run rate climb to 8+ runs per over fairly quickly. A few wickets from Watson and Maxwell put the 2015 team in a difficult position. The more experienced Maxwell certainly thrived from that difficult position, making a fantastic unbeaten knock of 84 that got his team within six runs with one over left. Despite being nine wickets down, a cool-headed Hazelwood hit the only two balls he faced for 4, leading his team to victory.

              Comment


              • #22
                Round 3 Results
                Round 3 was a very one-sided affair for each set of matches. Pakistan '92, India '83, India '11, West Indies '79, Australia '87 and Australia '23 each walked away with back-to-back wins while their opponents had two swallow a pair of bitter defeats. The best performance with the bat this round would have to be Srikkanth. He scored twin centuries (144 and 116) to guide India '83 to their wins. Both tons were scored at over a run per ball too. While only picking up two wickets in his two matches for the round, Muralitharan conceded only 40 runs in his 16 overs. That's an economy of 2.5 runs in matches where Viv Richards teed off.
                Group A
                WI 75 lost to PAK 92
                PAK 92 defeated WI 75
                SA 98 lost to India 83
                India 83 defeated SA 98
                ENG 19 defeated IND 11
                IND 11 lost to ENG 19
                AUS 03 - Bye
                Group B
                WI 79 defeated SL 96
                SL 96 lost to WI 79
                AUS 99 lost to AUS 87
                AUS 87 defeated AUS 99
                AUS 23 defeated AUS 15
                AUS 15 lost to AUS 23
                AUS 07 - Bye

                Current Standings
                Group A Played Wins Tie NRR Total
                India '83 6 4 1 0.60 9
                England '19 4 4 0.37 8
                Australia '03 4 3 1.86 6
                Pakistan '92 6 3 -0.50 6
                India '11 6 2 -0.26 4
                West Indies '75 6 1 1 0.05 3
                South Africa '98 4 0 -3.57 0
                Group B Played Wins N/R NRR Total
                Australia '87 6 4 0.27 8
                Australia '23 4 3 0.44 6
                West Indies '79 6 3 -0.07 6
                Australia '99 4 2 0.25 4
                Sri Lanka '96 6 2 -0.29 4
                Australia '07 4 2 -0.44 4
                Australia '15 6 2 -0.97 4

                Tournament Stat Leaders
                Batter Runs Bowler Wickets
                J Miandad (PAK92) 478 M Starc (AUS23) 12
                A de Silva (SL 96) 447 L Plunkett (ENG19) 12
                K Srikkanth (IND83) 400 C McDermott (AUS87) 12
                G Greenidge (WI79) 395 G Maxwell (AUS15) 12
                M Hayden (AUS07) 365 K Azad (IND83)
                +2 others
                11

                Round 4 Fixture
                Group A
                WI 75 vs SA 98
                ENG 19 vs IND 83
                IND 11 vs AUS 03
                PAK 92 - Bye
                Group B
                WI 79 vs AUS 99
                AUS 23 vs AUS 87
                AUS 15 vs AUS 07
                SL 96 - Bye
                ​​​

                Comment


                • #23
                  Game 19: West Indies '75 vs South Africa '98
                  West Indies '75 XI: R Fredericks, G Greenidge, A Kallicharran, R Kanhai, C Lloyd*, V Richards, K Boyce, B Julien, D Murray+, A Roberts, V Holder
                  South Africa '98 XI:
                  D Cullinan, M Rindel, M Boucher+, J Kallis, H Cronje*, J Rhodes, D Benkenstein, D Crookes, N Boje, P Symcox, S Elworthy
                  South Africa won the toss and elected to bowl.

                  West Indies '75
                  G Greendge 130(129), R Fredericks 103(119)
                  D Crookes 4-69, N Boje 2-67

                  8-318 (50 overs)

                  South Africa '98
                  M Boucher 123(140), D Crookes 67(40)
                  A Roberts 4-49, V Holder 2-74

                  8-273 (50 overs)

                  West Indies won by 45 runs
                  G Greenidge was awarded Man of the Match.


