Showing posts with label T20 Cricket World Cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T20 Cricket World Cup. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2014

T20 Cricket World Cup

T20 Cricket World Cup Score Update

History of Heartbreak Between Finalists


Match facts

Sunday, April 6, 2014
Start time 1900 local (1300 GMT)

Big Picture

Romesh Kaluwitharana caught at third man. Sanath Jayasuriya caught at third man too. Asanka Gurusinha is out soon. Eden Gardens has erupted. Aravinda de Silva comes out and silences them, and the spinners bury them. Heartbreak.
Mahela Jayawardene, Nuwan Kulasekara and Thisara Perera take 54 in the last four overs. Lasith Malinga follows it up with early wickets of Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar. Finally the final hoodoo is being broken. Gautam Gambhir and MS Dhoni, though, pull off a cool chase. Heartbreak returned.
 Big matches between India and Sri Lanka have somehow left bigger scars than others. The semis and finals between these two have rarely been close. Think Eden Gardens 1996. Think Jayasuriya, Muttiah Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas demolishing the psyche of a whole generation of India cricketers over the next three years or so. Or the many times they have knocked India out of major tournaments, either by directly beating them or other teams. Think even the Asia Cup final in 2008.
The captain of that losing Indian team in 2008 was a cricketer unlike any other Indian before him. Those scars left no imprint on his psyche. Under him, in limited-overs cricket, India have paid no heed to things such as history and legacy. Just keep doing your bit, the rest will take care of itself. In the process, they have overcome the shivers the sight of a Sri Lankan side in a big match used to send up the Indian spines. Under him, India have never lost a semi-final, and have been even with Sri Lanka in the finals. The turning point was that World Cup win in 2011, after which they have had it almost too easy against Sri Lanka in the really big matches.

Under that captain, India have put behind them a torrid recent time out of Asia, not just in Tests but also in ODIs, and have bossed this tournament. Dhoni has been the exact opposite of what he was before the break he took: fresh, backing his bowlers, trying to take wickets to slow runs down, making changes even to a winning combination to get the best XI on the field. India have responded superbly. R Ashwin and Amit Mishra have made sure there hasn't been a single horror day in the field. Led by Virat Kohli, the batsmen have risen up to every challenge. Now they are on the brink of doing something that has never been done: go unbeaten through a World T20.

If India have been channeling this rare calm they have achieved despite the turmoil in the administration of their cricket, Sri Lanka have ridden mainly on emotion. This could be the last final two of their greatest players ever play. It has almost been like some player or the other has been pulling them from the brink just for Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara. It hasn't been smooth. They even have had to realise that their designated captain for the tournament doesn't merit a place in this XI. They have had to fight dew, they have come back from being bowled out for 119, they have had to drop their main spinner leading into the tournament. You almost feel it is meant to be with every such improbable comeback, but you have felt it often with Sri Lanka.
The pair of Jayawardene and Sangakkara have lost four world finals now. Last year, Sangakkara spoke of the pain eloquently in this interview. "We really need to talk about it being a final," he said. "The more you try to ignore it, the more you think about it. We need to find a way to deal with it." Maybe if somehow, at a canter or through weather or an opposition choke or through a great one over, just some how, if they can win one final, they will stop being so conscious about the match? Then again, they are against a team whose captain specialises in not being conscious of how big a match it is.

Form guide
India WWWWW (completed matches, most recent first)
Sri Lanka WWLWW

Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene punch gloves during their partnership, England v Sri Lanka, Champions Trophy, Group A, The Oval, June 13, 2013
Two for the road: Another shot at the final for the twin towers of Sri Lankan cricket © Associated Press 
Enlarge
In the spotlight
Lasith Malinga has widely been considered the captain just for the toss with Jayawardene and Sangakkara visibly in charge of the field settings. He has also had some of his worst days on a cricket field against India. This is his chance to put one past the tormentors, and also show a thing or two to those of us who see him as a token captain.
Virat Kohli began becoming the possessed chaser that he is today with a century in a 300-plus chase in an ODI against Sri Lanka. Ever since that he has loved the Sri Lanka attack, especially going after their biggest name, Malinga. At the moment there is no glaring weakness in his game, he is extremely competitive and focused and in form. His lowest score in the tournament has been 23, and Sri Lanka will take if they can somehow give him a new lowest score.

