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  • #31
    Originally posted by Trevfromsussex&Oz View Post

    One question. Where did you get the '79 teams from? Wisden & Cricinfo didn't have nor ACS the reserves.
    Live Cricket Scoreboard: Get England vs West Indies Final, cricket scorecard, Prudential World Cup 1979 dated June 23, 1979.


    Cricinfo has pretty detailed stats for each World Cup, including partnerships, stats vs opposition, etc.

    Comment


    • #32
      Game 25A: England '19 vs South Africa '98
      England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, C Woakes, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood
      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 '98 won the toss and elected to bat.

      South Africa '98
      D Cullinan 142(104), J Kallis 91(61)
      M Wood 4-66, C Woakes 2-82

      8-389 (50 overs)

      England '19
      J Root 111(97), J Buttler 89(77)
      S Elworthy 4-86, J Kallis 2-52

      347 (49 overs)

      South Africa won by 42 runs
      D Cullinan was awarded Man of the Match.

      After some lacklustre performances with the bat, South Africa's inaugural Champion's Trophy winners finally hit their stride. A stunning 142 from Cullinan was the highlight but Kallis and Rhodes also made quickfire 50s to guide their team to one of the biggest totals of the tournament. The only bowler to keep a lid on things was Wood with his 4-66. England 19's chase went as well as they hoped with Root tonning up and the scoreboard ticking along quickly. Needing 100 runs from ten overs, Buttler and Plunkett were key but Elworthy dismissed both and wrapped the tail up with an over to spare.

      Game 25B: South Africa '98 vs England '19
      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
      England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, C Woakes, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood
      South Africa '98 won the toss and elected to bat.

      South Africa '98
      H Cronje 101(76), J Rhodes 93*(75)
      L Plunkett 3-66, A Rashid 1-52

      6-340 (50 overs)

      England '19
      J Bairstow 80(84), C Woakes (53(40)
      D Crookes 3-79, S Elworthy 2-50

      320 (49.1 overs)

      South Africa won by 20 runs
      H Cronje was awarded Man of the Match.

      Cronje started things off with a 100 and fast cameos from Boucher and Crookes gave South Africa the upper hand. Jonty Rhodes brought things home with an unbeaten 90 to give South Africa 340 runs to defend. Once again, only one of England's bowlers looked in control with Plunkett taking three wickets. Once again, the English chase started well with Bairstow, Root and Morgan making early runs but a middle-order collapse put them behind. At one stage Woakes looked like he might produce a heroic finish but Crookes and Kallis saw an end to the innings with a few wickets.

      Comment


      • #33
        Game 26A: India '11 vs Pakistan '92
        India '11 XI: V Sehwag, S Tendulkar, G Gambhir, V Kohli, M Dhoni*+, Y Singh, S Raina, H Singh, Z Khan, M Patel, S Sreenath
        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

        India '11 won the toss and elected to bat.

        India '11
        V Kohli 150(81), M Dhoni 114(100)
        W Akram 3-58, I Khan 2-68

        8-374 (50 overs)

        Pakistan '92
        R Raja 109(105), I Khan 88(50)
        S Tendulkar 1-40, H Singh 0-52

        2-378 (49 overs)

        Pakistan won by 8 wickets
        I Khan was awarded Man of the Match.

        Quick wickets got Pakistan into a good position but one of the best knocks of the tournament was produced by Kohli. He made 150 runs, striking at 180%. He was supported by a Dhoni century to get India past 300. A flashfire 50 from Z Khan pushed India's total, much to England's frustration. While it's well known that this Indian batting lineup is one of the best we've ever seen, there's much to be desired about their bowling attack. Pakistan's top four all made 80+, topped off by Raja's century, which allowed them to chase down a huge score.

        Game 26B: Pakistan '92 vs India '11
        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​​
        India '11 XI: V Sehwag, S Tendulkar, G Gambhir, V Kohli, M Dhoni*+, Y Singh, S Raina, H Singh, Z Khan, M Patel, S Sreenath
        Pakistan '92 won the toss and elected to bat.

        Pakistan '92
        I Ahmed 94(64), R Raja 49(64)
        S Sreenath 4-52, H Singh 3-51

        286 (48.5 overs)

        India '11
        V Sehwag 132(99), V Kohli 105(90)
        S Sreenath 4-52, H Singh 3-51

        3-289 (43.4 overs)

        India won by 7 wickets
        V Sehwag was awarded Man of the Match.

