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Thread: ICC World Cup 2011

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    Default ICC World Cup 2011

    cricket 2011 - ICC World Cup 2011
    ICC World Cup 20111 - ICC World Cup 2011
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    salam1 - ICC World Cup 2011

    Welcome to the SD Cricket World Cup 2011 Central. Here we are going to discuss everything related to the Cricket World Cup 2011 which is to be played in India - Sri Lanka and Bangladesh from February 12 to April 2, 2011 (Warm-up Matches start Feb 12th, 2011 and Group Matches start Feb 19th, 2011.)

    I would like to bring all the news and happenings related to the ICC World Cup. You are also encouraged to share news, your knowledge and insight as we move along.

    This Video below will help you know more about the schedule, venues and more about the ICC World Cup.

    [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BSmMNN0BaQ"]ICC World Cup 2011[/ame]
    Last edited by DexteR; 08-01-2011 at 05:38 PM.
    mera libas hai tu zps3e44c641 - ICC World Cup 2011

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    Mene usk expert opinnion suna nahi personally

    agr sunti to theek andaza hota k jealous hai ya nahi..Ye pitch men khary honey wali bat to bahar hal behuda hai

    pointing to empire k samnay khara ho jata hai jam ker
    namilakerudaslogose - ICC World Cup 2011

    There is no good or evil,there is only power and those


    too weak to seek it!!


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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    Australia win restored Pak image, says Afridi
    COLOMBO: Pakistan's World Cup victory over Australia has restored the team's battered image and boosted their credentials as champions-in-waiting, skipper Shahid Afridi said on Monday.

    Pakistan upstaged Australia by four wickets to end the defending champions' unbeaten 34-match streak in the World Cup stretching back to 1999.

    It also meant Pakistan finished top of Group A and gave them a quarter-final clash against the West Indies in Dhaka on Wednesday while Australia tackle India in Ahmedabad on Thursday.

    "We knew that beating Australia would be very important for us and this win has enhanced our image, sending a good signal to the cricket world that we can win despite our difficult situation," Afridi told.

    "Despite all the problems Pakistan is blessed with talent and it's because of this talent that we are a dangerous team and can win against anyone. We now hope to carry on the momentum," said Afridi.

    The Pakistan captain disagreed that the West Indies, who squeezed into the last eight on run-rate, will be easier opponents.

    "They have qualified for the quarter-finals after some good play, so we have to do well in all three departments because it's a knockout stage from here," said Afridi, the leading wicket-taker with 17 in six matches so far.

    Afridi said he was not thinking of a potentially high-voltage semi-final clash against India if the two Asian rivals come through their last-eight tests.

    "Our focus is on the quarter-final, we have to win that to reach the semi-final, so we are not thinking that far. First we have to win a must-win match against a dangerous opponent," said Afridi.

    The winners of the first two quarter-finals meet in the second semi-final at Mohail on March 30.

    South Africa play New Zealand on March 25 (Dhaka) and Sri Lanka face England (Colombo) in the last quarter-final a day later -- with the winners to play the first semi-final in Colombo on March 29. (AFP)

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    Misbah, Younis turn up for optional practice
    COLOMBO: Vice-captain Misbah-ul-Haq and former skipper Younis Khan turned up for an optional training session here at the SSC less than 20 hours before Pakistan’s morale-boosting win over defending champion Australia on Saturday night.
    Younis and Misbah are regarded as the backbone of Pakistan’s batting line-up but both of them have failed to score big in the last few outings after making a great start in the World Cup. They were among seven players who trained under coach Waqar Younis. Misbah later told reporters that Pakistan will continue working hard to ensure that they give an improved showing in the quarterfinals.
    He also stressed that the fact that Pakistan topped Pool A ahead of Australia and Sri Lanka proves that they are still one of the leading cricket-playing nations.
    “By beating Australia we have proved that Pakistan is a major cricket-playing nation and doesn’t deserve to be left in isolation,” said the experienced batsman.
    “We have prepared hard for the World Cup and the team will show further improvement in the quarters.”

