India Lead The Series 4-1


Raina secures India series win

January 23, 2013

 
 

India 258 for 5 (Raina 89*, Rohit 83) beat England 257 for 7 (Cook 76, Pietersen 76, Root 57*, Jadeja 3-39) by five wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

 

  Rohit Sharma scored 83 - his first double-figure ODI score in ten months, India v England, 4th ODI, Mohali, January 23, 2013

Rohit Sharma emerged from a form slump to play a crucial innings 
 
  

England fought hard to assemble a respectable total on a cold, wintry day in the Punjab, but when the fog cleared the view was a familiar one: another defeat in a one-day series in India. India’s pursuit of 258 was far from trouble free, but a winning margin of five wickets with 15 overs to spare was emphatic enough and left them 3-1 up one to play.

Instead of a dead rubber in ODI in Dharamsala, in the foothills of the Himilayas, England would be forgiven for fancying a spot of skiing, but sadly for them the weather forecast is improving. Only the cricket is going downhill.

It might have been different had England not fallen again to the curse of Steven Finn’s knee. When Finn thought he had Suresh Raina caught by Alastair Cook at first slip, India still needed 80 from 89 balls with what would have been five wickets intact. But Finn’s recalcitrant right knee had collided with the stumps again and umpire Steve Davis invoked Law 23, ruling that Raina had been distracted. Cook’s protests that Finn was entitled to a warning went unheeded.

England, for whom only Finn and James Tredwell possessed any real threat, never rallied again. Jade Dernbach dismissed MS Dhoni with a short, wide one, but his bowling circus has not troubled India.

India’s run chase was a personal triumph for Rohit Sharma, whose selection ahead of Ajinkya Rahane as a replacement opener had not possessed obvious logic on a seam-friendly morning, but who took advantage of easing conditions to move on from a lean run of form which had brought eight single-figure scores in his last nine innings. Rohit burst ahead after reaching his fifty, addressing Tredwell’s threat in the process, and had 83 from 93 balls when Finn won a fortunate lbw decision for a delivery slipping down the leg side.

On another day of fallible umpiring, Gautam Gambhir was adjudged caught at the wicket, carving at a wide one and left with a look of unfeigned surprise that the umpire thought he had hit it.

Virat Kohli was gently removed by Tredwell, not as much dismissed as quietly informed that he would take no further part in the game. In the calming manner of a hospital consultant, Tredwell’s entire demeanour is designed to allay fears. “Good morning, Mr Kohli, do relax, there is nothing to worry about.” But there was and by the end of his first over, Kohli had chipped a gentle return catch as if half-anaesthetised. There must have been some dip, or subtle change of pace, but you could study innumerable replays and struggle to discern it.

Tredwell claimed a second wicket when he defeated Yuvraj Singh’s sweep, dismissing him for the fourth time in the series.

England could ill afford to allow let-offs in the field, but both Kohli and Rohit survived half chances. Rohit, on 12, drove Tim Bresnan high to mid-off where Kevin Pietersen leapt to palm the ball in the air with his right hand but failed to locate it as it fell. Kohli was 2 when he pulled at Finn and the ball fell between the wicketkeeper, Jos Buttler, and Bresnan at fine leg.

Buttler was running backwards for a catch which could not have fallen more inconveniently had Kohli marked the spot with a cross, but he was a stand-in wicketkeeper for Craig Kieswetter, and an inexperienced one at that, and it was natural to wonder whether a more experienced keeper would have been more assertive.

India’s pace attack made impressive use of a good fast-bowling morning after Dhoni had won the toss. Bhuvneshwar Kumar conceded only 30 runs in a probing 10-over allocation delivered without interruption and Ishant Sharma was as dangerous as at any time in either Test or one-day series.

Alastair Cook’s methodical half-century was an appropriate response, but his demise, lbw to a ball from R Ashwin that pitched well outside leg stump was another rum decision. Umpires drawn from outside the elite panel, plus the absence of DRS, equals a greater likelihood of error wherever a game is played.

