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*Official* Cricket World Cup in Australia, CWLand and New Zealand

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
Super Eights: South Africa v Australia
at SCG

Scorecard
Ball By Ball

In front of a packed Sydney home crowd, Australia were defeated by the unlikeliest of heroes, Graeme Smith, as a nearly knocked-out South African team gave an excellent fight to show they were not quite the pushovers they had seemed so far in the tournament. Australia, meanwhile, showed bowling deficiencies that the other teams will be very keen to exploit, and a severe and uncharacteristic lack of bottle in the death overs.

South Africa's choice of batting first turned out to be a wise one, though after Smith had made a horrible decision on a single to run out partner Dippenaar for three, it didn't look that way. However, Smith and Gibbs took runs quickly and simply, and with Gibbs beneficiary of a dropped catch on 17 not even a rare Shaun Tait maiden stopped the South African juggernaut. Smith brought up his half-century by hoiking Watson for six - his second boundary of the innings - then treated Michael Clarke in the same fashion shortly afterwards, as Australia's fifth-bowler combination once again struggled. Eventually, however, Clarke caught Smith napping - a top edge went miles up in the air and was easily taken by Gilchrist.
That didn't deter Gibbs, however. He took Watson for four and six in the next over, and hit 102 runs in a splendid partnership with Jacques Kallis, lasting 96 balls with plenty of extravagant shots. Australia's breakthrough came through a cruel run-out, as Gibbs, on 99, was called over by Kallis for another single - and fell a yard short due to Clarke's excellent throw. With new batsman Ashwell Prince saved by the umpire on his next ball, South Africa didn't quite uphold the magnificent rate in the final overs, and had to be content with 18 off the final 24 balls. However, their target of 285 for four still looked daunting.

Australia started well enough, but in the third over, in-form wicketkeeper Gilchrist nicked Pollock behind for three. With Ntini and Pollock bowling reasonably tight lines, the required run rate immediately crept up above six an over, and when Ponting tried to up the tempo, he found Shaun Pollock in the deep to be gone for 31. Damien Martyn provided an entertaining 27 as Andrew Hall's occasional short and wide bowling was dispatched cleanly, and with Jaques coming to terms with his anchor role, Australia by no means looked out of it until Graeme Smith put himself on in a last desperate charge. By that time, with 18 overs left, Australia required 110 to win, and were nine ahead of South Africa's then-total.

Smith's first over was miserly, with most hits going straight to fielders and only four runs conceded. With Langeveldt following up in the next over with extra bounce that had the batsmen beaten, Jaques felt compelled to lash Smith out with the reverse sweep...and was bowled for 86. But that only brought finisher extraordinaire, Michael Hussey, to the crease, in his perfect situation - right? Not so. Although Smith's next over cost 10 runs, he then bowled a maiden over to Clarke, and some dot balls faced by Hussey indicated he was not comfortable. That was exposed by veteran Shaun Pollock, whose inswinging yorker may have lost pace but still may be effective - and Hussey's off stump went to see him gone for 20 and Australia requiring 69 off 53.

Watson and Clarke attempted it, with Watson hitting some fine boundaries - however, ultimately, both batsmen failed to take the quick singles, and that proved their undoing. Of the last 53 deliveries, 18 were dots, and despite Ntini's four-bye gift down the leg side in the final over, the remaining 35 balls could not give them the runs required. South Africa prevailed by eight runs, but with a win-loss record of 3-4, South Africa require the help of net run rate and a lot of other results if they are to qualify for the semi-finals.

South Africa 285 for 4 (50 overs) beat
Australia 277 for 6 (50 overs) by eight runs
Man of the Match: Graeme Smith

The website is also updated.
 

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
Cricket Web XI v Pakistan
at Telstra Dome

Live sim around 10:30 am GMT (11:30am London time, 8:30pm Sydney time). I trust there will be a more captive audience this time around. :sleep:

Line-up:

I Markus
LA Camps
*BJ Goff
CR Butler
RJ Dauth
MJ Robbins
+AP Chaulk
TC Halsey
NS Hoy
NS Pickup
NL Patrick
 

Jungle Jumbo

Well-known member
Hmm, 11:30...

Breakfast 10:00, waste time on CW 10-11:00, get dressed 11:05, mid morning carrot 11:10, water plants 11:20.

Should make it.
 

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
A double header today.

Super Eights: Cricket Web XI v Pakistan
at Telstra Dome

Scorecards only:

Scorecard
Ball By Ball

Super Eights: India v West Indies
at Brisbane

Scorecard
Ball By Ball

Excitement continues in the battle for the final two Super Eight places, and it is conceivable that four teams could be tied on eight points after West Indies failed to put away their game with India. They were defeated after magnificent innings from Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar, whose opening stand of 169 won the game.