Team news
It is unlikely India will make a change to their XI. Yuvraj Singh remains a question mark, but as he showed against Australia, he can still cause damage in a 10-ball spell, and you want such players on your side in big matches.
India (probable) 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Ajinkya Rahane, 3 Virat Kohli, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 Suresh Raina, 6 MS Dhoni (capt. & wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Amit Mishra, 10 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 11 Mohit Sharma

Sri Lanka are closer to finding their best XI, and it doesn't include Dinesh Chandimal, their squad captain. However, you can't be sure if they will keep Thisara Perera out again.

Sri Lanka (probable) 1 Kusal Perera, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Mahela Jayawardene, 4 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 5 Lahiru Thirimanne, 6 Angelo Mathews, 7 Seekkuge Prasanna/ Thisara Perera, 8 Nuwan Kulasekara, 9 Sachithra Senanayake, 10 Lasith Malinga (capt.), 11 Rangana Herath

Pitch and conditions
The pitch will help spin, it will be slow too, but if there is a storm around, batting first might not be an automatic choice. There is a reserve day, should the weather not allow a result.
Stat and trivia
India v Sri Lanka in tournament finals: India 9, Sri Lanka 8, no-result 2.
Yuvraj Singh is 43 short of becoming the 17th player to 1000 T20I runs.
Kumar Sangakkara needs five dismissals in his final match to reach 50 dismissals.
If Tillakaratne Dilshan doesn't score 36 runs more than him, Mahela Jayawardene will sign off as the second-highest run-getter in T20Is.
If India win, not only will they have equaled the longest winning streak in T20Is, they will also hold all three ICC limited-overs trophies.
Quotes
"It's a special day tomorrow and we have to do something special for Mahela and Sanga. They are great cricketers and deserve a good farewell."
Sri Lanka captain Lasith Malinga hopes for a fitting T20 farewell for the pair

"We can think of that only after we have won. For now, it is all about doing what will make us successful. We need to play good cricket, and not focus on statistics."
MS Dhoni on the prospect of holding all three limited-overs titles in the space of three years

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Twenty20 World Cup

Defending world champion West Indies announce ICC World T20 squad
Kieron Pollard and Kemar Roach not considered for selection due to continued rehabilitation from injury

Defending world champion West Indies announce ICC World T20 squad - Cricket News West Indies names squad for World Twenty20 2014.
The West Indies Cricket Board advised on Tuesday that its Selection Panel has named a 15-member squad to defend the ICC World Twenty20 title from 16 March to 6 April in Bangladesh

Team management unit:
Ottis Gibson (Head Coach)
Richie Richardson (Team Operations Manager)
Stuart Williams (Assistant Coach)
Andre Coley (Assistant Coach)
Saqlain Mushtaq (Assistant Coach)
C.J. Clark (Physiotherapist)
Hector Martinez Charles (Strength & Conditioning Coordinator)
Richard Berridge (Video & Statistical Analyst)
Virgil Browne (Massage Therapist)
Philip Spooner (Media Relations Manager)

Neither Kieron Pollard nor Kemar Roach were considered for selection due to continued rehabilitation from injury.

Pollard continues to recover from a knee injury sustained late last year, and Roach is still trying to get over a shoulder injury that forced him to return home from the tour of India without playing and required surgery.