        Pakistan's innings struggled to get going as Indian bowlers, particularly Sreenath and H Singh, took wickets at regular intervals. A last-minute hit out from Ahmed got Pakistan to a respectable 286 runs. Unfortunately for Pakistan, 286 was not nearly enough as Sehwag and Kohli both scored centuries to guide India to a comfortable victory.

        Comment


        • #34
          Game 27A: Australia '03 vs India '83
          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 '83 XI: S Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Y Sharma, S Patil, K Dev*, K Azad, R Binny, M Lal, S Kirmani+, B Sandhu

          Australia '03 won the toss and elected to bowl.

          Australia '03
          R Ponting 170(150), A Gilchrist 70(54)
          R Binny 2-60, M Lal 1-66

          4-342 (50 overs)

          India '83
          S Gavaskar 94(104), Y Sharma 78(92)
          A Bichel 4-44, G McGrath 2-55

          297 (48.2 overs)

          Australia '03 won by 45 runs
          R Ponting was awarded Man of the Match.

          Ponting had Indian fans claiming he had springs in his bat as he blasted an unbeaten 170. He was supported by Gilchrist and Bevan who both made 50s. The Indian bowlers struggled to take wickets, which allowed Australia to amass 342 runs. India responded slowly and steadily that saw them fall well behind the required run rate. Tight bowling Lee and Bichel meant that Dev had a lot of work to do to catch up but only managed 51 off 30 before falling along with the rest of the tail.

          Game 27B: India '83 vs Australia '03
          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​​
          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 '83 won the toss and elected to bat.

          India '83
          M Amarnath 116(107), K Dev 74(67)
          B Lee 3-60, B Hogg 2-48

          8-297 (50 overs)

          Australia '03
          R Ponting 118(132), D Martyn 33(41)
          B Sandhu 3-58, R Binny 2-69

          286 (49.1 overs)

          India won by 11 runs
          M Amarnath was awarded Man of the Match.

          On a difficult batting pitch, Amarnath stood tall amongst the Indian top order to score a century against a fiery Aussie attack. With Dev once again putting in heavy lifting at the end of the innings with 74 runs before being run out in the last over. India looked to be in control with ball in hand but a persistent Ponting century kept the Aussies in the game until needing 18 runs from the final two overs with two wickets in hand. Binny took the huge wicket of Ponting in the penultimate over, leaving just Lee and McGrath to score 12 runs off the final over. Unsurprisingly, McGrath was dismissed with the first ball of the final over, giving India a memorable 11-run victory.

          Comment


          • #35
            Game 28A: Australia '23 vs Australia '99
            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 '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 '23 won the toss and elected to bat.

            Australia '23
            Inglis 33*(38), A Zampa 23(27)
            D Fleming 6-34, P Reiffel 2-14

            132 (23.1 overs)

            Australia '99
            M Waugh 69*(84), A Gilchrist 62*(62)
            J Hazelwood 0-12, A Zampa 0-43

            0-133 (24 overs)

            Australia '99 won by 10 wickets
            D Fleming was awarded Man of the Match.

            Fleming tore through the most recent World Cup champions, taking six wickets in his seven-over opening spell. McGrath and Reiffel picked a couple each to roll the opposition in under 25 overs. The only reason the 23s even passed 100 was due to a decent partnership between Inglis and Zampa. M Waugh and Gilchrist chased down the total with ease with an unbeaten opening partnership.

            Game 28B: Australia '99 vs Australia '23
            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 '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 '99
            M Waugh 113(80), D Lehmann 70(56)
            A Zampa 4-60, M Marsh 4-61

            332 (50 overs)

            Australia '23
            D Warner 109(106), J Inglis 51*(30)
            S Warne 4-94, T Moody 2-64

            8-333 (47.5 overs)

            Australia '23 won by 2 wickets
            D Warner was awarded Man of the Match.

            Continuing on from their unbeaten partnership in the first match, Waugh and Gilchrist cruised through the powerplay, putting on a speedy 100-run partnership. Waugh in particular put his foot down to score a brilliant 100. His century set the groundwork for the rest of the team to make a big total that will take some big hitting from the 23s to chase down. Zampa and Marsh took four wickets each. A century from Warner got the 23s off to a good start but regular wickets from Warne and Moody saw the required run rate head above 10 runs an over with just two wickets remaining. That didn't stop Inglis and Zampa from putting on a blitzkrieg of a partnership, chasing down the final 50 runs off four overs to snatch victory from the grasp of the 99s.