                  Game 19B: South Africa '98 vs West Indies '75
                  South Africa '98 XI: D Cullinan, M Rindel, M Boucher+, J Kallis, H Cronje*, J Rhodes, D Benkenstein, D Crookes, N Boje, P Symcox, S Elworthy
                  West Indies '75 XI: R Fredericks, G Greenidge, A Kallicharran, R Kanhai, C Lloyd*, V Richards, K Boyce, B Julien, D Murray+, A Roberts, V Holder
                  South Africa won the toss and elected to bat.

                  South Africa '98
                  M Boucher 69(96), H Cronje 60(55)
                  A Roberts 3-37, V Holder 2-38

                  9-246 (50 overs)

                  West Indies '75
                  G Greenidge 97(98), R Fredericks 74(98)
                  D Crookes 3-37, J Kallis 1-34

                  5-248 (47.4 overs)

                  West Indies won by 5 wickets
                  G Greenidge was awarded Man of the Match.

                  Fredericks and Greenidge both scored centuries and put on over 200 runs together for their opening stand. That allowed the rest of the West Indies batsmen to score rapidly in the later overs, putting on over 100 runs in 15 overs but losing eight wickets. In response, Roberts picked up early wickets that the South Africans could never recover from. Even a steady 100 from Boucher could not keep them in the game for too long.

                  In the follow-up match, the West Indies bowlers, especially Roberts and Holder, were landing every delivery on a twenty-cent piece making it very difficult for the South Africans to make any headway into their innings. Boucher and Cronje managed to get some boundaries away but it was slim pickings for the rest of their team. And just like in the first match, Greenidge and Fredericks put on a stalwart performance to ensure that the West Indies had a comfortable time keeping a stronghold on the result.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Game 20A: England '19 vs India '83
                    England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, J Buttler+, C Woakes, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood
                    India '83 XI: S Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Y Sharma, S Patil, K Dev*, R Binny, K Azad, M Lal, S Kirmani+, B Sandhu

                    England '19 won the toss and elected to bowl.

                    India '83
                    M Amarnath 151(151), S Patil 74(39)
                    C Woakes 3-74, J Archer 2-33

                    6-342 (50 overs)

                    England '19
                    B Stokes 56(58), J Archer 44(35)
                    R Binny 3-52, M Lal 3-53

                    238 (41.4 overs)

                    India won by 104 runs
                    M Amarnath was awarded Man of the Match.

                    Archer and Woakes got the English off to the perfect start with a few top-order wickets and very few runs scored but the Indian middle-order capitalised on errant pace bowling. Amarnath led the way with a mammoth run-a-ball 151 and Patil, Binny and Azad finished the innings with fireworks to allow India to reach a total of 343 runs. The English batsmen found it difficult to stay at the crease and form partnerships like the Indian batsmen. Aside from a Stokes 50 and a low-order Archer cameo, India broke little sweat bowling England out for 100 runs short to give England their first loss of the tournament.

                    Game 20B: India '83 vs England '19
                    India '83 XI: S Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Y Sharma, S Patil, K Dev*, R Binny, K Azad, M Lal, S Kirmani+, B Sandhu
                    England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, J Buttler+, C Woakes, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood
                    England '19 won the toss and elected to bat.

                    England '19
                    J Root 105(98), B Stokes 92(43)
                    R Binny 3-78, B Sandhu 2-84

                    6-342 (50 overs)

                    India '87
                    S Gavaskar 99(97), K Dev 73(57)
                    C Woakes 3-44, J Archer 3-78

                    9-345 (50 overs)

                    India won by one wicket
                    S Gavaskar was awarded Man of the Match.