West Indies, under the leadership of Sammy and the guidance of Gibson, won the ICC World T20 two years ago, when they toppled hosts Sri Lanka by 36 runs in a thrilling Final at the Premadasa Stadium in the Sri Lanka capital of Colombo.
Twenty20 World Cup International Championship

ICC World Twenty20 can be described as the international championship of Twenty20 cricket, which is commonly abridged as T20 cricket. As the name suggests, the game is organized by ICC (International Cricket Council), the governing body of cricket in the world. The inaugural tournament of the ICC T20 World Cup was held in the year 2007, in South Africa.

Twenty20 Cricket World Cup 2007 stretched on from 11th September to 24th September, with India winning the championship, after defeating Pakistan by 5 runs (in Johannesburg). Just like the inaugural event had, all the tournaments of the Twenty20 Cricket World Cup will comprise of 12 teams, which will include all the Test-playing nations. Right now, it is expected that the world cup will held around every two years.
Qualification
Talking about the qualification for playing the ICC Twenty20 World Cup, all the Test-playing nations receive the same automatically. As for the rest of the places in the 12-teams championship, they are filled by ICC associate member nations, also known as qualifiers, on the basis of a qualification tournament. In 2007, there were two qualifiers - Scotland and Kenya. In the 2009 tournament, there are three qualifiers - Ireland, the Netherlands and Scotland.
Hosts
The hosts of ICC T20 Cricket World Cup are decided on the basis of the bids made by the nations interested in holding the championship.


It is the executive committee of International Cricket Council (ICC) that votes on the bids, selecting the host country. It had been decided that the first two tournaments will be held in South Africa and England, since they had opted the T20 format in the earliest stages only. The hosts of ICC Twenty20 World Cup, till 2014, have and will be:
2007 - South Africa
2009 - England
2010 - West Indies
2012 - Sri Lanka
2014 - Bangladesh
2016 - India
Main Twenty20 World Cup Records (Individual & Team)
Batting
Most Runs: Mahela Jayawardene - 858 (25 matches) (2007-2012)
Highest Average: Rohit Sharma - 55.00 (17 matches) (2007-2012)
Highest strike rate: Chris Gayle - 152.29 (18 matches) (2007-2012)
Highest Score: Brendon McCullum v Bangladesh - 123 (58 balls) (2012)
Highest Partnership: Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara v West Indies - 166 (100 balls) (second wicket) (2010)
Most Runs in a Tournament: Tillakaratne Dilshan - 317 (7 matches) (2009)
Most runs in an over: Yuvraj Singh against Stuard Broad - 36 (2007)
Bowling
Most wickets: Lasith Malinga - 33 (25 matches) (2007-2012)
Best Figures: Ajantha Mendis v Zimbabwe - 6/8 (4 overs) (18 Sep 2012)
Most Wickets in a Tournament: Ajantha Mendis - 15 (6 matches) (2012)
Fielding
Most Dismissals (wicket-keeper): by Kamran Akmal - 24 (8 + 16) in 26 matches (2007-2012)
Most Catches (fielder): AB de Villiers 16 (21 matches) (2007-2012)
Team
Highest Score: 260/6, by Sri Lanka vs Kenya (2007)
Lowest Score: 68 all out, by Ireland vs West Indies (2010)

Monday, March 31, 2014

ICC World Twenty20 Trophy 2014 Pictures

South Africa batsman Faf du Plessis plays a shot during T20 World Cup 2014 match


South Africa batsman Faf du Plessis plays a shot during the ICC World Twenty20 match between South Africa and New Zealand at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury stadium in Chittagong on March 24, 2014
© AFP/File Prakash Singh

WT20: Pakistan vs New Zealand Warmup T20 in Pictures

Pakistan’s captain Mohammad Hafeez congratulates teammate Kamran Akmal (L) after he scored a half century against New Zealand during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Pakistan’s captain Mohammad Hafeez celebrates after scoring a half century against New Zealand during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Pakistan’s Kamran Akmal celebrates after scoring a half century against New Zealand during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Pakistan’s captain Mohammad Hafeez plays a ball as New Zealand’s Luke Ronchi (R) watches during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Pakistan’s captain Mohammad Hafeez plays a ball against New Zealand during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka

WT20: Pakistan vs New Zealand Warmup T20 in Pictures

New Zealand’s Ronnie Hira plays a ball against Pakistan during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
New Zealand’s Kane Williamson (L) and Martin Guptill run between the wickets during their warm-up match against Pakistan during the ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
New Zealand’s captain Brendon McCullum plays a ball against Pakistan during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka

WT20: India vs Sri Lanka Warmup T20 in Pictures

Sri Lanka’s Dinesh Chandimal tries to play a ball as India’s captain and wicketkeeper MS Dhoni breaks the wicket to dismiss him successfully during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Sri Lanka’s Thisara Perera plays a ball against India during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Sri Lanka’s fielders congratulate Lasith Malinga (2nd R) as he dismissed India’s Virat Kohli successfully during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga bowls against India during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
India’s Ravindra Jadeja (2nd L) leaves the field as Sri Lanka’s fielders celebrate his dismissal during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Sri Lanka’s Kumar Sangakkara is bowled out as India’s captain MS Dhoni (R) watches during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
India’s Virat Kohli is bowled out against Sri Lanka during their warm-up match of ICC Twenty20 World Cup at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka

WT20: Bangladesh vs Afghanistan 1st T20 in Pictures

Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan (C) congratulates bowler Abdur Razzak as he dismissed Afghanistan’s Mohammad Nabi successfully during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup match at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan (R) congratulates bowler Abdur Razzak as he dismissed Afghanistan’s Mohammad Nabi successfully during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup match at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Bangladesh’s Nasir Hossain and Shakib Al Hasan (R) congratulate bowler Abdur Razzak after he dismissed Afghanistan’s Mohammad Nabi successfully during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup match at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Afghanistan’s Mohammad Shahzad leaves the field as Bangladesh’s Nasir Hossain (L) celebrates his dismissal during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup group A match at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Afghanistan’s Gulbadin Naib plays a ball against Bangladesh during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup match at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka
Afghanistan’s captain Mohammad Nabi plays a ball as Bangladesh’s captain and wicketkeeper Mushfiqur Rahim (R) watches during their ICC Twenty20 World Cup match at the Sher-E-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka


Sunday, March 30, 2014

ICC World T20 2014 in Bangladesh

World T20 : AB de Villiers onslaught powers South Africa

AB de Villiers smashed his way to an unbeaten 28-ball 69 to help South Africa post a massive 197-run target for England in their last Group 1 league match of the ICC World T20 at Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium in Chittagong.
AB de Villiers smashed his way to an unbeaten 28-ball 69 to help South Africa post a massive 197-run target for England in their last Group 1 league match of the ICC World T20 at Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium in Chittagong.
De Villiers was in his elements as he smacked nine fours and three huge sixes to leave England bowlers clueless.

