World Cup (cricket): 2015

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This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

2015

Venue: Australia and New Zealand.

Participating teams: 14 (Afghanistan, Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, Ireland, New Zealand, Pakistan, Scotland, South Africa, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emirates, West Indies, Zimbabwe)

South Asian teams’ journey to the QFs

The authors of this section are...

i) © Cricbuzz Mon, Mar 16 2015

Road to the quarter-finals - NZ sail through, Bangladesh create history from Pool A

Indpaedia volunteers got this section from a newspaper’s website which led to the Cricbuzz site

ii) © Cricbuzz Mon, Mar 16 2015 Road to the quarter-finals - India assert dominance in title defence from Pool B


Bangladesh

(P - 6 , W - 3, L - 2, NR/Tie - 1, Points - 7, Position - 4)

For 15 years, Bangladesh have underachieved in the international arena. It was expected that Bangladesh would be blown away in this edition as well but they put up a determined show and qualified for the quarter-finals of the World Cup for the first time ever.

Bangladesh started their campaign with a bang against Afghanistan in Canberra. Shakib Al Hasan's all-round exploits gave the team a 105-run victory and they benefited immensely in the next match when their game against Australia in Brisbane was washed out. The point they got out of the washout would prove to be crucial. Bangladesh faltered against Sri Lanka as they were thrashed by 92 runs and they seemed to be in trouble against Scotland in Nelson thanks to Kyle Coetzer's 156. Chasing 319, Tamim Iqbal's 95, followed by aggressive fifties Mahmudullah, Mushfiqur Rahim and Shakib Al Hasan helped Bangladesh achieve their highest successful chase in World Cups and they won the match by four wickets.

Against England, the stakes were high. If Bangladesh defeated England, they would seal a spot in the quarter-finals while a loss would keep their fate uncertain. Mahmudullah became the first Bangladesh batsman to score a century in the World Cup and backed by Rahim's aggressive 89, helped Bangladesh to 275 for 7. A spirited haul of 4 for 53 from Rubel Hossain bowled England out for 260 and Bangladesh sealed their place in the quarters for the first time. It was the high point for Bangladesh cricket while it was the lowest point for England, who had crashed out in the first round of the World Cup for the fourth time in five editions. Against New Zealand in Hamilton, Mahmudullah became the first Bangladesh player to score consecutive centuries in the World Cup. Chasing 289, Guptill's century put New Zealand on the right path and some calm knocks from Corey Anderson and Daniel Vettori gave New Zealand a hard-fought three-wicket victory. Despite the loss, Bangladesh finished in fourth spot to take on India in Melbourne.

India

((P - 6, W - 6, L - 0, NR/Tie- 0, Points - 12, Position - 1)

The defending champions did not put a foot wrong in their process of advancing to the QFs. Their batsmen have scored runs and more importantly, the bowlers have taken wickets in every match - becoming the only team in the tournament to get the opposition all out in every league game. In their high-voltage clash against Pakistan, Virat Kohli's century and Mohammed Shami's career-best 4/35 made it 6-0 against their Asian neighbours in World Cups. Shikhar Dhawan shrugged off his poor form with a match-winning 137 against South Africa and Ravichandran Ashwin's 4 for 25 against UAE made in three in a row for India.

They were made to stretch against the West Indies, but MS Dhoni's calmness and Shami's three-wicket haul got them over the line with a six-wicket win. An easy win followed against Ireland, in which Shami's 3 for 41 reduced them to 227 after getting off to a good start. However, the Zimbabwe game, was the one where the India bowlers were taken to the cleaners courtesy. Brendan Taylor's eight ODI ton in his final match for his country got them to 287, but it was trumped by the so-far untested Indian middle-order. Suresh Raina's maiden ODI ton, along with MS Dhoni's unbeaten 85 allowed India, who were 92 for 4 at one stage, seal a six-wicket win and remain unbeaten.