            Comment


            • #36
              Game 29A: Australia '15 vs Sri Lanka '96
              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
              Sri Lanka '96 XI: S Jayasuria, R Kaluwitharana+, A Gurusinha, A Ranatunga*, H Tillakaratne, R Mahanama, K Dharmasena, C Vaas, P Wickramasinghe, M Muralitharan

              Australia won the toss and elected to bat.

              Australia '15
              S Watson 79(66), S Smith 62(80)
              M Muralitharan 4-61, C Vaas 2-68

              8-332 (50 overs)

              Sri Lanka '96
              A Ranatunga 83(71), A de Silva 52(72)
              M Johnson 5-28, J Faulkner 3-77

              271 (43.5 overs)

              Australia '15 won by 61 runs
              M Johnson was awarded Man of the Match

              A couple of wickets in the powerplay saw Sri Lanka gain momentum early on but a 100-run partnership between Watson and Smith put Australia back on top. Despite late wickets, Sri Lanka let a chaseable target slip through their fingers when Johnson and Starc put on a last-minute 50 partnership to see Australia to 332 runs. A pace bowling masterclass from Johnson saw Sri Lanka down and out before the powerplay was even over. A lone partnership between de Silva and Ranatunga was the only reason why Sri Lanka managed to stay in the match as long as they did.

              Game 29B: Sri Lanka '96 vs Australia '15
              Sri Lanka '96 XI: S Jayasuria, R Kaluwitharana+, A Gurusinha, A Ranatunga*, H Tillakaratne, R Mahanama, K Dharmasena, C Vaas, P Wickramasinghe, M Muralitharan
              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
              Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat.

              Sri Lanka '96
              R Kaluwitharana 105(110), A Ranatunga 72(66)
              J Hazelwood 3-41, M Starc 3-43

              9-279 (50 overs)

              Australia '15
              A Finch 128*(117), M Clarke 51(53)
              M Muralitharan 2-46, C Vaas 2-65

              5-282 (46 overs)

              Australia '15 won by 5 wickets
              A Finch was awarded Man of the Match.

              A century from Kaluwitharana and a mid-innings 50 from Ranatunga had Sri Lanka looking to put on a big score. The Aussie quicks had other thoughts and were unplayable in the death overs, leaving Sri Lanka with a decent 279 runs to defend. While it wasn't the most explosive chase, the Australians saw home a comfortable victory. An unbeaten 128 from Finch led the way and 50s from Clarke and Maxwell sealed the deal.

              Comment


              • #37
                Game 30A: Australia '07 vs Australia '87
                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 '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 '87 won the toss and elected to bowl.

                Australia '07
                R Ponting 109(87), M Hayden 75(86)
                S O'Donnell 2-63, B Reid 2-80

                7-338 (50 overs)

                Australia '87
                G Marsh 81(98), S Waugh 50*(28)
                B Hogg 4-71, G McGrath 3-39

                252 (46.5 over)

                Australia '07 won by 84 runs
                R Ponting was awarded Man of the Match.

                A solid partnership from Gilchrist and Hayden got the 07's off to a good start but it was Ponting who turned the screws with another 100. None of the '87 bowlers could find their rhythm, which led to a difficult target of 338 runs. The 87's looked positive at the start of their chase, with an 81 from Marsh but Hogg and McGrath soon got stuck in to render their chase futile.

                Game 30A: Australia '87 vs Australia '07
                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 '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 '87 won the toss and elected to bat.

                Australia '87
                D Jones 99(77), D Boon 65(56)
                G McGrath 3-71, A Symonds 2-36

                284 (50 overs)

                Australia '07
                M Hayden 102(107), A Symonds 64(53)
                S O-Donnell 2-37, T May 2-91

                5-285 (44.2 overs)

                Australia '07 won by 5 wickets
                M Hayden was awarded Man of the Match.