                    A controlled partnership from Bairstow and Root set the launching pad for Stokes to go off in the last 10 overs. England was on track to reach 300 until Stokes blasted an unbeaten 92 runs off 43 balls to guide his team to 342. Gavaskar and the Indian top-order had India in a solid position and kept the large target in reach. Woakes and Archer tore through the middle-order to leave Dev at the crease with Kirmani and over 100 runs to get in the last 10 overs. Dev hit 73 of those runs before going out in the second last over, leaving the last wicket 11 runs off six balls for an Indian victory. Kirmani hit two 4s and was saved from an LBW shout by a no-ball. Needing 2 runs off the final ball, he hit Stokes through the covers for 4, guiding India to a last-ball win by one wicket.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Game 21A: India '11 vs Australia '03
                      India '11 XI: V Sehwag, S Tendulkar, G Gambhir, V Kohli, M Dhoni*+, Y Singh, S Raina, H Singh, Z Khan, M Patel, S Sreesanth
                      Australia '03 XI: A Gilchrist+, M Hayden, R Ponting*, D Martyn, D Lehmann, M Bevan, A Symonds, B Hogg, A Bichel, B Lee, G McGrath

                      India won the toss and elected to bowl.

                      Australia '03
                      D Martyn 92(79), R Ponting 75(77)
                      S Sreesanth 4-63, Z Khan 3-56

                      9-328 (50 overs)

                      India '11
                      V Kohli 122(103), M Dhoni 51(37)
                      G McGrath 3-50, B Hogg 2-84

                      7-332 (49.4 overs)

                      India '11 won by 3 wickets
                      V Kohli was awarded Man of the Match.

                      The Indian quicks got off to a flier, removing both openers in their opening spells but Ponting and Martyn steered the Aussies back on track with a wonderful partnership. Runs flowed freely throughout the middle overs and despite regular wickets from the likes of Sreesanth and Khan, Australia showed off their batting depth. They continued to hit boundaries throughout their whole innings. Stumps were sent flying three times in the first ten overs of the Indian innings but a stunning century from a young Kohli had the Indian team back on top with 100 runs needed off the last 15 overs, which Yuvraj Singh and Raina easily knocked off.

                      Game 21B: Australia '03 vs India '11
                      India '11 XI: V Sehwag, S Tendulkar, G Gambhir, V Kohli, M Dhoni*+, Y Singh, S Raina, H Singh, Z Khan, M Patel, S Sreesanth
                      Australia '03 XI: A Gilchrist+, M Hayden, R Ponting*, D Martyn, D Lehmann, M Bevan, A Symonds, B Hogg, A Bichel, B Lee, G McGrath

                      India won the toss and elected to bat.

                      India '11
                      Y Singh 46(77), M Dhoni 42(78)
                      B Lee 4-56, A Symonds 2-60

                      9-240 (50 overs)

                      Australia '03
                      D Lehmann 86*(70), M Hayden 71(76)
                      S Sreesanth 2-43, Z Khan 1-42

                      5-241 (40.4 overs)

                      Australia '03 won by 5 wickets
                      D Lehmann was awarded Man of the Match.

                      India's top order fell like dominos to the Australian quicks and while Dhoni and Y Singh steadied the ship, they couldn't increase the run rate before they were dismissed. This left India with an underwhelming total of 240 at the end of 50 overs but runs on the board nonetheless. Hayden and Gilchrist got the Australians off to an aggressive start to get the required run rate under four runs per over early on. The batting conditions proved difficult to get settled as the Indian bowlers picked up some soft wickets throughout the chase but once Hayden and Lehmann were set, the match was all but over.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Game 22A: West Indies '79 vs Australia '99
                        West Indies '79 XI: D Haynes, G Greenidge, V Richards, A Kallicharran, C Lloyd*, C King, D Murray+, A Roberts, J Garner, M Holding, C Croft
                        Australia '99 XI: A Gilchrist+, M Waugh, R Ponting, D Lehmann, S Waugh*, M Bevan, T Moody, S Warne, P Reiffel, D Fleming, G McGrath

                        Australia '99 won the toss and elected to bat.