Pakistan

((P - 6, W - 4, L - 2, NR/Tie- 0, Points - 8, Position - 3)

In a bid to repeat their World Cup 1992 success that was hosted in the same continent, Pakistan came into the tournament on the back of a not-so-promising ODI record. They had incurred series losses to Sri Lanka, Australia and New Zealand twice, so when they began their World Cup campaign with losses to India and West Indies, not many backed them to last the distance. They went down by 76 runs in their much-anticipated clash against India and succumbed to an embarrassing 150-run loss to the West Indies.

Their campaign finally took flight when they beat lesser-fancied sides such as UAE and Zimbabwe to keep their quarterfinal hopes alive and eventually finished the group stage with four wins, occupying third spot on the points table. They turned a corner with a morale-boosting win over South Africa at Eden Park. Sarfraz Ahmed's return to the fold helped them turn over a new leaf and their pacers, despite their inexperience, made it possible for them to defend a modest total against South Africa.

Pakistan's unpredictability is what made it possible for them to clinch four straight wins after the defeats in the first two games. The virtual knockout against Ireland, as it turned out, was a cakewalk in the end.

Sri Lanka

(P - 6, W - 4, L - 2, NR/Tie - 0, Points - 8, Position - 3)

Kumar Sangakkara has been the one-man army for Sri Lanka in this World Cup. He has created history and all hopes will rest on him as the tournament enters the most crucial stage.

Sri Lanka lost the first match in the 2015 ICC Cricket World Cup by 98 runs to New Zealand in Christchurch. They were pushed to the limits in the match against Afghanistan in Dunedin. Chasing 233, Sri Lanka were in trouble at 18 for 3 but Mahela Jayawardene's 19th ODI century and his 126-run partnership with Angelo Mathews helped the team win a close match by six wickets with 10 balls to spare. Sri Lanka were on fire in Melbourne with Dilshan and Sangakkara showing no mercy against Bangladesh. After a 122-run opening stand with Lahiru Thirimanne, Dilshan and Sangakkara strung a 210-run stand for the second wicket. Both batsmen registered wonderful centuries and Sri Lanka posted 332 for 1. Bangladesh were never in the hunt and they lost by 92 runs. Sangakkara was once again the driving force in Sri Lanka's demolition of England in Wellington. Chasing England's 310, Sangakkara was joined by Thirimanne and both batsmen tore the England bowling to shreds. They registered a 212-run partnership and both batsmen registered centuries as they coasted to a nine-wicket win.

Against Australia in Sydney, they put up a spirited show thanks once again to Sangakkara. Dilshan smashed Mitchell Johnson for six fours in one over while Sangakkara became the first batsman to score three consecutive hundreds in a World Cup. Chandimal's attacking 22-ball fifty gave them some hope but he retired hurt due to a hamstring strain and they lost the match by 52 runs. In Hobart, Sangakkara created history by becoming the first player in ODI history to score four consecutive centuries and Scotland tumbled to a 148-run loss. Following Australia's win against Scotland in Hobart, Sri Lanka finished in third spot to take on South Africa

India vs. Pakistan

Pool B match

The tickets for the eagerly-awaited contest were sold out in 20 minutes for the 50,000-capacity stadium, with the South Australian government expecting around 20,000 Indian travellers for the marquee clash.

Sun, Feb 15, 2015/ Adelaide Oval, Adelaide

India won the toss and opted to bat

India beat Pakistan by 76 runs, maintaining its unbeaten record against its neighbour, which now stands at 6:0. India won the sixth consecutive World Cup game against Pakistan since first met in the WC in 1992.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni's men first posted a competitive total of 300/7 (which is a record for an India-Pakistan World Cup game) riding on Virat Kohli's 22nd ODI hundred and then dismissed the opposition for 224 in 47 overs at the Adelaide Oval to secure two points.

Mohammad Shami (4/35), Umesh Yadav (2/50), Mohit Sharma (2/35) and Ravichandran Ashwin (1/41) were the pick of the Indian bowlers as they kept taking wickets to put pressure on the Pakistani batsmen. Captain Misbah-ul Haq (76), Ahmed Shehzad (47) and Haris Sohail (36) were the notable contributors.

This was India’s first victory in Australia since landing there in November 2014. India had managed to spend almost three months in Australia without winning a single official match.