                For the second time in a row, the 87s got off to a good start with both Boon and Jones making half-centuries. Jones almost made it a ton but was run out on 99. That runout turned the complexion of the match and the '07 bowlers managed to restrict the batsmen to 284 runs. Big-hitting by best mates, Hayden and Symonds, got the '07s over the line easily. Hayden top-scored with 102 runs.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Round 5 Results
                  In Group A, we saw a top of the table clash between India '83 and Australia '03. With both teams coming away with a win at home, it's difficult to tell who will earn top spot on that side of the draw. Group B saw its leader, Australia '87, suffer two defeats at the hands of Australia '07. Due to having an extra match up their sleeves, Australia '87 remain on top for the moment. Kohli's knock of 150, which came off just 81 deliveries earned him batting performance of the round. Striking at 185% against the likes of Akram and Khan should be impossible. Fleming caught the reigning World Cup champions unawares with a dazzling 6-34. He doubled his wicket tally with that performance.
                  Group A
                  ENG 19 lost to SA 98
                  SA 98 lost to ENG 19
                  IND '11 lost to PAK 92
                  PAK 92 lost to IND '11
                  AUS 03 defeated IND 83
                  IND 83 defeated AUS 03
                  WI 75 - bye
                  Group B
                  AUS 23 lost to AUS 99
                  AUS 99 lost to AUS 23
                  AUS 15 defeated SL 96
                  SL 87 lost to AUS 15
                  AUS 07 defeated AUS 87
                  AUS 87 lost to AUS 07
                  WI 79 - Bye

                  Current Standings
                  Group A Played Wins Tie NRR Total
                  India '83 10 6 1 0.55 13
                  Australia '03 8 5 1.50 10
                  Pakistan '92 8 5 -0.47 10
                  India '11 10 4 -0.20 8
                  England '19 8 4 -0.26 8
                  West Indies '75 8 3 1 0.27 7
                  South Africa '98 8 2 -0.37 4
                  Group B Played Wins N/R NRR Total
                  Australia '87 10 6 0.23 12
                  Australia '99 8 5 0.49 10
                  Australia '07 8 5 0.03 10
                  Australia '15 10 5 -0.35 8
                  Australia '23 8 4 -0.56 8
                  West Indies '79 8 3 -0.47 6
                  Sri Lanka '96 8 2 -0.47 4

                  Tournament Stat Leaders
                  Batter Runs Bowler Wickets
                  A Finch (AUS 15) 707 G McGrath (AUS 99) 20
                  M Hayden (AUS 07) 613 S Sreenath (IND 11) 20
                  R Ponting (AUS 03) 601 M Starc (AUS 23) 19
                  G Greenidge (WI 79) 584 C McDermott (AUS 87) 19
                  G Marsh (AUS 87) 478 G McGrath (AUS 07) 18

                  Round 6 Fixture
                  Group A
                  WI 75 vs ENG 19
                  AUS 03 vs SA 98
                  IND 83 vs PAK 92
                  IND 11 - Bye
                  Group B
                  WI 79 vs AUS 23
                  AUS 07 vs AUS 99
                  AUS 87 vs SL 96
                  AUS 15 - Bye
                  ​​​​​

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Game 31A: West Indies '75 vs England 19
                    West Indies '75 XI: G Greenidge, R Fredericks, A Kallicharran, R Kanhai, C Lloyd*, V Richards, K Boyce, B Julien, D Murray+, A Roberts, V Holder
                    England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, C Woakes, J Buttler+, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood

                    England '19 won the toss and elected to bowl.

                    West Indies '75
                    V Richards 85(71), R Kanhai 58(69)
                    M Wood 3-38, C Woakes 2-58

                    272 (43.5 overs)

                    England '19
                    J Root 54(47), J Buttler 48(48)
                    A Roberts 2-31, V Holder 2-56

                    7-274 (47.4 overs)

                    England won by 3 wickets
                    J Archer was awarded Man of the Match.

                    Wood kicked things off with a couple of early wickets and was backed up nicely by Archer and Plunkett. Viv Richards fought back alongside Kanhai and put on a 139-run stand to put the West Indies back into the game, finishing with a respectable 272. A good start from England seemed to put them ahead after the 10-over powerplay but good bowling from Holder and Julien pegged them back a bit. The match could have gone either way until the dying overs when Jofra Archer blitzed 42 off 23 balls to secure the win for England.

                    Game 31B: England 19 vs West Indies '75
                    England '19 XI: J Roy, J Bairstow, J Root, E Morgan*, B Stokes, C Woakes, J Buttler+, L Plunkett, J Archer, A Rashid, M Wood
                    West Indies '75 XI: G Greenidge, R Fredericks, A Kallicharran, R Kanhai, C Lloyd*, V Richards, K Boyce, B Julien, D Murray+, A Roberts, V Holder
                    West Indies '75 won the toss and elected to bowl.