                        Australia '99
                        A Gilchrist 90(100), R Ponting 86(64)
                        C Croft 4-93, C King 3-77

                        8-314 (50 overs)

                        West Indies '79
                        G Greenidge 132(125), V Richards 57(61)
                        G McGrath 7-32, P Reiffel 2-60

                        269 (44.5 overs)

                        Australia won by 45 runs
                        G McGrath was awarded Man of the Match.

                        The West Indies opening quicks were economical and the Aussie openers could only bide their time until their spells were over. Once Garner and Holding were out of the attack, Gilchrist, Hayden and then Ponting went into attack mode, scoring almost all of Australia's runs. Despite being expensive, Croft and King took seven wickets between them, including a hattrick from Croft. Greenidge responded with a big 100 but just as things were getting comfortable for the West Indies, McGrath took four wickets in an over that included a double hattrick. McGrath tore through the tail, taking the final five wickets for zero runs.

                        Game 22A: West Indies '79 vs Australia '99
                        Australia '99 XI: A Gilchrist+, M Waugh, R Ponting, D Lehmann, S Waugh*, M Bevan, T Moody, S Warne, P Reiffel, D Fleming, G McGrath​​
                        West Indies '79 XI: D Haynes, G Greenidge, V Richards, A Kallicharran, C Lloyd*, C King, D Murray+, A Roberts, J Garner, M Holding, C Croft
                        Australia '99 won the toss and elected to bat.

                        Australia '99
                        R Ponting 125(96), S Waugh 46(42)
                        A Roberts 4-69, M Holding 3-36

                        293 (41 overs)

                        West Indies '79
                        G Greenidge 57(90), C King 48(34)
                        G McGrath 3-33, S Warne 3-57

                        195 (44.3 overs)

                        Australia '99 won by 99 runs
                        R Ponting was awarded Man of the Match.

                        A solid start from the top-order and a marvellous century from Ponting had Australia headed towards another big 300+ score but a clinic from Roberts and Holding put a premature end to the Australian's innings with nine overs to spare. Greenidge and Haynes never got going but soaked up more than half of the innings for under 100 runs. By the time they were back in the sheds, the required run rate was almost 10 an over and the rest of the West Indies batsman crumbled under pressure.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Game 23A: Australia '23 vs Australia '87
                          Australia '23 XI: D Warner, T Head, M Marsh, S Smith, M Labuschagne, G Maxwell, J Inglis+, M Starc, P Cummins*, A Zampa, J Hazelwood
                          Australia '87 XI: D Boon, G Marsh, D Jones, A Border*, M Veletta, S Waugh, S O'Donnell, G Dyer+, T May, C McDermott, B Reid

                          Australia '23 won the toss and elected to bat.

                          Australia '23
                          S Smith 82(107), M Labuschagne 51(68)
                          S O'Donnell 2-45, C McDermott 2-58

                          7-246 (50 overs)

                          Australia '87
                          G Marsh 93(91), D Jones 86(65)
                          J Hazelwood 1-28, G Maxwell 1-45

                          3-247 (38.2 overs)

                          Australia '87 won by 7 wickets
                          D Jones was awarded Man of the Match.

                          A few quick wickets for the '87 Aussies saw the '23 Aussie batsman crawl into their shells to steady the innings but they never came out. Even with a bit of a slogfest at the end of the innings from Smith, Starc and Cummins, they only managed to put together 246 runs. The lower-than-average total was too easy for the '87 top order to chase down. Marsh and Jones made big 50s to finish the match with 12 overs to spare.

