Power reigns supreme at 11th World Cup

Tuesday, 31 March 2015 03:40 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reuters: The ICC hailed the 11th cricket World Cup the “most popular ever” and although most neutrals would have preferred New Zealand to win Sunday’s final, there is no doubt Australia were worthy of their fifth title. Michael Clarke’s side had the best blend of deep batting, strong fielding and, most importantly, wicket-taking bowlers which made them fitting winners of a tournament where power was king. The big hitters, extraordinary batsmen like New Zealand’s Brendon McCullum, South Africa’s AB de Villiers and Australia’s Glenn Maxwell, lit up the tournament and showed how much the 50-over game has transformed. With improvised shots that sometimes defy conventional description, they punctured the boundary at all points as six became the new four while 400 became the new 300. And popular it was. Fans crammed into grounds all over Australia and New Zealand in their hundreds of thousands – the final tally for all 49 matches was just over a million – and record numbers tuned in around the world on TV. Yet when the last six had been hit, the final batting power play concluded and the majority of the 93,013 fans at the Melbourne Cricket Ground were celebrating a home win, the Player of the Tournament was left-arm fast bowler Mitchell Starc.                             Taking wickets The Australian was, by consensus, a worthy recipient. The days of containing batting sides in one-day cricket appear to be over and the best way to stop runs being scored is now simply to take wickets. Starc took 22 at the cost of just over 10 runs apiece, his stingy average putting him ahead of New Zealand’s Trent Boult, who formed the most dangerous new ball attack in the tournament with Tim Southee. New Zealand’s aggressive play was a major highlight in a pool stage that took a month to whittle 14 teams down to eight. Afghanistan made a welcome World Cup debut and secured their maiden victory over Scotland in a Dunedin thriller, while Ireland beat West Indies and Zimbabwe only to miss out on the knockout stage in the final game of the pool phase. Both advanced the cause of the “associate members” though their battle to prevent the ICC reducing the number of teams in the 2019 tournament to 10, is one they look like losing.     England came and went unloved and unmourned after a calamitous campaign in which they failed to beat any of their test playing opponents. Jason Holder’s West Indies scraped into the last eight only to be pounded into the ground by New Zealand, for whom Martin Guptill scored a record 237 not out, surpassing Chris Gayle’s bludgeoning 215 earlier in the tournament. Likewise, Sri Lanka’s Kumar Sangakkara proved that prolific batting could still be about stroke play and not just destructive violence with an ODI record four successive centuries in his and Mahela Jayawardene’s last campaign. Misbah-ul-haq’s Pakistan briefly revived memories of their triumphant 1992 campaign by starting poorly before storming into the knockout stages only to bow out to Australia. Champions India brushed off a poor run-up to the tournament to romp unbeaten into the semi-finals, where they too fell victim to Australia’s pace with skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni conceding they had done well to get that far.     South Africa went some way to shedding the “chokers” tag by winning their first World Cup knockout match in the quarter-final against Sri Lanka only to reacquire it after defeat to New Zealand in the semis. That Eden Park match, decided on the penultimate ball by a Grant Elliott six, was sporting drama at its very best, even if it was the only one of the seven knockout matches that proved a contest. Australia skipper Clarke bowed out of the 50-over game a world champion for a second time after the final, hoping quitting one dayers might extend his career in test cricket, which he still regards as the pinnacle of the game. While he is not alone in that thought among the game’s purists, the 2015 World Cup proved, if nothing else, there is still a place in cricket for a format between the test and Twenty20 games.

 Starc award defies trend in bat-dominated tournament

  MELBOURNE (Reuters): At a World Cup dominated by batsmen and huge scores, it was an old-fashioned fast bowler who ultimately played the biggest role in Australia’s success. Mitchell Starc, whose devastating pace and movement troubled almost every batsmen who faced him, was named player of the tournament after Australia wrapped up their fifth title with a seven-wicket over New Zealand on Sunday. Glenn McGrath (2007) is the only other specialist bowler to have won the award but Starc was a popular choice after terrorising his opponents for the past six weeks. “It’s nice to see bat dominate ball every now and again,” Starc told reporters. “There’s been some fantastic performances with both. Obviously, it’s been a couple of big scores, a couple of double tons... but it’s just been fantastic the whole tournament.”     Although New Zealand opener Martin Guptill and Chris Gayle scored double centuries during the World Cup, Starc was an obvious choice for the player of the tournament award. He took 22 wickets, equal best with New Zealand seamer Trent Boult, but at a far better average of 10.18. Perhaps the left-armer’s most telling contribution, however, came in the first over of Sunday’s final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground when he cleaned bowled New Zealand’s captain and most destructive batsman Brendon McCullum with a yorker. The Black Caps never recovered and were bowled out for just 183 in the 45th over. “He’s been a key player for them right from the beginning, and he’s been fantastic for the Kiwis to get them off to great starts,” Starc said.     “We knew we had to sort of assess him as he went because he’s very unpredictable. I think personally it was a bit of a planning game with (bowling coach) Craig McDermott about just bowling in pace and yorker to him first up. “I’m not sure how that first one missed, but lucky the third one hit. There’s a lot of luck involved, but just nice to see that plan come off.” For Starc, his award was also a vindication of his rising status in Australia’s bowling ranks. One of three left-arm fast bowlers, he has often been overshadowed by Mitchell Johnson and James Faulkner, who was named man of the match in the final.     He was also criticised this summer by Shane Warne for not being aggressive enough but proved all his doubters wrong and now hopes his form in the one-day game will help him play more tests. “Over the last sort of 12 to 18 months I’ve really felt a part of the one-day team, really felt at home,” he said. “I’d like to push into test cricket now, but we’ve got a bit of a break now before any of the tests, but still a lot of work to do with white and red ball. Just going to really enjoy this moment.”
 

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