                    England '19
                    J Bairstow 150(120), B Stokes 74(77)
                    A Roberts 4-40, B Julien 2-54

                    7-324 (50 overs)

                    West Indies '75
                    C Lloyd 75(53), G Greenidge 68(76)
                    J Archer 2-78, L Plunkett 1-26

                    5-325 (72.5 overs)

                    West Indies '75 won by 5 wickets
                    J Bairstow was awarded Man of the Match.

                    London was alight with fireworks thanks to a brilliant 150 from Bairstow. His 150 came from 120 balls and included 24. The score would've ballooned to an outrageous total but Roberts bowled well and took 4-40. England set a sizeable 324 for the West Indies to chase. A strong, century-opening partnership from Greenidge and Fredericks took away any advantage the English had from their innings. While none of the West Indies batsmen had Bairstow-like heroics, four made 50s: Greenidge, Fredericks, Kanhai and Lloyd. They each scored them quickly to allow the West Indies to reach the total with seven overs to spare.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Game 32A: Australia '03 vs South Africa '98
                      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
                      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

                      Australia won the toss and elected to bat.

                      Australia '03
                      D Lehmann 83(59), D Martyn 79(52)
                      D Crookes 4-77, J Kallis 3-57

                      313 (49 overs)

                      South Africa '98
                      J Rhodes 59(93), D Cullinan 38(47)
                      A Bichel 3-51, G McGrath 2-18

                      205 (47.2 overs)

                      Australia won by 108 runs
                      D Lehmann was awarded Man of the Match.

                      Both Aussie openers were dismissed cheaply to give South Africa the positive start they desired. Ponting, Martyn and Lehmann banded together to each post 50+ scores to get Australia back into the thick of it. Last-minute hitting from Symonds and Bichel allowed Australia '03 to reach 313 runs. Despite not having an enormous target to chase, South Africa's required run rate was above 10 runs per over by the time 25 overs were bowled thanks to some very economical bowling from the Aussies, particularly Mcgrath, who only went for 18 runs off his 10 overs. South Africa was never in the picture.

                      Game 32B: South Africa '98 vs Australia '03
                      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
                      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
                      Australia won the toss and elected to bat.

                      Australia '03
                      R Ponting 85 (82), D Martyn 74(99)
                      P Symcox 3-57, J Kallis 3-65

                      9-300 (50 overs)

                      South Africa '98
                      D Cullinan 76(72), J Rhodes 64(45)
                      G McGrath 2-38, A Symonds 2-50

                      5-302 (43.5 overs)

                      South Africa '98 won by 5 wickets
                      D Cullinan was awarded Man of the Match.

                      Symcox opened the bowling with spin and trapped Gilchrist LBW with the very first ball of the match and he had Hayden in his second over. Once again, it was up to Ponting and Martyn to salvage the horrific start by the openers and they guided Australia to a round 300 runs off 50 overs. Cullinan got the chase underway with a quickfire 76 to get the South Africans' noses in front. Rhodes and Benkentstein slogged their way to victory with six overs up their sleeves.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Game 33A: India '83 vs Pakistan '92
                        India '83 XI: S Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Y Sharma, S Patil, K Dev*, K Azad, R Binny, M Lal, S Kirimani, B Sandhu
                        Pakistan '92 XI: A Sohail, R Raja, I Khan*, J Miandad, S Malik, I Ahmed, M Khan+, W Akram, M Ahmed, A Javed

                        Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat.

                        Pakistan '92
                        R Raja 108(117), A Sohail 53(80)
                        M Amarnath 4-84, M Lal 2-59

                        8-295 (50 overs)

                        India '83
                        S Kirimani 70(71), M Lal 52(53)
                        W Akram 4-34, A Javed 3-49

                        237 (43.3 overs)

                        Pakistan won by 58 runs
                        R Raja was awarded Man of the Match.

                        A slow and steady approach from Raja and Sohail saw Pakistan put on a 150-run opening stand. Despite some late-innings wickets from Amarnath, Pakistan's lower order put on a clinic, knocking the Indian bowlers all around the park to put on a competitive score. The Indians never recovered from early wickets and slumping to 5-89. A century partnership from Kirimani and Lal made their effort not embarassing but Akram and the Pakistani quicks were too much for them.

                        Game 33B: Pakistan '92 vs India '83
                        Pakistan '92 XI: A Sohail, R Raja, I Khan*, J Miandad, S Malik, I Ahmed, M Khan+, W Akram, M Ahmed, A Javed​​
                        India '83 XI: S Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Y Sharma, S Patil, K Dev*, K Azad, R Binny, M Lal, S Kirimani, B Sandhu
                        Pakistan won the toss and elected to bowl.