England staged a fightback against South Africa as they removed Quinton de Kock and JP Duminy in quick succession.
England got the first breakthrough when skipper Stuart Broad struck to dismiss Hashim Amla.
Amla, who put up a solid 90-run opening wicket stand with De Kock, came out all guns blazing to give South Africa blistering start and continued to hammer England bowlers all over the park and took Proteas past 50 runs in the sixth over.
Amla led from the front as he notched up 30-ball fifty to put South Africa on top. He smashed six boundaries and two sixes during his swashbuckling knock.
Soon after, ​Quinton de Kock (29) too returned back to the pavilion when he was stumped by England keeper Jos Buttler off the bowling of James Tredwell.
South Africa suffered another blow in the form of JP Duminy.  Play was disrupted because of floodlight failure forcing the players to walk off the field.
The lights were out for ten minutes before the players came back out and play continued.  Earlier, England skipper Stuart Broad won the toss and decided to field against South Africa.
With regular captain Faf Du Plessis serving a one-match ban for slow over rates, AB de Villiers leads South Africa.
Farhaan Behardien replaced Du Plessis while Wayne Parnell came in for Lonwabo Tsotsobe. England started with a loss against New Zealand, courtesy rain that robbed them of a chance to defend their total of 172/6, but the Broad-captained side brought its campaign back on track with a six-wicket victory over table-toppers Sri Lanka.
With back-to-back victories, South Africa have put themselves in contention for a semifinal berth and they will look to seal the berth.  South Africa had started their campaign on a sour note, losing to Sri Lanka by five runs, but Proteas notched up successive wins against New Zealand and the Netherlands in the next two games to stay in the hunt.
Teams:
England: Michael Lumb, Alex Hales, Moeen Ali, Eoin Morgan, Jos Buttler, Ravi Bopara, Tim Bresnan, Chris Jordan, Stuart Broad (capt), James Tredwell, Jade Dernbach
South Africa: Quinton de Kock (wkt), Hashim Alma, AB de Villiers (capt), JP Duminy, Farhaan Behardien, David Miller, Albie Morkel, Dale Steyn, Beuran Hendricks, Imran Tahir, Wayne Parnell
Why Ashwin feels wearing full sleeves helps offies

India's top off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin on Saturday made an innocuous media conference interesting when he said his 'Sunil Narine-like action' during Asia Cup was prompted by a thought as to whether "he can do a little bit with his elbow" wearing a "full-sleeve" jersey.

Ashwin did not take any names but his statement raised a question mark on whether some of the off-break bowlers in the international circuit are getting unfair advantage or not.

"I wanted to do something different (on his Narine-like action). Unless you try, you won't find out what can work or not. I had never bowled in full-sleeves before. So I wanted to see how it would feel. That's point number one," he said.

"And I just wanted to see if you can get more revs (revolution) on the ball if you can do a little bit with your elbow, as much as that is. You can get a lot of advantage with these things -- so why should I lag behind if someone else is getting a competitive edge," Ashwin said in remarks which may raise a few eyebrows.

Ashwin's 11-minute media interaction ahead of India's World Twenty20 match against Australia on Sunday had all sorts of elements in it. A bit of swagger when he answered the question on his winning man-of-the-match award against Bangladesh, some quotable quotes like "swim a tsunami" when quizzed on batting first and a seminar-like term "industrial average" when asked about India's death bowling.

Asked if India would like to challenge themselves and bat first on winning toss, Ashwin said, "I would not want to swim a tsunami! I would not want to challenge conditions. If we win the toss, we'll again bowl first if that is what is required. You will be fighting against a wall if you are fighting against conditions."
On his man-of-the match award against Bangladesh on Friday, Ashwin said, "I have been living with it for the last three-four years, so I'm used to it right now. For a batsman, who has not got runs for five-six games to actually get runs and get a man of the match award -- it's going to really boost his confidence.

"It's the same for a bowler. Unless you apprise the bowler with something like that, you will never find good bowlers coming through. As much as a batsman is important, a bowler's confidence is also important. In that regard, yes it's a big boost."

Asked about India's death bowling, he came up with a new term "industrial average".

"I have not looked at the stats but the 'industrial average' has been like that. It's not like Australia concedes less than what India does or Pakistan does. Probably Pakistan might (concede less) but if you see the overall stats, they're going at nine runs an over," he said.

"We're also doing the same if not picking a few more wickets on the way. We need to view it from a perspective of what's the world doing and what are we doing. If you take it that way, we're doing a pretty good job."

Asked if the preparation differs between bowling the first over and at the death, he spoke about "swallowing" one's ego by trading accuracy for wickets.

"When you're starting off, you tend to look to bowl as good balls as possible in the areas you want. The disadvantage with that is that a good ball can be hit for four with less amount of risk as fielders are insider the circle," he said.