                          Game 23B: Australia '87 vs Australia '23
                          Australia '87 XI: D Boon, G Marsh, D Jones, A Border*, M Veletta, S Waugh, S O'Donnell, G Dyer+, T May, C McDermott, B Reid​​
                          Australia '23 XI: D Warner, T Head, M Marsh, S Smith, M Labuschagne, G Maxwell, J Inglis+, M Starc, P Cummins*, A Zampa, J Hazelwood
                          Australia '87 won the toss and elected to bat.

                          Australia '87
                          G Marsh 82(88), A Border 80(59)
                          M Starc 6-43, A Zampa 2-77

                          307 (49.3 overs)

                          Australia '23
                          T Head 113(137), S Smith 34(55)
                          C McDermott 4-42, B Reid 2-29

                          227 (45.3 overs)

                          Australia '87 won by 80 runs
                          C McDermott was awarded Man of the Match.

                          Starc excelled with the ball, taking six vital wickets throughout the innings. Fortunately for the '87s, the other bowlers lacked Starc's venom and allowed them to still reach a strong total of 307 runs. The fightback was led by none other than Border, who made a rapid-fire 80. Even though Head scored a well-earned century, his efforts alone were not enough for the '23s to get close to victory. McDermott was a force to be reckoned with with a 4fa.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Game 24A: Australia '15 vs Australia '07
                            Australia '15 XI: D Warner, A Finch, S Smith, M Clarke, S Watson, G Maxwell, J Faulkner, B Haddin+, M Johnson, M Starc, J Hazelwood
                            Australia '07 XI: A Gilchrist+, M Hayden, R Ponting*, A Symonds, S Watson, M Clarke, M Hussey, B Hogg, N Bracken, S Tait, G McGrath

                            Australia '15 won the toss and elected to bat.

                            Australia '15
                            A Finch 182(132), M Clarke 53(61)
                            B Hogg 2-87, G McGrath 1-65

                            5-373 (50 overs)

                            Australia '07
                            M Hussey 59(45), S Watson 57(50)
                            J Hazelwood 4-34, M Johnson 2-62

                            286 (47.1 overs)

                            Australia '15 won by 87 runs
                            A Finch was awarded Man of the Match.

                            McGrath knocked over Warner's stumps with the first ball of the match but it was the Aaron Finch show for the other 49.5 overs. Finch carried his bat through the innings while scoring a blistering 182 runs. Just about all of the the '07 batsmen made it past the 20s except the tail and Clarke but with only Hussey and Watson making 50s, there were not enough runs to get close to the mammoth target set by the '15s.

                            Game 24B: Australia '07 vs Australia '15
                            Australia '07 XI: A Gilchrist+, M Hayden, R Ponting*, A Symonds, S Watson, M Clarke, M Hussey, B Hogg, N Bracken, S Tait, G McGrath​​
                            Australia '15 XI: D Warner, A Finch, S Smith, M Clarke, S Watson, G Maxwell, J Faulkner, B Haddin+, M Johnson, M Starc, J Hazelwood
                            Australia '15 won the toss and elected to bowl.

                            Australia '07
                            A Gilchrist 115(85), S Watson 71(59)
                            M Johnson 2-65, G Maxwell 2-73

                            6-376 (50 overs)

                            Australia '15
                            M Clarke 110(78), S Smith 72(67)
                            B Hogg 4-82, G McGrath 2-21

                            312 (47.4 overs)

                            Australia '07 won by 64 runs
                            A Gilchrist was awarded Man of the Match.

                            An all-round team effort, led by a Gilchrist ton, gave the '07s 376 to defend. The 15 bowlers never had the opportunity to find their rhythm as every batsman made solid scores and scored multiple boundaries. Despite the huge chase, the '15s looked like they were going to come out on top as Clarke and Smith quickly made runs. After a number of shoddy overs, Hogg removed both dangerous batsmen and picked up four wickets in the space of a couple of overs. In the end, the '07s took 10 wickets with plenty of runs to spare/