There was 76, too, from Pietersen, but it was a more fretful innings delivered by a batsman anxious for the first shaft of sunlight. He was struck on the elbow as Ishant cut one back and narrowly escaped an lbw decision in the same over when he just got outside the line. He needed 13 balls to get off the mark; 33 to find the boundary, an authoritative straight drive against R Ashwin.

He was illuminated only briefly, muscling Ishant over midwicket for six, but he got an excellent yorker in response as Ishant ensured that for once his bowling figures were not damaged by bowling at the most pressing times.

Cook, for all his frustration at his dismissal, had provided a solid layer, but England’s cause was not helped when they lost Eoin Morgan and Samit Patel in quick succession.

Morgan has had a poor series in a country in which, with IPL in mind, he was anxious to advance his reputation. He drove Ashwin weakly down the ground and only reached Yuvraj at mid-on. Patel was promoted to No. 5, presumably with the approaching batting Powerplay in mind, but he made a single in 10 balls when he chipped a return catch to Ravindra Jadeja. Patel stalked off; he has done more stalking off recently than is good for him.

England rallied with 100 from the last 10 overs, energised by Joe Root’s maiden ODI half-century, 57 not out from 45 balls, after he had been dropped off Ishant by Kohli at slip. Throughout the winter, in all three forms of the game, Root has proved more adaptable than perhaps even he had expected. His cricketing intelligence is one of his greatest assets.

He should also have fallen on 42, a slog sweep against Jadeja bringing a comical drop by Raina at midwicket. Jadeja’s left-arm slows have disturbed England throughout the series. The dismissal of Buttler and Bresnan in his final over left him with 3 for 39, figures which will further encourage India that they have discovered a player who can balance their one-day side.

Fourth ODI India Vs England 2013


England 257/7 (50 ov)

India 258/5 (47.3 ov)

India won by 5 wickets (with 15 balls remaining)

  • England in India ODI Series – 4th ODI
  • ODI no. 3327 | 2012/13 season
  • Played at Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali, Chandigarh
  • 23 January 2013 – day/night (50-over match)
               
  England innings (50 overs maximum) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal AN Cook* lbw b Ashwin 76 134 106 13 0 71.69
View dismissal IR Bell c Kumar b I Sharma 10 42 25 2 0 40.00
View dismissal KP Pietersen b I Sharma 76 150 93 7 1 81.72
View dismissal EJG Morgan c Yuvraj Singh b Ashwin 3 8 6 0 0 50.00
View dismissal SR Patel c & b Jadeja 1 9 10 0 0 10.00
  JE Root not out 57 61 45 8 1 126.66
View dismissal JC Buttler† c Yuvraj Singh b Jadeja 14 12 9 1 1 155.55
View dismissal TT Bresnan c Yuvraj Singh b Jadeja 0 1 2 0 0 0.00
  JC Tredwell not out 6 6 4 1 0 150.00
  Extras (b 2, lb 8, w 4) 14          
           
  Total (7 wickets; 50 overs; 215 mins) 257 (5.14 runs per over)
Did not bat ST Finn, JW Dernbach
Fall of wickets 1-37 (Bell, 9.4 ov), 2-132 (Cook, 31.5 ov), 3-138 (Morgan, 33.6 ov), 4-142 (Patel, 36.3 ov),5-220 (Pietersen, 45.5 ov), 6-241 (Buttler, 48.3 ov), 7-241 (Bresnan, 48.5 ov)
                 
  Bowling O M R W Econ    
  B Kumar 10 2 30 0 3.00 (2w)  
  Shami Ahmed 8 0 58 0 7.25 (1w)  
View wickets I Sharma 10 2 47 2 4.70 (1w)  
View wickets R Ashwin 10 0 63 2 6.30    
View wickets RA Jadeja 10 2 39 3 3.90    
  SK Raina 2 0 10 0 5.00    
               
  India innings (target: 258 runs from 50 overs) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal G Gambhir c †Buttler b Bresnan 10 22 16 2 0 62.50
View dismissal RG Sharma lbw b Finn 83 135 93 11 1 89.24
View dismissal V Kohli c & b Tredwell 26 44 33 3 0 78.78
View dismissal Yuvraj Singh lbw b Tredwell 3 27 16 0 0 18.75
  SK Raina not out 89 121 79 9 1 112.65
View dismissal MS Dhoni*† c Morgan b Dernbach 19 49 21 2 0 90.47
  RA Jadeja not out 21 31 27 2 0 77.77
  Extras (lb 2, w 5) 7          
           