Ian Bradshaw was on the money from the start, being miserly but unable to take any wickets with his barely above medium pace bowling, and Sehwag and Tendulkar stuck into the part-timers. They were not dominant, but they ran plenty and scored lots, and they built the foundation for a healthy target. With the remainder of the order contributing with quickfire innings, West Indies were forced to rotate their bowling attack, but did find a good death combination in Samuels and Bradshaw. Indeed, Bradshaw's last over may linger in the memories: it read W 1 W 1 W W, as India finished on 271 for nine.

However, West Indies replied feebly. The new ball seamers were taken for runs, but a run out did for Chanderpaul and Sarwan was bowled by Zaheer, while the other batsmen simply failed to score runs. Tied down by an excellent spell from Harbhajan, Samuels and Hinds needed run-a-ball half-centuries, and though the latter was accomplished, the run rate was somewhat short - West Indies totalled 233 in their 50 overs, helped by 24 extras, and finished losers under the lights in Brisbane.

India 271 for 9 (50 overs) beat
West Indies 233 for 6 (50 overs) by 38 runs
Man of the Match: Virender Sehwag

Super Eights: Sri Lanka v New Zealand
at Hobart

Scorecard
Ball By Ball

New Zealand gained an advantage before their final clash with West Indies by dismissing Sri Lanka with the help of a rampant Shane Bond. Bond took his tournament wicket tally to 29 as the Sri Lankans were played out of the World Cup.

After choosing to bat first, Sri Lanka got a nasty surprise as Marvan Atapattu, one ball after launching a Bond no-ball for six, inside edged for eight. It set the tune of the innings. No batsman going going, seven were dismissed in single figures, and even the dominant Sanath Jayasuriya made a stifled and circumspect 52. With Mahela Jayawardene and Russel Arnold both making fine knocks, Sri Lanka should have made more of it, but the wickets of Bond (5-43) and Vettori (2-27) meant there really was no one to do the job.

In reply, Lou Vincent and Nathan Astle were dull, but effective. Batting through nearly all of the 50 overs, neither managed a century in chase of 201, ending on 96 not out and 94 not out respectably, but still completed one of the highest scores in ten-wicket wins. They did, however, show that Sri Lanka's collapse was largely due to the magnificence of Bond, as there appeared to be nothing in the pitch when Sri Lanka bowled.

Sri Lanka 200 for 9 (50 overs) lost to
New Zealand 201 for 0 (47.5 overs) by ten wickets
Man of the Match: Shane Bond

Points table after the sixth match:

CW XI 8 pts (+0.86)
Pakistan 8 pts (+0.12)
Australia 8 pts (+0.12)
New Zealand 8 pts (-0.01)
West Indies 6 pts (+0.23)
South Africa 4 pts (-0.23)
Sri Lanka 4 pts (-0.56)
India 2 pts (-0.59)

The situation:

The winner of Pakistan v Australia tomorrow qualifies. The loser stands a good chance unless their net run rate is ruined, say by a 50-run defeat.
New Zealand v West Indies on Sunday is a virtual quarter-final - unless the loser of Pakistan v Australia gets a poor net run rate, in which case both teams could go through if the game is close.
CW XI are probably guaranteed qualification barring a 250-run defeat to South Africa, as the West Indies v New Zealand clash affects their net run rate
Sri Lanka v India is meaningless, except for ODI Championship points.

If anyone wants CWBCC coverage of any of these games, do tell. CW XI v South Africa will of course be covered on Monday, probably around the same time as the Pakistan match.
 

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
Super Eights: Australia v Pakistan
at MCG

Scorecard
Ball By Ball

Three opening hundreds dominated the match at a flat MCG track, but hosts Australia prevailed in the end to become the first team to book their place in the semi-finals. Pakistan's high total, however, means they too qualified for the semis, and this could well be a dress rehearsal of one of the semi-final games.

Pakistan opted to bat first, and after losing Shoaib Malik to Gillespie, Salman and Younis batted fluently to put on 56. However, it was the next partnership that set terrors into the Australian fans. Salman had looked circumspect, and a shadow of the self that made 142 against CW XI the previous week, but now he truly cut loose. With Yousuf providing a steady hand and plenty of boundaries, Salman eased past 50, keeping the runs flowing at about five an over. Then, he could cut loose with Afridi towards the end, and with the wides tally at nine, Pakistan posted a very healthy 290 for five, with Salman on another century - 124 not out.