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Round 4 Results
                              Group A was dominated by home teams, with only one away victory for the round. The only team to not get a win in Group A this round was England '19, who just fell short of defending 342 against a rampaging India '83. Batsman dominated Group B with five out of the six matches featuring totals above 300. Speaking of big scores, Round 4's batting performance was Aaron Finch's 182 off just 132 balls. That's the highest score of the tournament so far. This round also saw the best figures of the tournament so far with Glenn McGrath taking 7-32, the only 7fa of the tournament.
                              Group A
                              WI 75 defeated SA 98
                              SA 98 lost to WI 75
                              ENG 19 lost to IND 83
                              IND 83 defeated ENG 19
                              IND 11 defeated AUS 03
                              AUS 03 defeated IND 11
                              PAK 92 - bye
                              Group B
                              WI 79lost to AUS 99
                              AUS 99 defeated WI 79
                              AUS 23 lost to AUS 87
                              AUS 87 defeated AUS 23
                              AUS 15 defeated AUS 07
                              AUS 07 defeated AUS 15
                              SL 96 - Bye

                              Current Standings
                              Group A Played Wins Tie NRR Total
                              India '83 8 5 1 0.82 11
                              Australia '03 6 4 1.43 8
                              England '19 6 4 -0.13 8
                              West Indies '75 8 3 1 0.27 7
                              India '11 8 3 -0.34 6
                              Pakistan '92 6 3 -0.50 6
                              South Africa '98 6 0 -0.69 0
                              Group B Played Wins N/R NRR Total
                              Australia '87 8 6 0.59 12
                              Australia '99 6 4 0.65 8
                              Australia '23 6 3 -0.24 6
                              Australia '07 6 3 -0.37 6
                              West Indies '79 8 3 -0.47 6
                              Australia '15 8 3 -0.66 6
                              Sri Lanka '96 6 2 -0.29 4

                              Tournament Stat Leaders
                              Batter Runs Bowler Wickets
                              G Greenidge (WI 79) 584 M Starc (AUS 23) 19
                              A Finch (AUS 15) 550 G McGrath (AUS 99) 18
                              G Greenidge (WI 75) 489 C McDermott (AUS 87) 18
                              K Srikkanth (IND 83) 479 S Sreenath (IND 11) 16
                              J Miandad (PAK92) 478 Z Khan (IND 11)
                              G Maxwell (AUS 15)
                              15

                              Round 4 Fixture
                              Group A
                              ENG 19 vs SA 98
                              IND 11 vs PAK 92
                              AUS 03 vs IND 83
                              PAK 92 - Bye
                              Group B
                              AUS 23 vs AUS 99
                              AUS 15 vs SL 96
                              AUS 07 vs AUS 87
                              WI 79 - Bye
                              ​​​​

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Originally posted by Wilted View Post
                                Another Australian summer of cricket, another ATG Championship. The World Cup is the pinnacle achievement in cricket. It only comes around once every four years and a small mistake can send even the greatest teams packing. Since the very first World Cup in 1975, 13 different teams have held the trophy aloft. This ATG Championship will find out which of these teams of greats truly is the All Time Great World Cup XI. Will one of the fearsome West Indies teams take home all the accolades? Maybe an ever-present Australian XI will take top honours? Or will another stroke of luck see the English take out the trophy? Anything can happen when it comes to World Cups so any team could ultimately be crowned All Time Greats at the end of the tournament.

                                Format
                                Similar to previous ATG Championships, the greatest players from around the world will gather to face off against each other. This edition of the ATG Championship will pit each World Cup winning XI against each other. To even up the numbers, the inaugural Champion Trophy winning XI, South Africa, will be the 14th team. The teams will be split into two groups and the top three from each group will progress to the round of finals.

                                Teams
                                1975 - West Indies
                                Clive Lloyd led one of the most dominant teams in the history of the game to defeat Australia in the first World Cup final. Lloyd's 102 off 85 was one of the fastest centuries ever seen at the time and he would be a key player in this legendary lineup.

