Friday, June 5, 2009

Dutch Shock England in Cricket’s World Twenty20 Tournament

LONDON — Convention holds that a successful World Cup needs two things: shocking results and the host nation sticking around for the duration, or very close to it. Cricket’s World Twenty20 tournament certainly got one, but it may be at the expense of the other.

The Netherlands, 500-1 to win the 12-team tournament, defeated England by four wickets from the last ball of Friday’s opening match at London’s Lord’s ground. England must beat Pakistan on Sunday to avoid elimination.

The Dutch have a cricket tradition, though it is played by only about 6,000 enthusiasts. The Netherlands has beaten major cricket nations — Australia in 1964 and England in 1989. Both of those, though, were friendly matches.

The Netherlands’ captain Jeroen Smits hailed the result as “without doubt the biggest day in Dutch cricket history.” Most of his team are part-time cricketers.

“It cost me a lot of money to come here because I had to take days off,” Smits said. “But I don’t really mind at this moment.”

England’s captain, Paul Collingwood, said the Dutch had played with “‘freedom and belief”’ and that they had surprised England with their batting and running between the wickets.

The match was decided in a tumultuous final six-ball over, the last of the 20 the Dutch had to chase down England’s total of 162. At the beginning they needed seven runs. It became a nightmare for the bowler Stuart Broad. He is one of the brightest young players in cricket, but appears ill-fated at this tournament. The last time it was played, in South Africa in 2007, he was struck for six sixes — cricket’s equivalent of a home run, with the ball hit out of the playing area — in a single over by India’s Yuvraj Singh.

Broad had chances to throw out a Dutch batsman running to his end from the first two deliveries, but failed both times. Then he dropped a catch.

From the final ball the Netherlands needed two runs from the bat of Edgar Schiferli, who is picked for his bowling skills.

Schiferli struck the ball back towards Broad, who picked up and threw toward the stumps at his end of the pitch. Had he hit, England would have won by one run. Instead he missed, and his throw went so far past the stumps that the two exultant, disbelieving Dutch batsmen were able to turn for the second run that gave them their victory. Their teammates poured from the dugout and formed an orange-clad pileup in the outfield.

Earlier, England had looked set for the expected victory as its opening batsmen Luke Wright and Ravi Bopara scored 102 runs before they were parted. Teams are expected to score faster in the second half of an innings, but instead England slowed. The batsmen who followed showed too little aggression in both stroke-play and running. England did not hit a single six.

The Dutch showed clear intent when the opening batsman Darren Reekers hit two sixes. He and his partner Alex Kervezee were soon dismissed, but the Dutch batsmen continued to hit hard and run aggressively — frequently turning single runs into twos.

England helped it by conservative field placing, with men too deep to prevent those second runs. It also fielded badly at vital moments.

Cricket does not record fielding errors. If it did, England would have piled up an embarrassing total even before Broad’s last-over horrors.

The Dutch closed in calmly on their target. The middle-order batsman Tom de Grooth struck 49 runs before he was caught trying for his personal half-century.

At the end it was the highly paid full-time international players of England who panicked and made basic mistakes, while the outsiders kept their nerve for a famous victory.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/06/sports/cricket/06cricket.html?ref=sports

Dhoni denies rift rumours, says team superbly unified

To quash the rumours of disunity in the team, India captain MS Dhoni came to the press conference with entire team on the eve of their first match of the World Twenty20.

Dhoni read out a statement about unity in the team. The Indian skipper did not take any questions but he did clear the air that there was no rift between him and Sehwag and that the team stands united as defending champions.

"As we prepare for the T20 World Cup, we're a superbly unified team, the team spirit is as good as it has ever been. Recent reports in the Indian media of rifts between myself and Sehwag amount to nothing but false and irresponsible media," he said.

"Our fans and supporters can take confidence from the wonderful unity that continues to exist in this team," he added.

Dhoni's comments on Thursday on Sehwag's injuries and a reply "may be you should ask his physio to issue a press release" lent itself to media speculation of a rift between the two.

Dhoni stressed on team's unity and said it was well prepared to defend the title.

"We thank our fans for their continued support and look forward to entertaining you during this tournament, which we go into well prepared, unified as Team India and confident," Dhoni said.

Source: http://cricket.ndtv.com/cricket/ndtvcricket/WT20/storypage.aspx?id=SPOEN20090096259

T20 Worldcup 2009 Fixture

Group A
India
Bangladesh
Ireland

Group B
Pakistan
England
Netherland

Group C
Australia
Sri Lanka
West Indies

Group D
New Zealand
South Africa
Scotland

Super Eight Groups

Group E

A1
B2
C1
D2

Group F
B1
A2
C2
D1

Group stage fixtures

Friday 5 June
Opening ceremony, Lord's (5pm)
England v Holland, Lord's (5.30pm)

Saturday 6 June
New Zealand v Scotland, The Oval (10am)
Australia v West Indies, The Oval (2pm)
India v Bangladesh, Trent Bridge (6pm)

Sunday 7 June
South Africa v Scotland, The Oval (1.30pm)
England v Pakistan, The Oval (5.30pm)

Monday 8 June
Ireland v Bangladesh, Trent Bridge (1.30pm)
Australia v Sri Lanka, Trent Bridge (5.30pm)

Tuesday 9 June
Pakistan v Holland, Lord's (1.30pm)
New Zealand v South Africa, Lord's (5.30pm)

Wednesday 10 June
Sri Lanka v West Indies, Trent Bridge (1.30pm)
India v Ireland, Trent Bridge (5.30pm)

Super Eight

Thursday 11 June
D1 v A2, Trent Bridge (1.30pm)
B2 v D2, Trent Bridge (5.30pm)

Friday 12 June
B1 v C2, Lord's (1.30pm)
A1 v C1, Lord's (5.30pm)

Saturday 13 June
C1 v D2, The Oval (1.30pm)
D1 v B1, The Oval (5.30pm)

Sunday 14 June
A2 v C2, Lord's (1.30pm)
A1 v B2, Lord's (5.30pm)

Monday 15 June
B1 v A2, The Oval (1.30pm)
B2 v C1, The Oval (5.30pm)

Tuesday 16 June
D1 v C2, Trent Bridge (1.30pm)
D2 v A1, Trent Bridge (5.30pm)

Semi-finals

Thursday 18 June
Winner of Group E v runner up of Group F, Trent Bridge (5.30pm)

Friday 19 June
Winner of Group F v runner up of Group E, The Oval (5.30pm)

Final

Sunday 21 June
Lord's (3pm)

Source: http://www.ecb.co.uk/news/world/icc-world-twenty20-2009/fixtures/