"Whereas in the death, you have to be -- this is my take on it, not that this is how it has to be -- swallowing your ego and trying to make sure you're not giving runs away. Because there are people around who want to pick wickets at that time. For me, it's about swallowing your ego and making sure you've done the situation bit pretty well."

Ashwin also gave a curt reply when asked about any conscious ploy to bowl round-the-wicket to right-handed batsmen.

"As such, I've not thought about anything like that. It's a common phenomenon, isn't it? You see off-spinners coming around the stumps straight away these days. I cannot explain why we do it. It's just what you feel right. If it's worked, you want to stick on to it. A batsman makes runs with a bat, he sticks to the same bat! Something like that."

He also praised Amit Mishra but did not forget to mention that the leggie was used in situations where the batsmen were having a go at him.

"As a combination, every bowling unit benefits from each other's success and bowling strengths. Amit has been one of our potent forces in this tournament. We've been using him in all the situations where they actually have to go for it. He does not give you a lot of pace so when the batsmen are going after him, it's a big chance. Because, then he's going to slow it down even more."

Ashwin himself is also trying to vary his pace a lot. "There's been a conscious effort to vary the pace, not just slow it down. I've been bowling at different paces -- 100 kmph to 80 to 75. That's what I've been looking at and trying to use the crease much more -- whatever cues I took from the Asia Cup," he said.

Ashwin said that it won't be a problem that some of the Indian batsmen have not yet got a hit out there in the middle.

"Dhoni never batted until yesterday but look at the way he struck the ball. That's probably a positive. We never really came into this tournament as favourites. We would not want to have that tag of favourites. We'll go into the semi-final, play yet another game and see if we can find ourselves in the final again," said Ashwin.

The Tamil Nadu tweaker did not give indications about whether there will be any experiments with the team combinations now that India have qualified for the semifinals.

"Not so sure about that because it's pretty much like how we played the Champions Trophy. We take one game at a time. What suits us to win that particular game will be what we'll look to do," he said.

Ashwin conceded that the wicket at the Sher-e-Bangla Stadium was quite slow which required a bowler to vary his pace.

"It's a bit of variation in pace more than anything else. That's what I've been looking to do -- vary the length and vary the pace. You slow it down, you can get a bit of purchase. There were a few occasions when I slowed it down and the ball actually spun the other way yesterday.

"So I don't know what it is. The wicket is quite slow. But if you're prepared to slow it down and take pace off the ball, you're in with a chance here," Ashwin said.

Asked if the current situation in Indian cricket was somewhat similar to their Champions Trophy campaign (in 2013 after the IPL fixing scandal broke out), Ashwin gave an answer completely divergent from the question.

"There are lots but there are smaller things which obviously nobody hears of. Those are all smaller things, superstitions that we carry. But there's a lot that's similar to the CT. We're enjoying ourselves. For once we're not looking at results. We're not looking at what we need to achieve. If we're lucky enough, we'll be here until the 6th (April). That's how we look at it.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

T20 World Cup 2014 Points Table

ICC Twenty20 World Cup 2014 - Initial Stage

The WT20 format this year will see 16 teams for the first time participating ub the T20 World Trophy 2014. There are 2 initial groups Group A and Group B each with 4 teams. Zimbabwe and Bangladesh have qualified automatically and there will be further six associate/affiliate teams who qualifies from the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. 

The top two teams from each group, Group A & B will proceed to the Super Ten stage of the tournament. The top two teams each from the two Super Ten groups would play the semi-finals and finals, to be played at the Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur. The winner of this final shall be crowned world champions in Twenty20 cricket. West Indies are the defending champions, having won the 2012 edition in Sri Lanka. 


Monday, March 17, 2014

ICC World T20 2014 Points Table and Team Standings

Mar 16, 2014

 The ICC World T20 2014 will be held in Bangladesh from March 16 to April 6. This is the fifth edition of the T20 World Cup. A total of 16 teams will participate in the tournament. The qualifying phase will have a total of eight teams vying for two spots in the Super 10s. There will be two groups with four teams each for qualifying games in the T20 World Cup.

Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Nepal and Hong Kong are in Group A. Ireland, UAE, Zimbabwe and the Netherlands are the teams in Group B. Only one team will qualify into the next round. The qualifying matches finish on March 21. The Super 10s also start on the same day. South Africa, Sri Lanka, England and New Zealand are in Group 1. India, Australia, Pakistan and West Indies are in Group 2. Both the groups will have an additional qualifier to make it an overall Super 10.

 The semi-finals will be held on April 3 and April 4. The final will be played on April 6. All the three matches will be played at Mirpur. Chittagong and Sylhet are the other two places where matches will be held in the World T20.

The winning team will get two points. There will be one point for teams if the matches end in a tie or have no result or are abandoned.

 Group A Points Table

Teams
Matches
Won
Lost
Tied
No Result
Points
Nepal
1
1
0
0
0
2
Bangladesh
1
1
0
0
0
2
Afghanistan
1
0
1
0
0
0
Hong Kong
1
0
1
0
0
0

ICC World T20 2014 Points Table and Team Standings


Saturday, March 15, 2014

T20 World Cup 2014 Schedule

T20 World Cup 2014 Schedule


ICC has announced T20 World Cup 2014 schedule and fixtures dates as per FTP of Cricket which is set to take place in Bangladesh from 16 March to 6 April, 2014 in two major cities including Fatullah, Mirpur and Chittagong. For the first time the tournament will have 16 teams including 10 full members qualified directly and 6 associate members qualified through 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. Full schedule and fixtures of ICC T20 World Cup 2014 has now been announced by the ICC. A total of 51 matches are to be played during the 2014 T20 World Cup including 16 warm-up matches, 32 group matches, 2 semis and finals. All teams play four group matches before they qualify for the semis and final. Pakistan and India play 2 warm-up matches before Pakistan meet arch-rivals India in their opening match on Friday March 21 followed by matches with Australia, A1 qualifier and West Indies. India on the other hand play with West Indies, A1 qualifier and Australia respectively. You can sort the below fixtures table by each country by using the built-in search function. Schedule of T20 World Cup 2014 fixtures shows list of all matches with dates, venues and timing of matches in GMT, local, IST (Indian standard time) and PKT (Pakistan local time). Use the search below to filter matches by venues, countries or timings:
The ICC World Twenty20 2014 is a 20/20 cricket tournament played in Bangladesh in March-April 2014. It will be the fifth World Twenty20 cricket series. The ICC World Twenty20 2014 will be contested by 16 teams, but top 8 Test teams enter directly into super 10 stage and Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, who finished outside the top eight, will compete with six other qualifying teams (Afghanistan, Ireland, Nepal, Hong Kong, UAE and Netherlands) in the first round from March 16 to 21 for the remaining two places in the Super 10 groups. Final match will be played at Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur on April 06, 2014. Total prize money $3 million.

Group A - Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Nepal, Hong Kong
Group B - Zimbabwe, Ireland, United Arab Emirates, Netherlands

The two groups of the Super 10 stage are:

Group 1 - Sri Lanka, England, South Africa, New Zealand, Group B Qualifier 1
Group 2 - West Indies, India, Pakistan, Australia, Group A Qualifier 1

T20 World Cup 2014 Schedule

T20 World Cup 2014 Schedule


                    09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
1st Match,  Group A - Bangladesh v Afghanistan