  Total (5 wickets; 47.3 overs; 217 mins) 258 (5.43 runs per over)
Did not bat R Ashwin, B Kumar, I Sharma, Shami Ahmed
Fall of wickets 1-20 (Gambhir, 5.3 ov), 2-72 (Kohli, 16.5 ov), 3-90 (Yuvraj Singh, 22.4 ov), 4-158 (RG Sharma, 31.1 ov),5-213 (Dhoni, 39.1 ov)
                 
  Bowling O M R W Econ    
View wicket ST Finn 10 1 39 1 3.90 (2w)  
View wicket TT Bresnan 10 1 59 1 5.90 (2w)  
View wicket JW Dernbach 9.3 0 59 1 6.21 (1w)  
  SR Patel 3 0 21 0 7.00    
View wickets JC Tredwell 10 0 54 2 5.40    
  JE Root 5 0 24 0 4.80    
Match details
Toss India, who chose to field
Series India led the 5-match series 3-1
Player of the match SK Raina (India)
Umpires S Asnani and SJ Davis (Australia)
TV umpire C Shamsuddin
Match referee AJ Pycroft (Zimbabwe)
Reserve umpire AK Chowdhury
Match notes
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 37 runs, 1 wicket)
  • England: 50 runs in 13.4 overs (82 balls), Extras 8
  • Drinks: England – 53/1 in 15.0 overs (AN Cook 33, KP Pietersen 2)
  • AN Cook: 50 off 74 balls (9 x 4)
  • 2nd Wicket: 50 runs in 77 balls (AN Cook 28, KP Pietersen 18, Ex 4)
  • England: 100 runs in 25.2 overs (152 balls), Extras 9
  • Drinks: England – 132/2 in 31.5 overs (KP Pietersen 36)
  • Powerplay 2: Overs 35.1 – 40.0 (Batting side – 19 runs, 1 wicket)
  • England: 150 runs in 38.1 overs (229 balls), Extras 10
  • KP Pietersen: 50 off 84 balls (3 x 4)
  • 5th Wicket: 50 runs in 46 balls (KP Pietersen 20, JE Root 30, Ex 2)
  • England: 200 runs in 44.4 overs (268 balls), Extras 12
  • JE Root: 50 off 43 balls (7 x 4, 1 x 6)
  • England: 250 runs in 49.3 overs (297 balls), Extras 13
  • Innings Break: England – 257/7 in 50.0 overs (JE Root 57, JC Tredwell 6)
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 35 runs, 1 wicket)
  • India: 50 runs in 12.5 overs (77 balls), Extras 1
  • 2nd Wicket: 50 runs in 61 balls (RG Sharma 24, V Kohli 25, Ex 1)
  • Drinks: India – 72/2 in 16.5 overs (RG Sharma 34)
  • RG Sharma: 50 off 73 balls (6 x 4)
  • India: 100 runs in 24.2 overs (146 balls), Extras 3
  • 4th Wicket: 50 runs in 37 balls (RG Sharma 28, SK Raina 22, Ex 0)
  • India: 150 runs in 29.6 overs (180 balls), Extras 3
  • Drinks: India – 158/4 in 31.1 overs (SK Raina 33)
  • Powerplay 2: Overs 35.1 – 40.0 (Batting side – 37 runs, 1 wicket)
  • SK Raina: 50 off 46 balls (6 x 4)
  • India: 200 runs in 37.6 overs (228 balls), Extras 5
  • 5th Wicket: 50 runs in 45 balls (SK Raina 29, MS Dhoni 19, Ex 2)
  • India: 250 runs in 45.5 overs (275 balls), Extras 7
  • Man of The Match (Suresh Raina 89*)

Cricket - India v England 4th ODI Mohali

Pietersen was adjudged by umpire


Pietersen was adjudged by umpire

  Ishant Sharma had Kevin Pietersen caught behind, India v England, 3rd ODI, Ranchi, January 19, 2013

Kevin Pietersen looks around after being given out caught behind
 
 
 

Kevin Pietersen has been given a gentle reminder over his on-pitch behaviour following the obvious disappointment he exhibited after his dismissal in the third ODI in Ranchi.

