Live Twenty20 Score
Saturday, May 9, 2009
History of 2007 South Africa World Cup - ICC T20
India won the inaugural Twenty20 World Cup after they beat Rivals Pakistan by five runs in a thrilling final in Johannesburg.
How India Reached the final
Group A:
South Africa v West Indies at Johannesburg
South Africa won by 8 wickets
West Indies 205/6 | South Africa 208/2 (17.4)
Bangladesh v West Indies at Johannesburg
Bangladesh won by 6 wickets
West Indies 164/8 | Bangladesh 165/4 (18)
South Africa v Bangladesh at Cape Town
South Africa won by 7 wickets
Bangladesh 144 (19.3) | South Africa 146/3 (18.5)
Group B - Cape Town:
Australia v Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe won by 5 wickets
Australia 138/9 | Zimbabwe 139/5 (19.5)
England v Zimbabwe
England won by 50 runs
England 188/9 | Zimbabwe 138/7
Australia v England
Australia won by 8 wickets
England 135 | Australia 136/2 (14.5)
Group C:
Kenya v New Zealand at Durban
New Zealand won by 9 wickets
Kenya 73 (16.5) | New Zealand 74/1 (7.4)
Kenya v Sri Lanka at Johannesburg
Sri Lanka won by 172 runs
Sri Lanka 260/6 | Kenya 88 (19.3)
New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Johannesburg
Sri Lanka won by 7 wickets
New Zealand 164/7 | Sri Lanka 168/3 (18.5)
Group D
Pakistan v Scotland
Pakistan won by 51 runs
Pakistan 171/9 | Scotland 120 (19.5)
India v Scotland
No result (abandoned with a toss)
India v Pakistan
India won on bowl-out
India 141/9 | Pakistan 141/7
Group E:
India v New Zealand at Johannesburg
New Zealand won by 10 runs
New Zealand 190 | India 180/9
South Africa v England at Cape Town
South Africa won by 19 runs
South Africa 154/8 | England 135/7
England v New Zealand at Durban
New Zealand won by 5 runs
New Zealand 164/9 | England 159/8
South Africa v New Zealand at Durban
South Africa won by 6 wickets
New Zealand 153/8 | South Africa 158/4 (19.1)
England v India at Durban
India won by 18 runs
India 218/4 | England 200/6
South Africa v India at Durban
India won by 37 runs
India 153/5 | South Africa 116/9
Group F:
Australia v Bangladesh at Cape Town
Australia won by 9 wickets
Bangladesh 123/8 | Australia 124/1 (13.5)
Pakistan v Sri Lanka at Johannesburg
Pakistan won by 33 runs
Pakistan 189/6 | Sri Lanka 156/9
England v New Zealand at Durban
New Zealand won by 5 runs
New Zealand 164/9 | England 159/8
Australia v Pakistan at Johannesburg
Pakistan won by 6 wickets
Australia 164/7 | Pakistan 165/4 (19.1)
Bangladesh v Sri Lanka at Johannesburg
Sri Lanka won by 64 runs
Sri Lanka 147/5 | Bangladesh 83 (15.5)
Australia v Sri Lanka at Cape Town
Australia won by 10 wickets
Sri Lanka 101 (19.3) | Australia 102/0 (10.2)
Bangladesh v Pakistan at Cape Town
Pakistan won by 4 wickets
Bangladesh 140 (19.4) | Pakistan 141/6 (19)
Semi Finals:
New Zealand v Pakistan at Cape Town
Pakistan won by 6 wickets
New Zealand 143/8 | Pakistan 147/4 (18.5)
Australia v India at Durban
India won by 15 runs
India 188/5 | Australia 173/7
Final:
India v Pakistan at Johannesburg
India won by 5 runs
India 157/5 | Pakistan 152 (19.3)
Friday, May 8, 2009
Afridi May Captain Pakistan Twenty20 World Cup - T20 World Cup
After the Defeat from Australia in the One Day Series by 3-2, All-rounder Shahid Afridi could take over as Pakistan captain for the Twenty20 World Cup.
Pakistan Skipper Younis Khan is unhappy with the bitter criticism by the former cricketers.
Younis who replaced Shoaib Malik as Pakistan captain in January, managed to score only 73 runs in the five-match series at an average of 14.60, his highest being 28.
Pakistan former captain Inzamam-ul-Haq said Pakistan lost the Golden opportunity to defeat the weakened world champions, as Australian are without Ricky Pointing and other leading players.
Inzy further added "I think the batting more than the bowling let us down".
Another former Pakistan Captain Wasim Akram lased out at the strategy to rest fast bowler Umar Gul in the curisal game when australia were leading the Series 2-1.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Australian Squad For T20 World Cup - Twenty20 World Cup England
Australian Fast bowler Brett Lee and Shane Watson have been included in the Twenty20 World Cup.
Bret Lee has not bowled for Australia since the Boxing Day Test against South Africa last December due to suffering from ankle and foot problems.
Australian Selection Andrew Hilditch said "Brett Lee is progressing well and will return to international cricket in Thursday's"
he further added "Shane Watson has returned to the one-day side and performed extra well with the bat in the series in the UAE"
Allrounder Andrew Symonds and Explosive opening batsman David Warner have also been included.
Squad For Australia T20world CuP
Ricky Ponting (captain), Michael Clarke, Nathan Bracken, Brad Haddin, Nathan Hauritz, Ben Hilfenhaus, James Hopes, David Hussey, Mike Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Peter Siddle, Andrew Symonds, David Warner, Shane Watson.
Monday, May 4, 2009
Indian Squad For T20 World Cup - Twenty20 World Cup
Defending Champion India are back with their New Squad for Twenty20 World Cup.
Ojha and Jadeja have been included in Twenty20 Squad for World Cup which is to be held in England tournament starts from June 5 and the final is slated for June 21 at Lord's..
Left-arm spinner Pragyan Ojha and all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja were the two new faces chosen for the 15-man India squad for next month's Twenty20 World Cup in England.
Dinesh Karthik and Robin Uthappa, who were in the winning team, have been left out despite being in the 30 probables.
India are in Group A with Bangladesh and Ireland.
India Squad For Twenty world Cup Mahendra Singh Dhoni (captain), Virender Sehwag (vice-captain), Gautam Gambhir, Suresh Raina, Yuvraj Singh, Yusuf Pathan, Rohit Sharma, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan, Ishant Sharma, Praveen Kumar, Rudra Pratap Singh, Ravindra Jadeja, Pragyan Ojha and Irfan Pathan.
Friday, May 1, 2009
Twenty20 World Cup - Paul Collingwood Named T20 Captain
Last Year Paul Collingwood stepped down from One Day International Captain, as he felt the job is effecting his one day form.
All Rounder Andrew Flintoff named as been included in the T20 World Cup.
Twenty20 World Cup will begin from 5th June.
England Squad For Twenty20 World Cup
Paul Collingwood, James Anderson, Ravi Bopara, Stuart Broad, Andrew Flintoff, James Foster, Robert Key, Dimitri Mascarenhas, Eoin Morgan, Graham Napier, Kevin Pietersen, Owais Shah, Ryan Sidebottom, Graeme Swann, Luke Wright
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