ICC World Twenty20 (T20) 2007

From Indpaedia
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Pdewan moved page T20 World Championship 2007 to ICC World Twenty20 (T20) 2007 without leaving a redirect)
(Some facts)
 
Line 17: Line 17:
 
When Dhoni’s boys won the T20 World Championship in September 2007, their homecoming literally brought Mumbai to a standstill. Times of India’s Mumbai edition devoted as many as six pages to photos and reports of the massive homecoming ‘party’. This is what the caption of the above full page reads: “Through Monday morning and afternoon, the 30-km stretch from the airport to Marine Drive’s Wankhede Stadium was bursting at the seams with Mumbaikars. Housewives, students, office-goers and cameramen jostled to get the best view of Dhoni and his destroyers. Bikers waved the tricolour, young moms hoisted their kids onto the bonnet for a better view and thousands of cellphones went up to click grainy but unforgettable memories of cricket hysteria.” The T20 World Champions had come home, and the entire country was in on the big celebration.  
 
When Dhoni’s boys won the T20 World Championship in September 2007, their homecoming literally brought Mumbai to a standstill. Times of India’s Mumbai edition devoted as many as six pages to photos and reports of the massive homecoming ‘party’. This is what the caption of the above full page reads: “Through Monday morning and afternoon, the 30-km stretch from the airport to Marine Drive’s Wankhede Stadium was bursting at the seams with Mumbaikars. Housewives, students, office-goers and cameramen jostled to get the best view of Dhoni and his destroyers. Bikers waved the tricolour, young moms hoisted their kids onto the bonnet for a better view and thousands of cellphones went up to click grainy but unforgettable memories of cricket hysteria.” The T20 World Champions had come home, and the entire country was in on the big celebration.  
  
=Some facts=
+
= Inaugural World T20: India vs. Pakistan=
[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/icc-world-t20-2016/top-stories/Heads-we-bowl-tails-you-bat/articleshow/51367734.cms ''The Times of India''], Mar 12, 2016
+
[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/top-stories/India-v-Pakistan-World-T20-final-Cricket-news-This-day-that-year-India-win-inaugural-World-T20-beating-Pakistan-in-final/articleshow/54494343.cms   This day, that year: India win inaugural World T20 beating Pakistan in final, TNN | Sep 24, 2016, The Times of India]
[[File: Biggest sucessful T20 chases in India.jpg| Biggest sucessful T20 chases in India ; Graphic courtesy: [http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/icc-world-t20-2016/top-stories/Heads-we-bowl-tails-you-bat/articleshow/51367734.cms ''The Times of India''], Mar 12, 2016|frame|500px]]  
+
  
Partha Bhaduri
+
*India's win in the 2007 T20 World Cup paved the way for the rise of T20 cricket in the country
  
''' HIGHLIGHTS '''
+
*After a dramatic bowl-out in the league stage, India beat Pakistan again in the final to lift the championship
  
No team has won the toss, elected to bat and gone on to win a match on Indian soil.
+
NEW DELHI: The inaugural World T20 changed the landscape of Twenty20 cricket with India going from outsiders - they barely had a domestic T20 setup owing to the BCCI's apathy towards the format - to lifting the title at a packed The Wanderers after beating arch-rivals Pakistan in an epic final.
Chasing should be the preferred option with 11 out of 15 completed games won by the side batting second.
+
MS Dhoni, it would seem, is all too aware of this piece of statistic.
+
  
With such a fine line between victory and defeat, here's what teams can learn from past T20Is on Indian soil...
+
On September 24, 2007 in Johannesburg, India beat Pakistan by five runs to win the World Twenty20. Gautam Gambhir was the star with the bat for India, hitting 75 off 54 balls to get the total to 157 for 5 against a spirited Pakistan performance in the field, but Rohit Sharma's unbeaten 16-ball 30 proved a crucial cameo.
An analytical arms race is brewing as top teams await the starting gun. There's fierce competition at this level when it comes to the number crunching, with backroom research boys collating reams of data in the hope of gaining an inch or two of advantage over the adjacent dressing room. We at TOI did some number crunching of our own (Cutting to the Chase, below), restricting our data only to completed T20 internationals played on Indian soil before the World T20 qualifying stage matches began, and came up with some unexpected pointers. It may all eventually boil to player temperament and proper execution of skills, but a bit of headway in the strategizing department doesn't hurt. Here are our five keys to success in this World T20...
+
  
1. TEAM WINNING TOSS AND DECIDING TO BAT FIRST WILL LOSE MORE OFTEN THAN NOT
+
RP Singh struck early with the wickets of Mohammad Hafeez and Kamran Akmal, and Irfan was excellent with figures of 3/16 in his quota as India applied the squeeze. Once again it was Misbah ul Haq left with the task of taking Pakistan to an improbable win, and with 54 needed from 24 balls with three wickets in hand he almost did. Almost. After hitting Harbhajan Singh for three sixes in the 17th over, Misbah appeared at his unflappable best until the final over.
  
No team has won the toss, elected to bat and gone on to win a match on Indian soil. In general, chasing should be the preferred option with 11 out of 15 completed games (excluding those involving minnows) won by the side batting second. Even in the four games where the side batting first won, one victory was by the narrowest margin possible - a one run win by New Zealand over India in Chennai in Sep 2012.
+
That winning moment, Joginder Sharma to Misbah ul Haq. Photo Credit: Getty Images
India's captain MS Dhoni, it would seem, is all too aware of this piece of statistic: the last time he won the toss at home in a T20 international and decided to bat first was on Oct 29, 2011, against England at the Eden Gardens. No prizes for guessing that India lost that game. Incidentally, the Eden game is the only time India has not put the opposition in after winning the toss in a home T20.
+
  
2. KEEP WICKETS IN HAND WHILE CHASING, JUST LIKE IN ONE-DAY INTERNATIONALS
+
After much thinking MS Dhoni put faith in Joginder Sharma for the last six balls, from which Pakistan required 13.
  
That's a surprising trend, given that wicket management doesn't always seem to be on T20's logical list of priorities. But interestingly, in all 11 matches won by sides chasing, the victory margin has been at least 5 wickets. This suggests wickets in hand is key. To flip that around, a side that loses wickets at regular intervals while chasing will probably end up losing. But we knew that already during the heady days of ODIs, didn't we?
+
The first ball was a wide; the second a full toss which Misbah put away for six. The Pakistan fans at the ground were jubilant, the Indian supporters crestfallen. That's when Misbah walked across his stumps to paddle Joginder to fine leg, only to miscue the shot and find Sreesanth lurking at short fine leg. The second Sreesanth took the catch, The Wanderers exploded.
 
+
3. BIG HITTERS WHO CAN FINISH A CHASE ARE CRUCIAL
+
 
+
There's a bit of background to this conclusion. Firstly, there's little to choose between the side batting first and the one batting second in a match when it comes to run rates in the first 10 overs. The averages for the first 5 overs are 7.8 runs per over versus 7.9, for overs 6-10 they are 8.1 and 7.8, for overs 11-15 the gap widens a little at 7.4 versus 8.3. But the real difference is in overs 16-20, where teams chasing have averaged 10.8 runs per over against just 8.7 runs per over for those setting a target. Again, what that suggests is a gradual build up with wickets in hand allows for an explosion at the end. This also suggests big hitters who can finish a chase are crucial.
+
 
+
4. ...BUT DON'T LEAVE A FINISHER WITH TOO MUCH ON HIS PLATE
+
 
+
Here, teams can take a leaf out of India's strategy while chasing: they score fast at the start and leave themselves less to do at the end, never mind that they have a renowned finisher in MS Dhoni. India's largest successful run chase on home soil involved chasing 56 in the last 5 overs. India like their top and upper middle order to do the bulk of the scoring while chasing, it appears. To put it another way, in an ideal situation teams should pace their chase in a manner that leaves them with not more than two runs per ball to get in the last 5 overs.
+
 
+
While batting first, without the pressure of a creeping asking rate, ask the moon of your finisher. Again, just look at India's strategy: when batting first, overs 1-15 are evenly paced, with batsmen scoring at about 7-7.5 runs an over. But the last 5 overs are taken for about 46 runs on an average. That means, if you are forced to bat first, accelerate as much you can at the death. You never know how much will be enough on these flat pitches.
+

Latest revision as of 10:43, 24 September 2016

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

[edit] 2007

T20 World Championship, 2007

[edit] CHAMPIONS COME HOME

The Times of India

When Dhoni’s boys won the T20 World Championship in September 2007, their homecoming literally brought Mumbai to a standstill. Times of India’s Mumbai edition devoted as many as six pages to photos and reports of the massive homecoming ‘party’. This is what the caption of the above full page reads: “Through Monday morning and afternoon, the 30-km stretch from the airport to Marine Drive’s Wankhede Stadium was bursting at the seams with Mumbaikars. Housewives, students, office-goers and cameramen jostled to get the best view of Dhoni and his destroyers. Bikers waved the tricolour, young moms hoisted their kids onto the bonnet for a better view and thousands of cellphones went up to click grainy but unforgettable memories of cricket hysteria.” The T20 World Champions had come home, and the entire country was in on the big celebration.

[edit] Inaugural World T20: India vs. Pakistan

This day, that year: India win inaugural World T20 beating Pakistan in final, TNN | Sep 24, 2016, The Times of India

  • India's win in the 2007 T20 World Cup paved the way for the rise of T20 cricket in the country
  • After a dramatic bowl-out in the league stage, India beat Pakistan again in the final to lift the championship

NEW DELHI: The inaugural World T20 changed the landscape of Twenty20 cricket with India going from outsiders - they barely had a domestic T20 setup owing to the BCCI's apathy towards the format - to lifting the title at a packed The Wanderers after beating arch-rivals Pakistan in an epic final.

On September 24, 2007 in Johannesburg, India beat Pakistan by five runs to win the World Twenty20. Gautam Gambhir was the star with the bat for India, hitting 75 off 54 balls to get the total to 157 for 5 against a spirited Pakistan performance in the field, but Rohit Sharma's unbeaten 16-ball 30 proved a crucial cameo.

RP Singh struck early with the wickets of Mohammad Hafeez and Kamran Akmal, and Irfan was excellent with figures of 3/16 in his quota as India applied the squeeze. Once again it was Misbah ul Haq left with the task of taking Pakistan to an improbable win, and with 54 needed from 24 balls with three wickets in hand he almost did. Almost. After hitting Harbhajan Singh for three sixes in the 17th over, Misbah appeared at his unflappable best until the final over.

That winning moment, Joginder Sharma to Misbah ul Haq. Photo Credit: Getty Images

After much thinking MS Dhoni put faith in Joginder Sharma for the last six balls, from which Pakistan required 13.

The first ball was a wide; the second a full toss which Misbah put away for six. The Pakistan fans at the ground were jubilant, the Indian supporters crestfallen. That's when Misbah walked across his stumps to paddle Joginder to fine leg, only to miscue the shot and find Sreesanth lurking at short fine leg. The second Sreesanth took the catch, The Wanderers exploded.

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Translate