Cricket, India: A history (2023)

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[[Category:India | ]]
 
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=Australia tour of India, 2023=
 
===3rd ODI, Indore: India wins===
 
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/article-share?article=25_01_2023_016_001_cap_TOI  Gaurav Gupta, January 25, 2023: ''The Times of India'']
 
  
[[File: Scoreboard- Australia vs India, 2022- 3rd ODI, Indore.jpg|Scoreboard- Australia vs India, 2022- 3rd ODI, Indore <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/article-share?article=25_01_2023_016_001_cap_TOI  Gaurav Gupta, January 25, 2023: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
  
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=The year in a nutshell=
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[https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/cricket/news/2023-a-year-of-what-could-have-been-for-indian-cricket/articleshow/106429565.cms  Nitin Naik, January 1, 2024: ''The Times of India'']
  
Indore : On Monday morning, some of the Indian players visited the Mahakaleshwar temple in nearby Ujjain to pray for Rishabh Pant’s fast recovery. Perhaps they should also have prayed for some mercy for the Kiwi bowlers, who have been found wanting on this tour.
 
  

India’s openers were simply on fire, with Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill slamming superb centuries to pulverize a clueless New Zealand attack on a belter at the Holkar Stadium in the third ODI.
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''' 2023: A YEAR OF WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN '''
  
Their 212-run opening stand in just 157 balls was India’s highest partnership for the first wicket against the Kiwis in ODIs. With Rohit and Gill destoying the bowling after being put in to bat, at one point it even seemed India could scale ‘Mount 500’ for the first time in ODIs. A mini-collapse, though, slowed them down, before a typically belligerent half-century by the explosive Hardik Pandya (54; 38b, 3x4, 3x6), and his 54-run alliance in 34 balls for the seventh wicket with Shardul Thakur (25 off 17 balls), took India to 385/9.
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’’ Despite Numerous Statistical Highs, Including Being Ranked No.1 In All Formats, The Big Prize In Men’s Cricket Eluded The Indian Team ''
  

Showing why he is rated among the top openers in world cricket, Devon Conway then cracked a brilliant 138, getting to three figures off just 71 balls. But India, spearheaded by a Shardul Thakur burst (3/45 in 6 overs), managed to bowl out New Zealand for 295 in 41. 2 overs.  
+
How would you sum up 2023 if you were an Indian cricket fan? Two words would do justice. “What if?.” 2023 was a year where the Indian men’s cricket team had two cracks at ending a 10-year wait for an ICC Trophy, but it came up short on both occasions in the WTC final at The Oval and the ODI World Cup final at Ahmedabad. And both times, it got outskilled by a familiar adversary. Australia.
  

Having won all the six ODIs it has played at this venue, India can claim that the Holkar Stadium, a high-scoring venue, is its fortress.
+

What if India had picked Ashwin at the Oval in the WTC final? What if India had tried to bounce out Travis Head earlier? What if Head had nicked one of the many balls he played and missed in the first ten overs of that chase in Ahmedabad?
  
The convincing 90-run victory helped India regain the No. 1 ranking in ODIs as the hosts pulled off a 3-0 clean sweep. The T20I leg begins in Ranchi.
+

The loss on November 19 in Motera would scar the souls and puncture the spirits of those in the changing room more because India had played a flawless tournament till the semifinal, crushing opponents systematically, but cruelly had an off day in the game that mattered on a curiously prepared pitch that was slow and dry to start with and then changed dramatically when Australia started their chase of 240.
  
With India resting regular pacers Mohammed Shami and Mohammed Siraj, Pandya provided India with the perfect start when he had Finn Allen playing the ball on to his stumps for a two-ball duck. Conway, however, kept the Kiwis in the hunt, adding 106 off 87 balls for the second wicket with Henry Nicholls (42 off 40 balls), and then 78 for the third wicket with Daryl Mitchell (24).  
+

But to not celebrate the performances of the team, especially in the white-ball format, would be ungrateful.
  