                        Pakistan '92
                        S Malik 57(38), I Khan 34(67)
                        R Binny 3-57, K Dev 2-52

                        9-250 (50 overs)

                        India '83
                        S Gavaskar 101(105), Y Sharma 46(51)
                        I Khan 3-51, W Akram 3-52

                        9-252 (48.3 overs)

                        India won by 1 wicket
                        S Gavaskar was awarded Man of the Match.

                        Pakistan never got going in their home match. Wickets at regular intervals from Binny and Dev meant the most prolific of the Pakistan batsmen never had the opportunity to score freely. While the final score of 250 was by no means a daunting target, the match went down to the wire. India cruised comfortably until they lost five wickets for less than 40 runs. Akram and Imran Khan did most of the damage with the ball but a wonderful century from Gavaskar proved to be the difference between the two teams, giving India a very good chance of progressing to the finals with their bye in the final round.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Game 34B: West Indies '79 vs Australia '23
                          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
                          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

                          West Indies won the toss and elected to bat.

                          West Indies '79
                          A Kallicharran 63(84), C King 46(45)
                          P Cummins 4-50, A Zampa 3-46

                          224 (39.4 overs)

                          Australia '23
                          S Smith 90(95), T Head 43(56)
                          M Holding 3-38, C Croft 2-40

                          6-228 (45.2 overs)

                          Australia '23 won by 4 wickets
                          S Smith was awarded Man of the Match.

                          Starc bowled a mammoth 10-over spell to begin with and was awarded with three vital wickets. His opening partner in crime also snagged a couple of wickets in the early overs. The middle overs saw Kallicharran and King look to rebuild their team's innings but Zampa and a returning Cummins wrapped up the the remaining batsmen with ease. The West India fast bowling quartet (and King) showed proved that a meagre 224 may be a defendable target. None of the Aussie batsmen could score quickly, with even Maxwell making his 32 runs off 50 balls. Despite falling just short of a century, Smith was the difference with his 90, allowing Australia to reach the target with only a little bit of worry.

                          Game 34B: Australia '23 vs West Indies '79
                          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
                          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 '79 won the toss and elected to bat.

                          West Indies '79
                          V Richards 107(107), G Greenidge 70(86)
                          M Marsh 3-80, M Starc 1-48

                          5-304 (50 overs)

                          Australia '23
                          M Marsh 41(46), D Warner 30(38)
                          C King 3-44, C Croft 3-61

                          219 (39.4 overs)

                          West Indies won by 85 runs
                          V Richards was awarded Man of the Match.

                          One might have mistaken the West Indies for batting too slow in the first half of the innings but Viv Richards and the middle order amped things up in the latter part of the innings. The old adage of 'double your score at 30 overs' could have been triple instead thanks to the West Indies wickets in hand at the time. Australia easily kept up with the required pace throughout the innings but Croft tore through the top order in the space of a few overs and just as the Aussies were looking to get back on top, King cracked open the middle order. This left the Aussies with no wickets and the West Indies with a chance to make finals still.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Game 35A: Australia '07 vs Australia '99
                            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 '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 '07 won the toss and elected to bat.

                            Australia '07
                            A Gilchrist 48(38), R Ponting 42(39)
                            S Warne 4-56, T Moody 2-22

                            229 (42.2 overs)

                            Australia '99
                            S Waugh 107*(101), D Lehmann 26(47)
                            B Hogg 4-39, G McGrath 2-34

                            8-235 (48.3 overs)

                            Australia '99 won by 2 wickets
                            S Waugh was awarded Man of the Match.

                            Gilchrist paved the way for a big total, scoring quickly but falling short of 50 thanks to none other than Warne. That big score never came though since Warne rampaged through the top and middle order with a bit of help from Moody and Reiffel.​ Quick wickets at the start of the 99s chase made it difficult to keep up with the required run rate. At the 40-over mark, the 99s were seven wickets down and needed 90 runs still. Steve Waugh dug in and hit boundaries in every direction to bring his team back from the brink for an unlikely victory.

                            Game 35B: Australia '99 vs Australia '07
                            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 '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 '99 won the toss and elected to bat.​

                            Australia '99
                            A Gilchrist 97(75), R Ponting 76(81)
                            S Tait 4-48, B Hogg 2-50

                            9-285 (50 overs)

                            Australia '07
                            M Hayden 143(126), A Gilchrist 72(75)
                            S Warne 2-94, T Moody 1-50

                            4-289 (42.5 overs)

                            Australia '07 won by 6 wickets
                            M Hayden was awarded Man of the Match.