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    Buoyant Pakistan on pole against rattled Windies
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    Buoyant Pakistan on pole against rattled Windies

    Pakistan on pole against rattled Windies

    DHAKA: Confident Pakistan take on the West Indies in the World Cup quarter-finals on Wednesday hoping to continue their winning run in the tournament against a side bruised by recent defeats.

    The hugely talented, but unpredictable, Pakistanis have been the revelation of the tournament so far by topping Group A with five wins in six matches in the preliminary league.

    The West Indies inexplicably lost their last two games against England and India from dominant positions to finish fourth in Group B with three wins, the same as Bangladesh, but with a superior run-rate.

    Shahid Afridi's Pakistan saved the best for the end when they broke three-time defending champions Australia's unbeaten streak of 34 World Cup matches with a four-wicket win in Colombo on Saturday.

    It was just the tonic Pakistan needed after being stripped of big-time cricket at home due to security concerns in their volatile nation and tainted by an unsavoury spot-fixing scandal.

    The absence of former captain Salman Butt and pace spearheads Mohammad Aamer and Mohammad Asif due to the controversy was not felt as the team rallied superbly under their inspirational captain.

    Afridi is the tournament's leading bowler with 17 wickets with his fastish leg-breaks, while seamer Umar Gul has kept the pressure on at the other end with 13 wickets.

    All-rounder Afridi may have failed with the bat so far with just 65 runs in six games, but young guns Umar Akmal and Asad Shafiq have shone brightly in their first World Cup.

    Akmal has scored 211 runs at 52.75 and Shafiq averages 124 in the two games he has played so far, while seasoned seniors like Misbah-ul Haq and Younis Khan have lent solidity to the middle-order.

    Team manager Intikhab Alam, who was coach when Pakistan won the 1992 World Cup under Imran Khan, was delighted with his side's performance so far.

    The former captain attributed the success to "self-belief, fitness and high energy levels."

    "There's a lot of positive energy among the boys after the victory over Australia and we will take that into the quarter-finals," Intikhab said. "We are peaking at the right time."

    The West Indies, in contrast, appear to be falling apart just when it matters most.

    They were on the brink of victory against England in Chennai when, chasing a modest target of 244, they were comfortably placed at 222-6 before losing their last four wickets for three runs.

    Against India on Sunday, they caved in again as eight wickets fell for 34 runs after they were 154-2 and lost by 80 runs.

    The West Indies have now lost 18 successive matches against the leading nations, but Darren Sammy's men cannot afford another defeat in the knock-out rounds.

    All is, however, not over yet for the West Indies.

    They return to the Sher-e-Bangla stadium in Dhaka where they shot out Bangladesh for their lowest one-day total of 58 in the league to romp home by nine wickets in a match that lasted under two hours.

    Batting star Chris Gayle and key fast bowler Kemar Roach are expected to be back after missing the India game, Gayle with a abdominal strain and Roach due to illness.

    Sammy said he was aware of Pakistan's threat, but remained confident his team can bounce back strongly.

    "Pakistan have done well so far, but hopefully they will have their bad match against us and we will bring our A game," he said. (AFP)
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><!--<iframe src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/recommendations.php?site=www.geosuper.tv&width=480&font=sego e%2Bui" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" style="border:none; overflow:hidden; width:480px; height:300px;" allowTransparency="true"></iframe> --></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" align=center><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=2>shim - ICC World Cup 2011</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    Vettori hopeful of making SA clash
    xMUMBAI: New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori believes he will be fit to face South Africa in the World Cup quarter-finals after missing two matches with a knee injury.
    Vettori was sidelined for the win over Canada and defeat against Sri Lanka after hurting his knee while fielding against Pakistan in Pallekele nearly two weeks ago. “I should be all right to get through the batting and bowling, it is just the running around that is hampering me a little bit,” said Vettori. “But I still have a few days left and I am confident of being available.”
    Opening batsman and wicket-keeper Brendon McCullum, who has carried on playing in spite of tearing the cartilage in his right knee during the 10-wicket win over Zimbabwe, shrugged off his injury. “I hate the fact this sort of stuff can be used as an excuse,” he said.
    “The stars are never going to be fully aligned each time you play. If it was a bilateral series then maybe you’d have a few games off but the World Cup comes around every four years, so players need to get over it and work through injuries. “There are plenty of people with worse problems and issues than mine.”

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    England are team to avoid, says Bell
    NEW DELHI: Ian Bell believes England’s unpredictability means they are a side none of their rivals will want to face in the knockout stages of the World Cup.
    England have been involved in several thrilling matches at the tournament. They tied with co-hosts India and beat a highly fancied South Africa yet lost to both Ireland and Bangladesh in the group stage.
    And the Ashes-winners and World Twenty20 champions were on the brink of elimination from the World Cup when the West Indies, chasing 244 for victory, were 222 for six at Chennai’s Chidambaram Stadium on Thursday.
    Yet England took four wickets for three runs to stay in the tournament and now face a quarter-final against either Sri Lanka or Pakistan.
    “In the last 12-18 months, when we’ve had matches we’ve got to win we’ve come out well,” England batsman Bell said on Sunday.
    “I’m sure there are a lot of teams around that don’t really want to play England — because they don’t quite know what they’re going to get at the minute.”
    Bell admitted England had not played to their full potential at the World Cup but warned their best was yet to come.
    “If we win all three matches, we’ll be able to look back on one of the best (northern hemisphere) winters of all time,” the 28-year-old said.
    “Three games, and we can win a World Cup.
    “It’s been pretty incredible, tiring and a little bit frustrating that we haven’t quite put it all together. We’ve played six games here and still haven’t got it all right at the same time.”
    Bell said the Ashes winners had shown a huge desire to win their crunch match against the West Indies and believed they could beat anyone on their day.
    Ever since England lost Kevin Pietersen to injury early in this tournament, Matt Prior has reverted to opening the innings alongside captain Andrew Strauss.
    There are many who feel Bell, currently in at number four, would be a better option and he said: “One-day cricket is a great place to go up at the top of the order, with the field up.
    “It’s a good place to go out and bat, so I’d be really desperate to do that.
    “But if I had to stay at four and keep to my role for the team, I’m happy to do that as well.”
    Bell, who has so far managed two fifties at this tournament, said: “I feel in great touch. But it’s been hard work scrapping for runs coming in in the middle when it’s been turning a lot.”

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    India game is a mini-final - Tim Nielsen
    Tim Nielsen, Australia's coach, has said his team were hoping to meet India in the final of the World Cup, and would be treating their quarter-final against the tournament co-hosts in Ahmedabad on Thursday as a "mini-grand final". He said he was aware the atmosphere at Motera would be electric, and his players were looking forward to that.

    "The adrenaline will certainly be flowing and playing in front of their home crowd in Ahmedabad will be exciting and a challenge for us," Nielsen said. "We've got no fear now; we know we're in the knockout stage.

    "It's exciting … a mini-grand final in itself. If you came here and thought, 'What would be the best result? It would be great to make the final against India'. Well, we've got our final against India in the next few days. I'm sure if we're on our game, they won't necessarily be looking forward to playing against us. That's something in our favour."

    India have played Australia in 15 one-dayers at home in the last five years, and Australia have won nine of those matches. Both teams have lost a game each in the group stages of this World Cup, and though India will be hoping home advantage can buoy them to a victory, Nielsen warned it could also be a hindrance to them.

    Nielsen said he remembered the pressure Australia faced when they played the World Cup at home in 1992, and said things would be no different for India. "It's [playing at home] a huge factor for them. There's some pressure there and if we can start the game well and maybe quieten the crowd that will play on the mind of the Indian team."

    The attention on India will also help lessen the hype that usually surrounds any Australian team at a World Cup. This time around, the defending champions are not the out-and-out favourites to win the tournament, and the end of their unbeaten World Cup streak, against Pakistan in Colombo, has further lessened the aura of the side. Nielsen looks at that as an advantage, saying all the pressure was on India.

    ''The media and the public scrutiny will also be so great that you'd expect India to have most of the pressure on them. They will be answering all the questions; there'll be questions about the surface we play on, there'll be questions about their line-up. It would be nice to think we can sneak under the radar a bit and just go about our preparation over the next few days and be as ready to go as we can be."