Thakur stepped up at the right time, ripping the heart out of New Zealand’s innings when he dismissed Mitchell, skipper Tom Latham and Glen Phillips in quick succession. When Conway hit Umran Malik straight to Rohit at mid-wicket, and the dangerous Michael Bracewell (26) was stumped off a wide down the legside off Kuldeep Yadav (3-62), the game was done and dusted.
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The men’s team played fifty-eight white-ball games (35 ODIs and 23 T20Is) this year and ended up winning forty-two out of them (27 in ODIS and fifteen in T20Is).
On the eve of the match, India coach Rahul Dravid had joked that as soon as they landed in Indore, all the bowlers shied away from bowling on the flat pitch here. The small ground adds to the bowlers’ woes. India’s innings, incidentally, included 33 fours and a record 19 sixes.  
+
  
India’s momentum was broken when Rohit, going for another big one, was bowled by Michael Bracewell, and Gill was caught at point while mistiming a cut off Blair Tickner. Ishan Kishan (17) sacrificed his wicket for Kohli and was run out, Virat Kohli (36 off 27 balls) spooned Duffy to mid-off, while Suryakumar Yadav (14) mistimed his trademark flick to long on to Duffy as well.
+
ODIs, a format that is losing relevance, was given a lifeline by the men in blue, especially during a feverish World Cup campaign where captain Rohit Sharma’s thrilling assault on bowlers in the powerplay, captivated fans as it was both effective and selfless.
However, Pandya’s strong forehands, resembling that of a tennis player, fetched him a few sixes. With Thakur chipping in with little cameo, India were back on the fast track.  
+
  
It will take a while for the Kiwi bowlers to erase this brutal hammering. Playing just his third ODI, Jacob Duffy picked up three wickets but ended up conceding 100 in his 10 overs. Blair Tickner too took three but his 10 over quota went for 76.
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The skipper was unfairly criticized for his stroke in the final off Glenn Maxwell, which was pouched miraculously by Travis Head, but his 47 (31 balls) was exactly how he had batted right through the tournament, in fact right through the year.
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With the heartbreak of the T20 World Cup semifinal vs England in Adelaide still fresh in his mind, the skipper had made up his mind that he was willing to buy the idea of India getting outclassed, but would not buy it if India ended up second best for want of intent. And he took it upon himself to not just stat pad but focus on giving the middle-order a cushion of runs so that they can bat deep without feeling the pressure of accelerating.

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 +
It was a template that worked perfectly in the marquee tournament. Virat Kohli played the ideal foil for Rohit’s daredevilry, anchoring chases or giving the strokeplayers around him like KL Rahul and Shreyas Iyer the freedom to go big without the worries of the team suffering a blowout. He logged six ODI hundreds in 2023 with three of them coming in the World Cup, none more important than the one he scored in the semifinal at the Wankhede Stadium against perennial nemesis New Zealand which made him the lone man to get to 50 ODI tons and surpass the record held by the great Sachin Tendulkar. It was a pity that his 765 runs in 11 matches did not result in a trophy more significant than the player of the tournament prize.
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 +

The same can be said about the skipper. Rohit was one of four Indian batters to log over 1000 ODI runs along with Shubman Gill (1584), Kohli (1377) and Rahul (1060) and his approach can best be established by the fact that he hit 67 of India’s 250 ODI maximums in 2023 with 31 of them coming in the World Cup, a majority of those hits coming against top bowlers in the powerplay.
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 +

How you wish you had an intent meter sometimes. India’s bowlers were not too bad either. How’s this for a factoid? Arshdeep Singh’s 5-37 at Johannesburg against South Africa last month was the eighth instance of an Indian bowler picking a five-wicket haul in 2023. Mohammed Shami, who had a dream World Cup campaign (24 wickets) produced three of them in the tournament. He also bagged one in Mohali vs Australia just before the World Cup started. Kuldeep Yadav, Mohammed Siraj and Ravindra Jadeja were the others to make that distinguished list.
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 +