                                1979 - West Indies
                                The West Indies made it two from two in 1979. This team is arguably the stronger of the West Indies team with a full-strength bowling lineup including the likes of Garner, Roberts and Holding.

                                1983 - India
                                It took one of the best bowling performances in World Cup history to finally beat the West Indies in a World Cup final when India lifted the World Cup. Dev's men could very well stun the world again.

                                1987 - Australia
                                Border was the first Aussie captain to lift the cup for his country. Border, Marsh and Waugh all feature in this team so there should be no shortage of runs.

                                1992 - Pakistan
                                Swing kings, Khan and Akram, led Pakistan to victory at the MCG. They have one of the most complete teams in the tournament with explosive batsmen, bowlers and all-rounders.

                                1995 - Sri Lanka
                                One of the greatest upsets of all time. If they can beat a team of Ponting, Waugh(x2), Bevan, Warne and McGrath, Ranatunga's team can take on anyone. Vaas, Murali, de Silva and Jayasuriya would love another crack at glory.

                                1998 (Champion's Trophy)- South Africa
                                While making up the numbers, South Africa was the first team to win what is now called the Champions Trophy. And with players like Boucher, Kallis, Rhodes and Cronje, they certainly do deserve the title of champions.

                                1999 - Australia
                                Australia's second World Cup title came with one of the most convincing World Cup final wins of all time. It only took Waugh, Gilchrist, Ponting and Lehmann to knock over a measly Pakistan total, which was dismantled by the likes of Warne and McGrath.

                                2003 - Australia
                                With just a few changes, Australia dominated for a second consecutive win. Ponting's century with springs in his bat meant that Australia didn't even have to bring out all of their weapons. Not to mention, their bowlers included Lee and McGrath as well as big-hitting Symonds who was underused.

                                2007 - Australia
                                Not only did Australia complete their hat trick, but they completed their three wins by some of the biggest margins we've seen in World Cup finals. The same old faces appear, McGrath, Gilchrist, Ponting.

                                2011 - India
                                It took an all-time performance from one of the best teams ever for India to get their second World Cup title. Tendulkar finally got his time to bask in glory alongside a young Kohli. Dhoni's grit could be the deciding factor once again.

                                2015 - Australia
                                Yet another Australia win but with an almost entirely different XI playing. Modern greats such as Starc, Warner and Maxwell add their strength to this team.

                                2019 - England
                                The closest match of all time. A lucky/unlucky moment gave England their first World Cup win after falling short 11 times, leaving New Zealand the only team from the first World Cup to not have a title to their name. Root, Stokes and Morgan all would like to prove everyone wrong by showing the world they were the best team on the day.

                                2023 - Australia
                                Arguably not the best team of the tournament but the Aussies won their fifth World Cup by being the best team on the day. This Australian team shows that no matter how the tournament progresses, once a match begins, history and expectations have little to do with the result.

                                Standings
                                Group A Played Wins N/R NRR Total Group B Played Wins N/R NRR Total
                                West Indies '75 0.00 0 West Indies '79 0
                                India '83 0.00 0 Australia '87 0
                                Pakistan '92 0.00 0 Sri Lanka '96 0
                                South Africa '98 0.00 0 Australia '99 0
                                Australia '03 0.00 0 Australia '07 0
                                India '11 0.00 0 Australia '15 0
                                England '19 0.00 0 Australia '23 0
                                ​The top 3 teams progress to the finals

                                Fixtures
                                Group A
                                WI 75 vs AUS 03
                                IND 83 vs IND 11
                                PAK 92 vs ENG 19
                                SA 98 - Bye
                                Group B
                                WI 79 vs AUS 07
                                AUS 87 vs AUS 15
                                SL 96 vs AUS 23
                                AUS 99

                                And with that, the tournament is ready to begin.
                                One question. Where did you get the '79 teams from? Wisden & Cricinfo didn't have nor ACS the reserves.

                                Comment

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