However, Australia responded in kind. Gilchrist and Jaques settled in to play fantastic innings, with Jaques bringing up the half-century by hoiking Naved-ul-Hasan for six. He had then faced 40 balls. Gilchrist was more restrained, taking 60 balls to reach the half-century mark, but by that time the scoreboard read 127 for nought, and Inzamam was starting to worry about this partnership. With Afridi slogged out of the attack, conceding 48 in five overs with a maiden - one particularly brutal over to Gilchrist read . 4 4 Y 4 6 1 - and the other bowlers too inaccurate, it was little help when Gilchrist finally found Shoaib Akhtar to be gone for 111. More wickets followed, as Australia wanted to earn net run rate, but Ponting and Hussey found the boundaries and Andrew Symonds secured victory by dabbing a single down the leg side.

Pakistan 290 for 5 (50 overs) lost to
Australia 291 for 6 (45.5 overs) by four wickets
Man of the Match: Phil Jaques

Liam's supposed to do West Indies v New Zealand, so that comes later. CW XI v Pakistan still on tomorrow, half an hour earlier than the last match. (So that's 11 am London time, 8 pm Sydney time.)
 

Mr Mxyzptlk

Well-known member
Super Eights: West Indies v New Zealand
at SCG

An entertaining batting performance from the West Indies set up a comfortable win over New Zealand, and a semi-final berth for the defending champions. Chris Gayle was solid at the top of the order with 98, but it was the stylish strokeplay of Brian Lara and the explosive contribution of Wavell Hinds that truly pushed the West Indies forward.

Lara was in fine touch from the moment he strode to the crease. He issued warnings of his class with a glorious cover drive to the boundary off the first ball he saw from Mason. The West Indies captain went on to score 68 runs, facing 70 balls. Hinds later smacked five consecutive boundaries off Jacob Oram, and 7 in total in his innings of 47 from 31 balls.

A score of 291 was always due to challenge the New Zealanders, but after a disastrously slow start, the task ventured nearer to the impossible than the improbable. Several batsmen got starts, but none could find any of the momentum needed, and instead the disciplined West Indian bowling cleaned up for an easy 60-run win.

West Indies 291 all out beat
New Zealand 231-9 by 60 runs
Man of the Match: CH Gayle
 

Attachments

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
CW XI v South Africa

The West Indies v New Zealand means that CW XI have two possible semi-final opponents, West Indies or Pakistan. A win over South Africa would see a clash with Pakistan, while defeat means that CW will face West Indies. These are the only two teams to beat CW XI so far during the World Cup.

CW XI:

I Markus
LA Camps
*BJ Goff
CR Butler
RJ Dauth
MJ Robbins
+AP Chaulk
TC Halsey
NS Hoy
NS Pickup
NL Patrick
 

new_age_ar

Well-known member
Well done on making the semis guys, just two more games and we will be in our rightful position in One Day Cricket, on top of the world. :D
 

vic_orthdox

Global Moderator
marc71178 said:
Erm, didn't we win the last game?!
I was talking about the last game posted in here :p

The one vs Pakistan.

Mind you, Dauth's 2* vs South Africa was a pretty stylish knock too ;)
 

Blewy

Well-known member
Liam/Hakon

Im going to be away till next week as of 2nite, thus wont be responding to any selections.. Im sure you can work the team without me :p
 

Magrat Garlick

Global Moderator
Blewy: OK. I promise not to spring any big surprises. :p

Super Eights: Sri Lanka v India
at Adelaide

Scorecard
Ball By Ball

India avoided the wooden spoon thanks to another fine performance, as they pulled a win from seemingly nowhere: at one point they were 137 for five, then later they stared at 119 for nought defending a total 254. Yet, their change bowlers, R. P. Singh and Virender Sehwag, did a sterling job in keeping the run rate down, and not even late slogging from Tillakaratne Dilshan and Chaminda Vaas could bring Sri Lanka to the win.

India had batted first, and after losing early wickets to Maling aand Jayasuriya, Yuvraj Singh came to the fore. In a fine innings including nine boundaries, Yuvraj notched up 74 runs at a very healthy rate, and he was well supported by M. S. Dhoni for a sixth-wicket stand of 74. As Bandara, Muralitharan and malinga were taken for runs, India maintained a good total, and ended on 254 for seven.

Marvan Atapattu and Sanath Jayasuriya then showed exactly what troubles Sri Lanka's team at present. The two put on 119 for the first wicket, taking Agarkar, Pathan and Zaheer out of the ground - and then got absolutely no support. The supporting cast got scores of 8, 18, 22, 20, 24* and 17* - gifting their wickets away to a niggling Sehwag - and despite Pathan's woeful figures of 9-0-50-0, including three wides and a no-ball, India survived to take the match by nine runs, which also saw them finish seventh in the league stage.

India 254 for 7 (50 overs) beat
Sri Lanka 245 for 6 (50 overs) by nine runs
Man of the Match: Yuvraj Singh
 
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