Siraj produced a spell for the ages in the Asia Cup final vs Sri Lanka in Colombo with his 6-21 including a four-wicket over, a first by an Indian in ODIs. He was also lethal in the World Cup with the new ball, invariably producing an early breakthrough. What if India had not changed their plan and gave him the new ball in the final too instead of bringing him on in the17th over?
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 +

It was a story of What if for the women too. They choked like they did in the Commonwealth Games final against who else, but Australia in the semifinal of the T20 World Cup at Newlands when skipper Harmanpreet Kaur was run out with her bat getting stuck in the turf. India needed forty off thirty-two balls with six wickets in hand and fell short by five runs.

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 +
What if Kaur had managed to ground her bat? But Kaur did find some well-deserved cheer later in the year as her team in the inaugural WPL, Mumbai Indians, went on to clinch the trophy. She also captained India to memorable Test triumphs over England and Australia in Mumbai late in the year. While big trophies in white-ball cricket eludes the ladies, they tasted success in the Asian Games, winning the gold medal and the under-19 team led by Shafali Verma clinched the World Cup.

 +
 
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May be the continued growth and success of the WPL, will see more talented players coming through the system.
 +
 
 +

''' INDIAN MEN’S TEAM’S SCHEDULE IN 2024 ''' 

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 +
TESTS: 1 vs SA in SA; 5 vs Eng in Ind; 2 vs Bangladesh in Ind 3 vs NZ in Ind; 4 vs Aus in Aus
 +
 
 +

T20IS: 3 vs Afg in Ind; 3 vs SL in SL; T20 WC in USA and WI

 +
 
 +
ODIS: 3 vs SL in SL
 +
 
 +
 
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=World Test Championship=
 +
==2023==
 +
===The road to the final===
 +
[[File: The road to the WTC final, for India and for Australia, 2023.jpg|The road to the WTC final, for India and for Australia, 2023 <br/> From: [From the archives, June 6, 2023: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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'''See graphic''':
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 +
'' The road to the WTC final, for India and for Australia, 2023 ''
 +
 
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[[Category:India| CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRIC
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[[Category:Pages with broken file links|CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICK
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[[Category:Politics| CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRICKET, INDIA: A HISTORY (2023)CRIC
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Latest revision as of 08:56, 4 January 2024

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Contents

[edit] The year in a nutshell

Nitin Naik, January 1, 2024: The Times of India


2023: A YEAR OF WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN

’’ Despite Numerous Statistical Highs, Including Being Ranked No.1 In All Formats, The Big Prize In Men’s Cricket Eluded The Indian Team

How would you sum up 2023 if you were an Indian cricket fan? Two words would do justice. “What if?.” 2023 was a year where the Indian men’s cricket team had two cracks at ending a 10-year wait for an ICC Trophy, but it came up short on both occasions in the WTC final at The Oval and the ODI World Cup final at Ahmedabad. And both times, it got outskilled by a familiar adversary. Australia.


What if India had picked Ashwin at the Oval in the WTC final? What if India had tried to bounce out Travis Head earlier? What if Head had nicked one of the many balls he played and missed in the first ten overs of that chase in Ahmedabad?


The loss on November 19 in Motera would scar the souls and puncture the spirits of those in the changing room more because India had played a flawless tournament till the semifinal, crushing opponents systematically, but cruelly had an off day in the game that mattered on a curiously prepared pitch that was slow and dry to start with and then changed dramatically when Australia started their chase of 240.


But to not celebrate the performances of the team, especially in the white-ball format, would be ungrateful.


The men’s team played fifty-eight white-ball games (35 ODIs and 23 T20Is) this year and ended up winning forty-two out of them (27 in ODIS and fifteen in T20Is).


ODIs, a format that is losing relevance, was given a lifeline by the men in blue, especially during a feverish World Cup campaign where captain Rohit Sharma’s thrilling assault on bowlers in the powerplay, captivated fans as it was both effective and selfless.