India could have got a bigger score had it not been for some excellent death bowling by the Pakistani pace bowlers. Their young fast bowler Sohail Khan (5/55) checked the Indian surge by bowling a tight line and length.

Virat Kohli became the first Indian batsman to hit a century against Pakistan in the World Cup. His 107 off 128 deliveries is the highest score by a player from either side in an India-Pakistan World Cup game.

Virat Kohli who continued his passionate romance with the Adelaide Oval, scoring his fourth century in only his seventh innings there. Already, Adelaide has become Kohli's happy hunting ground in the same way that Sydney was for Sachin Tendulkar, Port of Spain for Sunil Gavaskar and Eden Gardens for VVS Laxman.

India wobbled in the last five overs, losing five wickets for only 27 runs which stopped them short of the projected score of 325.

Kohli now has 22 ODI centuries and is joint second with Sourav Ganguly for most ODI tons scored by an Indian. Only Sachin Tendulkar (49) is ahead of him. But Kohli did eclipse Tendulkar's highest individual score (98) by an Indian against Pakistan in any World Cup game.

Indian team

Playing XI: Shikhar Dhawan, Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina, Ajinkya Rahane, MS Dhoni, Ravindra Jadeja, Ravichandran Ashwin, Mohit Sharma, Mohammed Shami, Umesh Yadav

Bench: Ambati Rayudu, Stuart Binny, Axar Patel, Bhuvneshwar Kumar

Pakistan Squad

Playing XI: Ahmed Shehzad, Younis Khan, Haris Sohail, Misbah-ul-Haq, Sohaib Maqsood, Umar Akmal, Shahid Afridi, Wahab Riaz, Yasir Shah, Sohail Khan, Mohammad Irfan

Bench: Nasir Jamshed, Sarfraz Ahmed, Ehsan Adil, Rahat Ali

Man of the Match: Virat Kohl

Scoreboard

India innings

300/7 (50 overs)

 

 

 

Batting

 

R

Fours

Sixes

Rohit Sharma

c Misbah b S Khan

15

2

0

Shikhar Dhawan

run out (Misbah)

73

7

1

Virat Kohli

c U Akmal b S Khan

107

8

0

Suresh Raina

c H Sohail b S Khan

74

5

3

MS Dhoni (c & wk)

c Misbah b S Khan

18

1

1

Ravindra Jadeja

b Riaz

3

0

0

Ajinkya Rahane

b S Khan

0

0

0

Ravichandran Ashwin

not out

1

0

0

Mohammed Shami

not out

3

0

0

Extras

 

6

 

 

Total

(50 Overs, 7 Wickets)

300

 

 

Bowling

R

W

 

 

Mohammad Irfan

58

0

 

 

Sohail Khan

55

5

 

 

Shahid Afridi

50

0

 

 

Wahab Riaz

49

1

 

 

Yasir Shah

60

0

 

 

Haris Sohail

26

0

 

 

Pakistan innings

224 (47 overs)

 

 

 

Batting

 

 

 

 

Ahmed Shehzad

c R Jadeja b Umesh

47

5

0

Younis Khan

c Dhoni b Shami

6

1

0

Haris Sohail

c Raina b Ashwin

36

3

0

Misbah-ul-Haq (c)

c A Rahane b Shami

76

9

1

Sohaib Maqsood

c Raina b Umesh

0

0

0

Umar Akmal (wk)

c Dhoni b R Jadeja

0

0

0

Shahid Afridi

c Kohli b Shami

22

1

1

Wahab Riaz

c Dhoni b Shami

4

1

0

Yasir Shah

c Umesh b Mohit Sharma

13

1

0

Sohail Khan

c Umesh b Mohit Sharma

7

1

0

Mohammad Irfan

not out

1

0

0

Extras

 

12

 

 

Total

(47 Overs, 10 Wickets)

224

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bowling

R

W

 

 

Umesh Yadav

50

2

 

 

Mohammed Shami

35

4

 

 

Mohit Sharma

35

2

 

 

Suresh Raina

6

0

 

 

Ravichandran Ashwin

41

1

 

 

Ravindra Jadeja

56

1

 

 

 

Trivia

Pakistan players' disciplinary problems

fined for night out/ AFP

Eight Pakistan players, including maverick former captain Shahid Afridi and opener Ahmed Shehzad, were fined 300 Australian dollars (US $230) for breaching a team curfew (coming 45 minutes late to their Sydney hotel after a dinner night out) ahead of their crucial World Cup game against India. They were also been warned that a repeat offence would see them kicked out of the tournament.