                  Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
                                                                                            Sun Mar 16
                    13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
2nd Match, Group A - Hong Kong v Nepal
                    Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
                                                                                            Mon Mar 17
                     09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
3rd Match, Group B - Zimbabwe v Ireland
                     Sylhet Stadium
                                                                                              Mon Mar 17
                     13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
4th Match, Group B - Netherlands v United Arab Emirates
                      Sylhet Stadium
                                                                                               Tue Mar 18
                      09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
5th Match, Group A - Afghanistan v Hong Kong
                       Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
                                                                                                 Tue Mar 18
                       13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
6th Match, Group A - Bangladesh v Nepal
                        Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
                                                                                                 Wed Mar 19
                        09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
7th Match, Group B - Netherlands v Zimbabwe
                         Sylhet Stadium
                                                                                                 Wed Mar 19
                        13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
8th Match, Group B - Ireland v United Arab Emirates
                          Sylhet Stadium
                                                                                                   Thu Mar 20
                          09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
9th Match, Group A - Afghanistan v Nepal
                           Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
                                                                                                     Thu Mar 20
                           13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
10th Match, Group A - Bangladesh v Hong Kong
                             Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
                                                                                                       Fri Mar 21
                           05:30 GMT | 11:30 local | 11:00 IST | 10:30 PKT
11th Match, Group B - Zimbabwe v United Arab Emirates
                             Sylhet Stadium
                                                                                                         Fri Mar 21
                           09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
12th Match, Group B - Ireland v Netherlands
                            Sylhet Stadium
                                                                                                          Fri Mar 21
                           13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
13th Match, Group 2 - India v Pakistan
                            Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
                                                                                                          Sat Mar 22
                           09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
14th Match, Group 1 - South Africa v Sri Lanka
                             Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
                                                                                                            Sat Mar 22
                            13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
15th Match, Group 1 - England v New Zealand
                                   Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
                                                                                                             Sun Mar 23

T20 World Cup 2014 Schedule

T20 World Cup 2014 Schedule

T20 World Cup 2014 Schedule


09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
16th Match, Group 2 - Australia v Pakistan
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Sun Mar 23
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
17th Match, Group 2 - India v West Indies
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Mon Mar 24
09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
18th Match, Group 1 - New Zealand v South Africa
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Mon Mar 24
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
19th Match, Group 1 - Sri Lanka v TBC (Qualifier B1)
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Tue Mar 25
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
20th Match, Group 2 - West Indies v TBC (Qualifier A1)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur N/A
Thu Mar 27
09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
21st Match, Group 1 - South Africa v TBC (Qualifier B1)
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Thu Mar 27
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
22nd Match, Group 1 - England v Sri Lanka
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Fri Mar 28
09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
23rd Match, Group 2 - Australia v West Indies
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Fri Mar 28
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
24th Match, Group 2 - India v TBC (Qualifier A1)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Sat Mar 29
09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
25th Match, Group 1 - New Zealand v TBC (Qualifier B1)
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Sat Mar 29
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
26th Match, Group 1 - England v South Africa
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Sun Mar 30
09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
27th Match, Group 2 - Pakistan v TBC (Qualifier A1)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Sun Mar 30
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
28th Match, Group 2 - Australia v India
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Mon Mar 31
09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
29th Match, Group 1 - England v TBC (Qualifier B1)
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Mon Mar 31
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT 30th Match, Group 1 - New Zealand v Sri Lanka
Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
Tue Apr 1
09:30 GMT | 15:30 local | 15:00 IST | 14:30 PKT
31st Match, Group 2 - Australia v TBC (Qualifier A1)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Tue Apr 1
13:30 GMT | 19:30 local | 19:00 IST | 18:30 PKT
32nd Match, Group 2 - Pakistan v West Indies
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Thu Apr 3
13:00 GMT | 19:00 local | 18:30 IST | 18:00 PKT
1st Semi-Final - TBC v TBC (1st Group 1 v 2nd Group 2)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Fri Apr 4
13:00 GMT | 19:00 local | 18:30 IST | 18:00 PKT
2nd Semi-Final - TBC v TBC (1st Group 2 v 2nd Group 1)
Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur
Sun Apr 6
13:00 GMT | 19:00 local | 18:30 IST | 18:00 PKT
Final - TBC v TBC (Reserve Day 7th April)
Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur