World Cup (cricket): 2023

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Contents

The results of all the matches

The Indian Express


Match 1, October 05, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad

ENGLAND

282/9 (50.0)

VS

NEW ZEALAND

283/1 (36.2)

New Zealand beat England by 9 wickets


Match 2, October 06, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Hyderabad

PAKISTAN

286/10 (49.0)

VS

NETHERLANDS

205/10 (41.0)

Pakistan beat Netherlands by 81 runs


Match 3, October 07, 2023 at 10:30 IST. Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium, Dharamsala

BANGLADESH

158/4 (34.4)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

156/10 (37.2)

Bangladesh beat Afghanistan by 6 wickets


Match 4, October 07, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi

SOUTH AFRICA

428/5 (50.0)

VS

SRI LANKA

326/10 (44.5)

South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 102 runs


Match 5, October 08, 2023 at 14:00 IST. MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai

INDIA

201/4 (41.2)

VS

AUSTRALIA

199/10 (49.3)

India beat Australia by 6 wickets


Match 6, October 09, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Hyderabad

NEW ZEALAND

322/7 (50.0)

VS

NETHERLANDS

223/10 (46.3)

New Zealand beat Netherlands by 99 runs


Match 7, October 10, 2023 at 10:30 IST. Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium, Dharamsala

ENGLAND

364/9 (50.0)

VS

BANGLADESH

227/10 (48.2)

England beat Bangladesh by 137 runs


Match 8, October 10, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Hyderabad

PAKISTAN

345/4 (48.2)

VS

SRI LANKA

344/9 (50.0)

Pakistan beat Sri Lanka by 6 wickets


Match 9, October 11, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi

INDIA

273/2 (35.0)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

272/8 (50.0)

India beat Afghanistan by 8 wickets


Match 10, October 12, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Bharat Ratna Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium, Lucknow

AUSTRALIA

177/10 (40.5)

VS

SOUTH AFRICA

311/7 (50.0)

South Africa beat Australia by 134 runs


Match 11, October 13, 2023 at 14:00 IST. MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai

NEW ZEALAND

248/2 (42.5)

VS

BANGLADESH

245/9 (50.0)

New Zealand beat Bangladesh by 8 wickets


Match 12, October 14, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad

INDIA

192/3 (30.3)

VS

PAKISTAN

191/10 (42.5)

India beat Pakistan by 7 wickets


Match 13, October 15, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi

ENGLAND

215/10 (40.3)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

284/10 (49.5)

Afghanistan beat England by 69 runs


Match 14, October 16, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Bharat Ratna Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium, Lucknow

AUSTRALIA

215/5 (35.2)

VS

SRI LANKA

209/10 (43.3)

Australia beat Sri Lanka by 5 wickets


Match 15, October 17, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium, Dharamsala

SOUTH AFRICA

207/10 (42.5)

VS

NETHERLANDS

245/8 (43.0)

Netherlands beat South Africa by 38 runs


Match 16, October 18, 2023 at 14:00 IST. MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai

NEW ZEALAND

288/6 (50.0)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

139/10 (34.4)

New Zealand beat Afghanistan by 149 runs


Match 17, October 19, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Pune

INDIA

261/3 (41.3)

VS

BANGLADESH

256/8 (50.0)

India beat Bangladesh by 7 wickets


Match 18, October 20, 2023 at 14:00 IST. M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru

AUSTRALIA

367/9 (50.0)

VS

PAKISTAN

305/10 (45.3)

Australia beat Pakistan by 62 runs


Match 19, October 21, 2023 at 10:30 IST. Bharat Ratna Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium, Lucknow

NETHERLANDS

262/10 (49.4)

VS

SRI LANKA

263/5 (48.2)

Sri Lanka beat Netherlands by 5 wickets


Match 20, October 21, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

ENGLAND

170/10 (22.0)

VS

SOUTH AFRICA

399/7 (50.0)

South Africa beat England by 229 runs


Match 21, October 22, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium, Dharamsala

INDIA

274/6 (48.0)

VS

NEW ZEALAND

273/10 (50.0)

India beat New Zealand by 4 wickets


Match 22, October 23, 2023 at 14:00 IST. MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai

PAKISTAN

282/7 (50.0)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

286/2 (49.0)

Afghanistan beat Pakistan by 8 wickets


Match 23, October 24, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

SOUTH AFRICA

382/5 (50.0)

VS

BANGLADESH

233/10 (46.4)

South Africa beat Bangladesh by 149 runs


Match 24, October 25, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi

AUSTRALIA

399/8 (50.0)

VS

NETHERLANDS

90/10 (21.0)

Australia beat Netherlands by 309 runs


Match 25, October 26, 2023 at 14:00 IST. M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru

ENGLAND

156/10 (33.2)

VS

SRI LANKA

160/2 (25.4)

Sri Lanka beat England by 8 wickets


Match 26, October 27, 2023 at 14:00 IST. MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai

PAKISTAN

270/10 (46.4)

VS

SOUTH AFRICA

271/9 (47.2)

South Africa beat Pakistan by 1 wicket


Match 27, October 28, 2023 at 10:30 IST. Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium, Dharamsala

AUSTRALIA

388/10 (49.2)

VS

NEW ZEALAND

383/9 (50.0)

Australia beat New Zealand by 5 runs


Match 28, October 28, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Eden Gardens, Kolkata

NETHERLANDS

229/10 (50.0)

VS

BANGLADESH

142/10 (42.2)

Netherlands beat Bangladesh by 87 runs


Match 29, October 29, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Bharat Ratna Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium, Lucknow

INDIA

229/9 (50.0)

VS

ENGLAND

129/10 (34.5)

India beat England by 100 runs


Match 30, October 30, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Pune

AFGHANISTAN

242/3 (45.2)

VS

SRI LANKA

241/10 (49.3)

Afghanistan beat Sri Lanka by 7 wickets


Match 31, October 31, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Eden Gardens, Kolkata

PAKISTAN

205/3 (32.3)

VS

BANGLADESH

204/10 (45.1)

Pakistan beat Bangladesh by 7 wickets


Match 32, November 01, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Pune

NEW ZEALAND

167/10 (35.3)

VS

SOUTH AFRICA

357/4 (50.0)

South Africa beat New Zealand by 190 runs


Match 33, November 02, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

INDIA

357/8 (50.0)

VS

SRI LANKA

55/10 (19.4)

India beat Sri Lanka by 302 runs


Match 34, November 03, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Bharat Ratna Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium, Lucknow

NETHERLANDS

179/10 (46.3)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

181/3 (31.3)

Afghanistan beat Netherlands by 7 wickets


Match 35, November 04, 2023 at 10:30 IST. M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru

NEW ZEALAND

401/6 (50.0)

VS

PAKISTAN

200/1 (25.3)

Pakistan beat New Zealand by 21 runs (D/L method)


Match 36, November 04, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad

ENGLAND

253/10 (48.1)

VS

AUSTRALIA

286/10 (49.3)

Australia beat England by 33 runs


Match 37, November 05, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Eden Gardens, Kolkata

INDIA

326/5 (50.0)

VS

SOUTH AFRICA

83/10 (27.1)

India beat South Africa by 243 runs


Match 38, November 06, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi

BANGLADESH

282/7 (41.1)

VS

SRI LANKA

279/10 (49.3)

Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka by 3 wickets


Match 39, November 07, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

AUSTRALIA

293/7 (46.5)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

291/5 (50.0)

Australia beat Afghanistan by 3 wickets


Match 40, November 08, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Pune

ENGLAND

339/9 (50.0)

VS

NETHERLANDS

179/10 (37.2)

England beat Netherlands by 160 runs


Match 41, November 09, 2023 at 14:00 IST. M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru

NEW ZEALAND

172/5 (23.2)

VS

SRI LANKA

171/10 (46.4)

New Zealand beat Sri Lanka by 5 wickets


Match 42, November 10, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad

SOUTH AFRICA

247/5 (47.3)

VS

AFGHANISTAN

244/10 (50.0)

South Africa beat Afghanistan by 5 wickets


Match 43, November 11, 2023 at 10:30 IST. Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Pune

AUSTRALIA

307/2 (44.4)

VS

BANGLADESH

306/8 (50.0)

Australia beat Bangladesh by 8 wickets


Match 44, November 11, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Eden Gardens, Kolkata

ENGLAND

337/9 (50.0)

VS

PAKISTAN

244/10 (43.3)

England beat Pakistan by 93 runs


Match 45, November 12, 2023 at 14:00 IST. M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru

INDIA

410/4 (50.0)

VS

NETHERLANDS

250/10 (47.5)

India beat Netherlands by 160 runs


1st Semi-Final, November 15, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai

INDIA

397/4 (50.0)

VS

NEW ZEALAND

327/10 (48.5)

India beat New Zealand by 70 runs


2nd Semi-Final, November 16, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Eden Gardens, Kolkata

SOUTH AFRICA

212/10 (49.4)

VS

AUSTRALIA

215/7 (47.2)

Australia beat South Africa by 3 wickets


Final, November 19, 2023 at 14:00 IST. Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad

INDIA

240/10 (50.0)

VS

AUSTRALIA

241/4 (43.0)

Australia beat India by 6 wickets

India's matches

Pune: India beat Bangladesh

Oct 20, 2023: The Times of India


India vs Bangladesh highlights, World Cup 2023: Virat Kohli slams 48th century as India beat Bangladesh by 7 wickets

IND vs BAN highlights: Virat Kohli's unbeaten century sealed India's fourth win from four World Cup matches as the hosts defeated Bangladesh by seven wickets in Pune on Thursday. 

Star batsman Kohli reached his century and ended the match in style with a six against spinner Nasum Ahmed when he needed three runs to complete his century and India required two more runs to reach a target of 257. 

They got there with more than eight overs to spare, finishing on 261-3. 

Kohli faced 97 balls, including six fours and four sixes, with this century his third score in excess of fifty in four innings following contributions of 85 and 55 not out in recent pool wins over Australia and Afghanistan. 

But for Bangladesh, a third defeat in four matches left them with an uphill struggle to qualify for the semi-finals. 

The stage was set for Kohli by an opening partnership of 88 between India skipper Rohit Sharma (48) and Shubman Gill (53). 

Rohit signalled India's intentions with a second-ball cover-driven four off Shoriful Islam as Bangladesh bowling coach Allan Donald, the former South Africa spearhead, looking on from the boundary edge. 

Rohit, fresh from scores of 131 and 86 against Afghanistan and Pakistan respectively, hooked Hasan Mahmud for a huge six only to hole out when trying to repeat the shot next ball. 

Kohli, however, was soon into his stride with a four -- off a free hit -- and a sublime straight six from successive Mahmud deliveries. 

Gill's exit, as he just failed to clear the rope for a third time, made little difference to the run-spree. 

Earlier, spinners Kuldeep Yadav and Ravindra Jadeja sparked a top-order collapse against a Bangladesh side who had won three of their four previous ODIs against India. 

The Tigers were held to 256-8, having been well-placed at 93 without loss, after stand-in Tigers skipper Najmul Hossain Shanto won the toss on a good batting pitch. 

Jadeja took a miserly 2-38 from his 10 overs and Yadav 1-47. 

Tanzid Hasan, whose 51 was the left-hander's maiden ODI fifty, and Liton Das (66) shared a fine opening stand while facing Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj only for Bangladesh to slump to 137-4. 

The 22-year-old Tanzid, whose highest score in eight previous ODIs was 16, completed a 41-ball fifty before he was lbw to left-arm wrist-spinner Yadav. 


Liton was still there but he carelessly lofted Jadeja to long-off.



India were a bowler down after Hardik Pandya managed just three balls in the ninth over before limping off with ankle damage.



Kohli, bowling in an ODI for the first time in six years, completed Pandya's over.



Mushfiqur Rahim's 38 and fellow veteran Mahmudullah's 46 bolstered Bangladesh's total.



But with left-arm spinner and regular skipper Shakib Al Hasan sidelined following the thigh injury suffered during Friday's eight-wicket loss to New Zealand in Chennai, it never looked enough.



India's quest for a third World Cup title continues against New Zealand in Dharamsala on Sunday, with Bangladesh facing South Africa in Mumbai.

Dharamshala: India beats New Zealand, after 2003

Partha Bhaduri, Oct 23, 2023: The Times of India

Scoreboard, New Zealand vs. India, World Cup 2023, Dharamshala
From: Partha Bhaduri, Oct 23, 2023: The Times of India

India’s World Cup campaign acquired an aura of invincibility, and more than a dash of inevitability, with a four-wicket victory over New Zealand chasing 274.

Five games in, the law of averages has not applied to this team so far. At the centre of this powerful vortex consuming all in its path is the eye of the storm, Virat Kohli, the calm epicentre, the glue who binds the diverse elements and brazenly attempts to scale both tall run-chases and some stratospheric landmarks which are in his sights.


The epoch-making 49th ton which would have equalled Sachin Tendulkar’s ODI tally nearly happened on Sunday, but Kohli faltered on 95 (104b; 8x4, 2x6), going for a six and falling to a Matt Henry slower delivery with five runs still needed for victory.


With the long tail exposed and captain Rohit Sharma looking on, incredulous, Ravindra Jadeja (39 not out off 44; 3x4, 1x6) at the other end calmly fashioned the winning runs, laying to rest the ghosts of India’s semifinal defeat to the same team in the 2019 edition. Incidentally, Jadeja was batting for the first time in the World Cup since that game. The win not only broke a jinx stretching back to 2003 but ticked a lot of important boxes along the way. For one, India have a veteran pacer who can come off the bench and break the back of the Kiwi resistance with a fifer, as Mohammed Shami did with his 5/54.


Shami showed there is no alternative to the skills of a specialist in a crunch game, and though India needed two players to replace the injured Hardik Pandya — Shami and Suryakumar Yadav — they made the best of the bargain.
Rarely are teams blessed with so many cricketers who have the ability to hit peak form when required, though Surya missed out on Sunday, sacrificing his wicket for Kohli amid some chaotic scenes.


The sacrifice was well worth it, as the ‘chasemaster’ again fashioned a tricky chase on a pitch with some inconsistent bounce in these high-altitude conditions, showcasing that he is still the spine in this batting order. All the others need to do is either set the early tempo with the bat, like Rohit Sharma does game after game, or bat around him, like KL Rahul and then Ravindra Jadeja did on Sunday. The template has worked like a charm so far in chases, as it has for years.


Kohli’s consistency is uncanny. He can absorb pressure by rotating strike, swat away the bad balls for boundaries — even square drive some good ones or charge down the ground to the pacers — and break a target down by eliminating any notion of prevailing chaos. Kohli is still relentlessly driving both this team and his ambitions forward.


Even the boxes India did not tick — like chief spinner Kuldeep Yadav leaking runs and being unable to prise an opening in the middle overs, or the surprisingly poor catching on view, or Shreyas Iyer giving in to his ego and falling to yet another short delivery — did not hurt them. 
Daryl Mitchell’s spectacular, counterattacking 127-ball 130 couldn’t take his team over the line as Shami stemmed the tide.


With India 230/5 in 41 overs and needing 44 more from 54 balls, with only the long tail to come, the tense crowd sensed its moment and came alive, infusing energy in the proceedings with its “Kohli, Kohli” chants. It was again all about the man. Would a 49th ton happen? This wasn’t as sealed a deal as the Bangladesh affair, though, and Jadeja had other ideas.


He danced down to Rachin Ravindra, who had forged a fine partnership with Mitchell earlier to again showcase his worth. The shot went high over midwicket for six as the fielder slipped near the boundary, no doubt undone by the poor condition of the Dharamshala outfield. Kohli still went for it, and eventually it was one hit too many.


The win was set up in the initial overs of the game, as Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj’s new-ball spell tied the Kiwis up in knots. Devon Conway fell early, the nerves set in, and the Kiwi batters had a poor first Powerplay, allowing the two pacers to settle on their lengths. It wasn’t until Mitchell came in and showed the pluck to stand outside his crease or dance down the wicket that the runs started coming.


Shami did the rest, taking a wicket with his first ball in the World Cup and posing happy questions for the team management.
 This wasn’t an easy win by any means, but India right now seem untouched by notions of the ordinary. Even the hill mist which descended here in the late evening and disrupted the game for a quarter of an hour couldn’t break the winning run.

Lucknow: India beats England

Partha Bhaduri, Oct 30, 2023: The Times of India

Scoreboard, India vs. England, Lucknow, World Cup, 2023
From: Partha Bhaduri, Oct 30, 2023: The Times of India

Lucknow : India’s World Cup campaign officially gained invincibility status.

Poor England. Down and out on their luck, they were seemingly having a good time until first Jasprit Bumrah (3/32 in 6.5 overs) and then Mohammed Shami (4/22 in 7) — those two fiery, relentless avenging angels of pace and fizz and seam and genius — turned the new white ball into a screaming, spherical weapon of mass destruction under lights. The pace duo’s effort killed any ambitions Jos Buttler’s men may have nurtured about resurrecting their doomed campaign. It also gave India their sixth consecutive victory. Clearly, this is not a team that believes in the law of averages. India won by 100 runs in 34.5 overs after putting up what at first looked a below-par 229/9 batting first.


Chasing 230 on a challenging pitch where even some of India’s best batters struggled, and with the dew coming in, England experienced a false dawn — Siraj bowled too full and the boundaries flowed from the bat of Dawid Malan. A score of 26 for no loss after four overs during a tricky chase can always soothe the nerves. To be fair, it was over before England could say “Boom, Boom” in tune with the MC here at the Ekana stadium. Fifth ball of the fifth over, Bumrah, always questioning with that in-between, just short of good length deliveries, got Malan to chop on, the batter shaping up for a cut shot and finding no room.


Next ball, Joe Root — with his poor returns whenever he comes out to bat between overs 1-10 already the talk of the town — was plumb legbefore. Pitched up, skiddy, keeping low, stuck flush on the pads in front of the stumps. Bumrah leapt high and punched the air. Fifty thousand people at the Ekana stadium heaved in unison and let out a collective yell of triumph. Root trudged off, but not before wasting a DRS call.


Up next, eighth over, a Shami masterclass for Ben Stokes. Around the wicket to the left-hander, angling in, then seaming away. The batter, left repeatedly frustrated by the back-of-a-length deliveries, eventually looked to hit his way out of jail. The ball was fuller and it clattered the exposed stumps. A 10-ball duck. Shades of Virat Kohli’s impatient 9-ball duck earlier in the day. England 33/3. First ball of Shami’s next over, Jonny Bairstow, on the backfoot, dragged one on to the stumps. Shami was on a hat-trick now. England were 39/4 and the game was virtually dead in 9.1 overs.


Any hopes of a rebuilding phase were nipped in the bud by leggie Kuldeep Yadav snaring Buttler and Livingstone. Even with the dew setting in heavily, the spinners were not easy to get away. India too had lost a flurry of early wickets when they batted, but the perspicacity of Rohit Sharma (87 off 101 balls; 10x4, 3x6), and with his sheer skill with the bat, saved the day. KL Rahul contributed in a 91-run partnership to resurrect the innings before a fluent Suryakumar took the score to safety. The rest were unable to soak up the pressure.


Where do India go from here? They have a few important pointers after having batted first for the first time in this tournament. They need to play the waiting game better. The addition of Suryakumar adds punch to the lineup. 
They cannot drop Shami now, on any surface.

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