    India's formidable batting line-up has shown a weakness in their last two games. In both matches, the top order set a solid base, only for the middle and lower order to collapse spectacularly. Against South Africa, in Nagpur, India lost their last 9 for 29, and then against West Indies, in Chennai, the collapse was 7 for 50. However, Nielsen said Australia could not risk letting India get off to a good start in the hope that wickets would fall later on, and would need to try to get early wickets.

    "The importance of a quarter-final and the stature of a match will mean they [India's batsmen] are switched on. But if we can make some early inroads into their batting - [Virender] Sehwag, [Sachin] Tendulkar, Virat Kohli and [Gautam] Gambhir have played really well for them - we'd like to think that would be a benefit for us.''

    Australia's own batting has had a few chinks, with Ricky Ponting and Cameron White both struggling for form, and the team crashing to 176 all out against Pakistan. Nielsen was not too concerned about the form of individual players, and said that as long as one of the top four batsmen got a big score, the team could kick on from that.

    ''We need to get a platform for our batting to expand and score quickly. The grounds are huge, the outfields lightning fast. If you can get in, then when the ball is changed after 34 overs you've really got an opportunity to score quickly.''

    Australia have an impressive record against India in World Cup matches, having beaten them in seven of the nine counters, and will hope to continue that run on March 24.

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    Chanderpaul in line for West Indies recall
    Chris Gayle, Kemar Roach and Shivnarine Chanderpaul are all set to return for West Indies' quarter-final clash against Pakistan in Dhaka. Gayle has recovered from an abdominal strain, Roach is healthy after a mild infection and Chanderpaul may be given an opportunity to show that he is over his patch of poor form.
    Gayle sustained the injury after West Indies' third group-stage match against Bangladesh in Dhaka, two and half weeks ago, and missed out on the Ireland clash in Mohali as a result of that. He returned against England, where he scored a flashy 43 off 21 balls, but then was ruled out of the match against India three days later.
    Darren Sammy, the West Indies captain, said Gayle should be fit to open the batting in the quarter-final. "He batted in the nets and I liked the way he was hitting the ball and moving his feet," Sammy said at the Shere-e-Bangla stadium. Although Gayle was seen lagging behind some of the others during the warm-up drills, Sammy said the big-hitting opener will play through pain if he has to. "I know Chris is a very committed fellow, he will do whatever it takes to put the team in a position to win."
    Roach's concern was not as serious and he has made a full recovery. He bowled in the nets on Tuesday. If Roach returns, it will probably be at the expense of Ravi Rampaul, who took 5 for 50 against India. It presents West Indies with quite a selection dilemma but one they will not be unhappy to have. "Ravi had an excellent start for us in his first game. I know we will come up with the best combination to go out and win us the quarter-finals," Sammy said.
    The most surprising of the recalls is Chanderpaul's, who played in the first four group matches and scored 70 runs in three innings. Chanderpaul has not managed a half-century this year, in six ODIs, and last scored more than 50 against South Africa nine months ago. His experience means that he can't be on the sidelines for too long and Sammy indicated that his return is imminent. "He is part of the team, he has a big role to play and most likely we will see him feature in tomorrow's game."
    Making room for Chanderpaul may prove tricky. One of Andre Russell or Devendra Bishoo may find themselves benched. They may also make a radical change and drop Devon Thomas, who has scored just 41 runs in six matches, and give the wicket-keeping responsibilities to Darren Bravo.

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    Default Re: ICC World Cup 2011

    Pakistan's bowling variety allows extra batsman
    Through their unexpectedly smooth progress to the quarter-finals, the one question that has been asked of Pakistan repeatedly has been about the balance of the side. The Akmal brothers and Shoaib Akhtar hijacked matters temporarily, but the only on-field issue has been whether Pakistan have been playing a specialist bowler short to guard against the insecurities about its batting.
    On the surface, much of the uneasiness about the combination is an instinctive, intangible one, a knee-jerk reaction to years of Pakistan sides geared around the bowling. No Pakistan team ever plays a bowler short, do they? It gives this combination initially a defensive feel, designed to make sure they can cover the weaknesses in their batting by taking from the strength of their bowling. And Pakistan play best when they are the aggressor, when they have specialists doing what specialists are meant to do.
    In the loss to New Zealand, when Abdul Razzaq, Shoaib and Abdur Rehman bowled the last four, pivotal overs, the folly of this strategy came through. Chasing 300-plus subsequently, it wouldn't have made a difference whether they had six, seven or eleven batsmen in the side. Razzaq, who is a vital but underused component of this strategy, made a half-century at No 8, an effort lost on the game.
    But after the win against Australia, a revision was in order and the true intent of what Pakistan have been trying to do seeped through. The comfort of Razzaq at eight was, after all, designed precisely for the kind of small innings he played against Australia, an unbeaten 20 that soothed frayed nerves. More tellingly, his two wickets earlier in the day meant Pakistan's attack looked just as Pakistan's attack is meant to look.
    Though not conclusive either way, five wins in six games means the dilemma doesn't matter so much right now. And it matters even less because the attack they have played with, a bowler short or not, has actually done so well. "The way our boys have bowled in this competition has been amazing," Shahid Afridi said, with some justification ahead of Wednesday's quarter-final in Mirpur with West Indies. "All the credit [for our progress] goes to them for that. [Umar] Gul, Rehman, [Mohammad] Hafeez, Razzaq all have been bowling very well, Wahab [Riaz] as well."
    They are joint-third on the list of team wicket-takers in the tournament, behind South Africa and India and equal with their quarter-final opponents. But for a rain-curtailed game against Zimbabwe, in which they bowled less than 40 overs, they would likely be higher. They also have the top wicket-taker and joint-fourth top wicket-taker of the competition in Afridi and Gul; the latter is the form paceman currently in the world.
    But for variety, they are unmatched. In the first-choice XI they have played in the previous two games, they have every modern-day bowling option you can imagine. They have a right-arm fast bowler, a left-arm fast bowler (and both are fast, not fast-medium or some such dilution), a left-arm spinner, an offspinner, a legspinner, a right-arm medium-pacer; save for the chinaman, each and every angle is covered here. They have new ball wicket-takers, old ball reverse-swingers, death-over specialists, choking spinners through the middle, attacking ones through the same.
    Just in case of injury or form, they have Shoaib's pace, Saeed Ajmal's off-spin and Junaid Khan's left-arm angle as back-up. So well-stocked have they been with options, they've even opened with spin, something they hadn't done in 13 years before this, and with some success.
    And Razzaq apart, each and every one of them have done precisely what they have been asked to, and done it consistently. Hafeez has bowled nearly six overs a game and been miserly (only 4.08 runs per over conceded). He's picked up big wickets regularly, including Ricky Ponting and Upul Tharanga in the two biggest group games. Rehman has gone for only 4.42 an over, building a hurried and sustained pressure at one end.
    These are the sweats, not the glory-seekers.
    With this kind of choice, each bowling change Afridi makes has ensured that batsmen are unable to fall into the kind of rhythm they thrive on. Each change has brought a change of pace, a change of angle, a change in the degrees of turn to account for; in short, a different challenge.
    On the pitches of the subcontinent, that is often a winning ploy.

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    West Indies assured 'state-level' security in Mirpur
    Bangladesh officials have assured the West Indies team 'state-level' security during their World Cup quarter-final clash against Pakistan in Mirpur on March 23. The extra precaution is an effort to avoid a repeat of the embarrassing incident on March 4, when angry locals pelted stones at the West Indies team bus following their thumping win against the home side at the same venue.
    "The West Indies are our valued guests and we will ensure the highest state-level security to them," Dhaka police commissioner Benazir Ahmed told AFP. "They can be assured of fool-proof security. It's a state-level commitment. We shall make sure that there is no crowd along the key parts of the road to the stadium."
    Ahmed said the same security arrangement was provided to the South African team when they took on Bangladesh at the Shere Bangla Stadium on Saturday. Bangladesh slumped to another huge defeat in that game, bringing an end to their World Cup campaign ahead of the knockouts. This time, however, there was no angry reaction from the fans.
    Bangladesh's early exit could have an impact on the attendance at the Shere Bangla Stadium, which will also host the quarter-final clash between New Zealand and South Africa on March 25.

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