                            Once again it was Gilchrist who got his team off to a stunning start. He sped ahead to 97 before being bowled by Symonds. Ponting chipped in with 76 and the tail wagged a bit to help the 99s to a decent 285. Tait's express pace ensured the scoring did not get out of hand with four wickets. While most of the 2007 batsmen cruised along, happy enough to defend their wickets, Hayden took on the '99 bowlers. He scored one of the biggest scores we've seen in recent games. 50 of those runs came just from Warne's bowling, striking at 200% against the King of Spin. His big hitting led the 2007s to an easy victory.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Game 36A: Australia '87 vs Sri Lanka '96
                              Australia '97 XI: D Boon, G Marsh, D Jones, A Border*, M Veletta, S Waugh, S O'Donnell, G Dyer+, T May, C McDermott, B Reid
                              Sri Lanka '96 XI: S Jayasuriya, R Kaluwitharana+, A Gurusinha, A de Silva, A Ranatunga, H Tillikaratne, R Mahanama, K Dharmasena, C Vaas, P Wickramsinghe, M Muralitharan

                              Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat.

                              Sri Lanka '96
                              S Jayasuriya 111(103), A Gurusinha 71(67)
                              B Reid 3-70, T May 2-65

                              6-349 (50 overs)

                              Australia '87
                              G Marsh 108(98), A Border 74(62)
                              K Dharmasena 1-57, S Jayasuriya 1-57

                              4-350 (50 overs)

                              Australia won by 6 wickets
                              G Marsh was awarded Man of the Match.

                              A phenomenal opening stand of 137 runs from Jayasuriya and Kaluwitharana gave Sri Lanka the perfect start to their innings against the top team in Group B. Gurusinha kept the runs ticking and cameos filled with fireworks from Tillikaratne and Mahanama gave Sri Lanka a chance at pulling off one of the biggest upsets of the tournament. Marsh and Boon came out swinging and reduced the required run rate to just over six within the first 10 overs. From there it was never in doubt with Marsh bringing up a ton, Border a 50 and the rest of the batsmen contributing with fast-scoring 30s and 40s.

                              Game 36B: Sri Lanka '96 vs Australia '87
                              Sri Lanka '96 XI: S Jayasuriya, R Kaluwitharana+, A Gurusinha, A de Silva, A Ranatunga, H Tillikaratne, R Mahanama, K Dharmasena, C Vaas, P Wickramsinghe, M Muralitharan
                              Australia '97 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 won the toss and elected to bowl.

                              Sri Lanka '96
                              A Ranatunga 102(89), A de Silva 27(33)
                              C McDermott 3-42, B Reid 3-49

                              240 (42.3 overs)

                              Australia '87
                              G Marsh 107(105), A Border 53(69)
                              S Jayasuriya 3-58, M Muralitharan 2-54

                              7-241 (46.4 overs)

                              Australia '87 won by 3 wickets
                              G Marsh was awarded Man of the Match.

                              A century from Ranatunga was the only highlight in the Sri Lankan innings. He singlehandedly guided Sri Lanka to 240 while de Silva was the only other batsman to make it past 20 runs. It was the pace trio of McDermott, Reid and O'Donnell who picked a combined eight wickets. A second straight century from Marsh led Australia to 2-176 and looking to cinch an easy victory. Jayasuriya and Muralitharan took five wickets for 50 runs to bring the Sri Lankans back into the match. O'Donnell made a clutch 30-run innings while wickets fell around him in the final four overs of the chase to turn what should've been an easy victory into a hard-fought battle.

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Round 6 Results
                                Group A hosted the much-awaited clash between Pakistan 92 and India 83. Both teams are still vying for a spot in the final and walked away from their matches with one win apiece. India had to fight hard for their one-wicket win, which was the closest game of the tournament so far. While no matches reached the heights of the India vs Pakistan clash in Group A, Group B still had some close scuffles. Results ended up being expected with two matches having their results split evenly and ladder leaders Australia 87 asserting dominance over cellar dwellers Sri Lanka 96.