The skipper was unfairly criticized for his stroke in the final off Glenn Maxwell, which was pouched miraculously by Travis Head, but his 47 (31 balls) was exactly how he had batted right through the tournament, in fact right through the year.


With the heartbreak of the T20 World Cup semifinal vs England in Adelaide still fresh in his mind, the skipper had made up his mind that he was willing to buy the idea of India getting outclassed, but would not buy it if India ended up second best for want of intent. And he took it upon himself to not just stat pad but focus on giving the middle-order a cushion of runs so that they can bat deep without feeling the pressure of accelerating.


It was a template that worked perfectly in the marquee tournament. Virat Kohli played the ideal foil for Rohit’s daredevilry, anchoring chases or giving the strokeplayers around him like KL Rahul and Shreyas Iyer the freedom to go big without the worries of the team suffering a blowout. He logged six ODI hundreds in 2023 with three of them coming in the World Cup, none more important than the one he scored in the semifinal at the Wankhede Stadium against perennial nemesis New Zealand which made him the lone man to get to 50 ODI tons and surpass the record held by the great Sachin Tendulkar. It was a pity that his 765 runs in 11 matches did not result in a trophy more significant than the player of the tournament prize.


The same can be said about the skipper. Rohit was one of four Indian batters to log over 1000 ODI runs along with Shubman Gill (1584), Kohli (1377) and Rahul (1060) and his approach can best be established by the fact that he hit 67 of India’s 250 ODI maximums in 2023 with 31 of them coming in the World Cup, a majority of those hits coming against top bowlers in the powerplay.


How you wish you had an intent meter sometimes. India’s bowlers were not too bad either. How’s this for a factoid? Arshdeep Singh’s 5-37 at Johannesburg against South Africa last month was the eighth instance of an Indian bowler picking a five-wicket haul in 2023. Mohammed Shami, who had a dream World Cup campaign (24 wickets) produced three of them in the tournament. He also bagged one in Mohali vs Australia just before the World Cup started. Kuldeep Yadav, Mohammed Siraj and Ravindra Jadeja were the others to make that distinguished list.


Siraj produced a spell for the ages in the Asia Cup final vs Sri Lanka in Colombo with his 6-21 including a four-wicket over, a first by an Indian in ODIs. He was also lethal in the World Cup with the new ball, invariably producing an early breakthrough. What if India had not changed their plan and gave him the new ball in the final too instead of bringing him on in the17th over?


It was a story of What if for the women too. They choked like they did in the Commonwealth Games final against who else, but Australia in the semifinal of the T20 World Cup at Newlands when skipper Harmanpreet Kaur was run out with her bat getting stuck in the turf. India needed forty off thirty-two balls with six wickets in hand and fell short by five runs.


What if Kaur had managed to ground her bat? But Kaur did find some well-deserved cheer later in the year as her team in the inaugural WPL, Mumbai Indians, went on to clinch the trophy. She also captained India to memorable Test triumphs over England and Australia in Mumbai late in the year. While big trophies in white-ball cricket eludes the ladies, they tasted success in the Asian Games, winning the gold medal and the under-19 team led by Shafali Verma clinched the World Cup.


May be the continued growth and success of the WPL, will see more talented players coming through the system.

INDIAN MEN’S TEAM’S SCHEDULE IN 2024

TESTS: 1 vs SA in SA; 5 vs Eng in Ind; 2 vs Bangladesh in Ind 3 vs NZ in Ind; 4 vs Aus in Aus


T20IS: 3 vs Afg in Ind; 3 vs SL in SL; T20 WC in USA and WI


ODIS: 3 vs SL in SL


[edit] World Test Championship

[edit] 2023

[edit] The road to the final

The road to the WTC final, for India and for Australia, 2023
From: [From the archives, June 6, 2023: The Times of India]

See graphic:

The road to the WTC final, for India and for Australia, 2023

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