AFP added: Pakistani players have a history of off-field discipline problems. Three key players -- Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer -- were caught in a spot-fixing scandal in England in 2010.The trio was accused of taking money to orchestrate deliberate no-balls during the Lord's Test. All three were banned for five years by the International Cricket Council. They, along with their agent Mazhar Majeed, were also jailed in UK.

Coach threatened to resign / PTI

Then the national team's fielding coach Grant Luden threatened to resign complaining of misbehaviour, including use of abusive language, from three senior players Shahid Afridi, Ahmed Shehzad and Umar Akmal during a training session.

India versus South Africa at the MCG

The Times of India

Feb 23 2015

India came up with yet another near-perfect show to beat South Africa

India

Studs

Shikhar Dhawan

He played the perfect anchor role for India, blunting the new-ball attack by being watchful and discreet. He paced his innings to a nicety, taking 71 deliveries for his first 50 and then just 52 more to record his 7th ODI ton. He cut loose in the batting Powerplay, even slamming Dale Steyn for a massive six and a four off consecutive balls. India have never lost when he has scored a 100 and that didn't change later.

Ajinkya Rahane

With Dhawan and Virat Kohli intent on seeing off SA's danger men, India needed somebody to play an attacking innings. Rahane provided that without ever stooping to risky shots. He split gaps precisely and lofted the ball when he found spaces to exploit. It took the pressure off Dhawan and also helped the scoring rate to get a life. His 60-ball 79 ensured that panic never set into the India camp

Mohit Sharma

He was the lucky talisman. Bowled to his strengths and didn't yield too many runs. Crucially, he took the prized scalps of Amla, Du Plessis and effected the critical runout of De Villiers with an inch-perfect throw from the deep.

DUDS

Lower middle order:

Once again, India blew up an incredible platform, huffing and puffing to just over 300. At one stage, when Rahane and Dhawan were batting, a total of over 330 looked quite plausible. But the lower middle order lost its way, giving South Africa a sliver of hope.

South Africa

Studs


Faf Du Plessis

The only batsman who looked comfortable in the middle.bb

Came out to bat early and hit a few crispy boundaries in his stroke-filled half-century. His fighting knock got no support from the other end apart from a end apart from a brief stand with captain AB De Villiers.As for Du Plessis was at the crease, South Africa were South Africa were still in the game.

Duds

Wayne Parnell

Wayward and awry from his first ball, Parnell failed to justify the faith SA team management has showed in him over Ryan McLaren. He gave too much width to Dhawan and bowled too full to Rahane. Made life really tough for SA skipper, who had already lost Vernon Philander to injury. No. 7 appeared too high a batting spot for someone of his capability and Parnell did nothing to change that perception.

Morne Morkel

They say fast bowlers hunt in pairs and Morkel was expected to be one of the strike bowlers for South Africa along with Dale Steyn but looked far below par. He bowled with pace but never managed to trouble any of the Indian batsmen bar Suresh Raina, who cut and pulled him with ease. Ajinkya Rahane was especially severe on him.

Hashim Amla

Facing a huge chase, a lot depended on the calm and collected SA opener. He got an early reprieve when Suresh Raina muffed up a great run-out opportunity but went for an ill-advised pull shot off Mohit Sharma with two men on the fence. His early dismissal following opening partner Quinton de Kock's wicket pushed South Africa back severely.


See also

World Cup (cricket): history <>World Cup (cricket): 1975 <>World Cup (cricket): 1979 <>World Cup (cricket): 1983 <>World Cup (cricket): 1987 <>World Cup (cricket): 1992 <>World Cup (cricket): 1996 <>World Cup (cricket): 1999 <>World Cup (cricket): 2003 <>World Cup (cricket): 2007 <>World Cup (cricket): 2011 <>World Cup (cricket): 2015

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