                                By far the best batting performance of the round went to Geoff Marsh. His twin tons helped his dominant team to win against Sri Lanka. Without those batting performances, Sri Lanka would likely have walked away with two underdog wins. Akram bowled Pakistan to a win against India with 4-34 and almost did it again in the return match taking 3-52. His seven wickets over two match was the best bowling performance of the round.
                                Group A
                                WI 75 lost to ENG 19
                                ENG 19 lost to WI 75
                                AUS 03 def SA 98
                                SA 98 def AUS 03
                                PAK 92 def India 83
                                IND 83 defeated PAK 92
                                IND 11 - Bye
                                Group B
                                WI 79 lost to AUS 23
                                AUS 23 lost to WI 79
                                AUS 07 lost to AUS 99
                                AUS 99 lost to AUS 97
                                AUS 87 def SL 96
                                SL 96 lost to AUS 87
                                AUS 15 - Bye

                                Current Standings
                                Group A Played Wins Tie NRR Total
                                India '83 12 7 1 0.36 15
                                Australia '03 10 6 1.34 12
                                Pakistan '92 10 6 -0.27 12
                                England '19 10 5 -0.31 10
                                West Indies '75 10 4 1 0.27 9
                                India '11 10 4 1 -0.20 8
                                South Africa '98 10 3 -0.43 6
                                Group B Played Wins N/R NRR Total
                                Australia '87 12 8 0.23 16
                                Australia '99 10 6 0.32 12
                                Australia '07 10 6 0.08 12
                                Australia '15 10 5 -0.35 10
                                Australia '23 10 5 -0.54 10
                                West Indies '79 10 4 -0.25 8
                                Sri Lanka '96 10 2 -0.41 4

                                Tournament Stat Leaders
                                Batter Runs Bowler Wickets
                                G Marsh (AUS 87) 795 M Starc (AUS 23) 23
                                M Hayden (AUS 07) 613 W Akram (PAK 92) 22
                                R Ponting (AUS 03) 745 D Crookes (SA 98) 22
                                A Finch (AUS 15) 707 C McDermott (AUS 87) 22
                                G Greenidge (WI 79) 663 G McGrath (AUS 99)
                                S Warne (AUS 99)
                                21

                                Round 7 Fixture
                                Group A
                                WI 75 vs IND 11
                                AUS 03 vs ENG 19
                                PAK 92 vs SA 98
                                IND 83 - Bye
                                Group B
                                WI 79 vs AUS 15
                                AUS 07 vs AUS 23
                                SL 96 vs AUS 99
                                AUS 87 - Bye
                                ​​​​​​
                                Who can still make the finals?
                                Just like other ATG tournaments, the top three of each group will progress through to the final. The top team will head straight on to the semi-finals while the second and third will play in the qualifying-finals.

                                Group A
                                • South Africa never got going in this tournament and is completely out of the race for a top-three finish.
                                • India '11 and West Indies '75 play each other in the final round and are unlikely to make it to the top three. Both teams need two wins and two favourable results from other rounds to progress so there's still a glimmer of hope.
                                • If England '19 upset both of their games against Australia '03 they are guaranteed a spot in the qualifying final. If they pull off just one win, then they will need Pakistan to lose both games to leapfrog them.
                                • Pakistan '92 and Australia '03 both need to win just one match against a lower-ranked to ensure a ticket to the finals. If either wins both matches, then they will leapfrog India '87 for the top spot. Australia has a much higher NRR and will stay ahead of Pakistan if they have similar results.
                                • India '87 can rest easy with a bye this round. They have already earned a spot in the final but need Pakistan and Australia to lose a match each to hold onto the top spot.
                                Group B
                                • Sri Lanka '96, like South Africa, will play their last match of the tournament next round with no way of making it through to the finals.
                                • West Indies '79 need to win both of their games against Australia '03 and Sri Lanka '96 to win two games against Australia '99 just to have a slim chance at scraping into third place on NRR.
                                • Australia '23 and Australia '15 both need wins to get them a look at finals. One win could mathematically get them through but it would be unlikely with other results. Two wins give Australia '15 a small chance of progressing whereas two wins for Australia '23 will see them leapfrog their final-round opponents, Australia '07.
                                • Australia '07 just need one win against Australia '23 to seal a finals spot. One loss and they need other results and NRRs to fall in their favour, though it would still be likely. Two would even give them a shot at the top spot.
                                • Australia '99 is in the same boat as Australia '07 but their opponents are bottom of the table Sri Lanka. One win earns them a spot in the finals and two wins will see them into the top spot since they already have a higher NRR than Australia '87.
                                • Australia have not only made it through to the finals ahead of the final-round bye. As said above, Australia 99 are their biggest threat to the top spot but there's even an unlikely scenario that they fall as far as third depending on other results and NRR.

                                Comment

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