Pietersen was adjudged by umpire S Ravi to have been caught behind off Ishant Sharma for 17 but lingered in the crease for several seconds in apparent disbelief at the decision.

While Pietersen may well have been unfortunate with the dismissal, replays suggesting that the ball brushed only his thigh, England‘s limited-overs coach, Ashley Giles, supported the action of the match referee, Andy Pycroft, to have an informal chat with Pietersen.

Giles was particularly keen to remind Pietersen how difficult umpiring could be in conditions as noisy as the ODI in Ranchi where umpires have little hope of distinguishing between the noise of the bat clipping the pad or the ball clipping the edge of the bat.

“Andy was right to speak to Kev,” Giles admitted, “but I think common sense prevailed. It was just a little word. I didn’t think it was a reaction, more disappointment from Kev.

“But we’ve got to be careful with reactions to decisions. It’s tough for the umpires here, it’s so loud that decision making is tough. We understand that.”

Pycroft also had a brief conversation with Giles, taking the chance to talk with the England coach after bumping into him in the toilet at Ranchi airport. “It was in the gents,” Giles said. “So that was a nice scene for my first meeting with the match referee.”

ICC Rankings 2013


ICC rankings for Tests, ODIs and Twenty20

 

 

ICC Test Championship

 

 

 

 

14 January 2013
Team Matches Points Rating
South Africa 32 3965 124
England 41 4825 118
Australia 42 4916 117
Pakistan 29 3148 109
India 37 3879 105
Sri Lanka 36 3318 92
West Indies 31 2809 91
New Zealand 30 2333 78
Bangladesh 15 0 0

 

 

Zimbabwe is currently unranked, as it has played insufficient matches. It has 167 points and a rating of 42.

 

ICC ODI Championship

 

 

 

 

19 January 2013
Team Matches Points Rating
India 36 4279 119
England 28 3316 118
South Africa 19 2201 116
Sri Lanka 38 4230 111
Australia 31 3442 111
Pakistan 31 3311 107
West Indies 25 2206 88
Bangladesh 21 1636 78
New Zealand 21 1596 76
Zimbabwe 14 700 50
Ireland 6 207 35
Netherlands 4 63 16
Kenya 4 45 11

 

 

 

ICC Twenty20 Championship

 

 

 

 

28 December 2012
Team Matches Points Rating
Sri Lanka 15 1524 127
West Indies 17 1585 122
India 18 1789 119
England 22 1891 118
South Africa 21 1868 117
Pakistan 28 2324 116
Australia 20 1615 108
New Zealand 21 1563 98
Bangladesh 11 668 84
Ireland 12 659 82
Zimbabwe 10 306 44

 

 

The following teams are not ranked as fewer than eight T20I matches played since August 2010. Afghanistan; Netherlands; Scotland; Canada & Kenya.

India Crushed Out England to take series lead


India Crushed England to take series lead

January 19, 2013

 

India 157 for 3 (Kohli 77*, Tredwell 2-29) beat England 155 (Root 39, Jadeja 3-19) by seven wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

 

 

  MS Dhoni leaps after getting Ian Bell out caught, India v England, 3rd ODI, Ranchi, January 19, 2013

MS Dhoni claimed three caught behinds.
 
 

 

MS Dhoni has not had too much to smile about in recent months, as his India side suffered unexpected home defeats in Test and ODI cricket, but he was able to pack away the defensive frown and wary gaze and enjoy the occasion in Ranchi, as India strolled to a seven-wicket victory in the first international match ever to be staged in his hometown. Dhoni was even out in the middle to hit the winning runs and soak up the atmosphere as England, who appeared as eager as the crowd to give him a day to remember, slipped 2-1 down in the five-match series.

 

All of India’s bowlers contributed in a concerted display, aided by a touch of early movement and a middle-order collapse against spin of familiar proportions. Dhoni also claimed three catches, including a diving take to dismiss England’s top-scorer, Joe Root, and a sharp chance at the wicket off Ian Bell, as England were once again spooked by the ghosts of their recent past in 50-over cricket in India, mustering a paltry 155.

 

India’s innings proved that the pitch was a good one – the curator had predicted a score of 350 for the side batting first but he was obviously banking on that side being India. Although Steven Finn cleaned up Ajinkya Rahane again, bowled through the gate for the second time in as many matches, and James Tredwell claimed his sixth and seventh wickets of the series, Virat Kohli made sure England were the only ones doing any chasing. Kohli twice hammered Tredwell over the ropes, to go with a further nine fours in an unbeaten 77, his return to form yet another fillip for his captain.

 

England’s total was their second-lowest batting first against India (in full matches), as they subsided from an initially promising 68 for 1. Although there was an element of luck about the second breakthrough, as the sound of Kevin Pietersen‘s bat on pad seemed to deceive the umpire into awarding a caught behind, India did not owe their victory to fortune. The early dismissals of Alastair Cook, Pietersen and Bell left the middle order exposed and despite another promising display of character from Root, who put on 47 with Tim Bresnan, India were always in control.

 

 

Smart stats

  • India won the match with 131 balls to spare, which is their largest margin of win in ODIs against England (in terms of balls remaining). The previous highest was 123, in Jaipur in 2006.
  • England’s highest score in their innings was 39, which is the sixth-lowest top-score for them in a completed ODI against India.
  • England’s total of 155 is their third-lowest all-out scorein an ODI against India.
  • Virat Kohli has become the second-fastest cricketer to 4000 ODI runs, in terms of innings batted. Viv Richards achieved the landmark in 88 innings, while Kohli reached there in his 93rd.
  • For the second match in a row, three England batsmen were dismissed without scoring. Before the Kochi game, this had only happened four times for England in ODIs against India.
  • Ranchi became the 42nd Indian venue, and the 182nd venue in the world, to host a one-day international.
 

 

The gods had already smiled on Dhoni at the toss, as he was given the option and chose to insert an England side still apparently winded from their emphatic, 127-run defeat in Kochi on Tuesday. Although the pitch looked hard and flat, there was a light covering of grass and just enough moisture to aid the bowlers, further justifying Dhoni’s decision, made ostensibly in view of the possibility of evening dew making the ball difficult to grip. By the time the sun set, however, it was the match that had slipped out of England’s hands.

 

Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Shami Ahmed bowled impressive opening spells and although Cook christened the ground with its first international boundary, in the second over, England’s captain was soon undone by swing. The fans at the newly constructed 39,000-capacity Jharkhand State Cricket Association Stadium had come to see only one inspirational leader among the two sides, and the cheer that went up when he moved across his stumps to be hit in front by a Shami delivery that curved back at him confirmed it was not Cook.

 

Pietersen is an England player capable of whipping up an Indian crowd but they were even more delighted by his downfall. Having added 44 in 41 balls with Bell, both batsmen fell in consecutive overs, Pietersen given out after again briefly threatening despite there being no apparent edge. Pietersen was visibly reluctant to drag himself away after fencing at a length ball from Ishant Sharma that rose sharply, the awkwardness of his stroke forcing the bat into the flap of his front pad. If there was doubt about that dismissal, there was none three balls later as Dhoni collected a scrape off the toe of Bell’s bat while standing up to Bhuvneshwar.

 

England were never able to feel at home on the Ranchi surface and India’s hold on the match was further strengthened as Morgan tamely lobbed the ball to short-third man. Morgan laboured for 10 off 30 balls in a manner reminiscent of his poor form in the UAE last year, playing and missing against the quicks before getting out attempting a premeditated reverse-swipe through point against R Ashwin. Ravindra Jadeja then burst one through a loose defensive shot from Craig Kieswetter and pinned Samit Patel lbw pushing half forward as three wickets fell for one run in nine balls to send the crowd into further raptures.

 

Root again dropped anchor, displaying familiar circumspection and timing a handful of boundaries. He and the returning Bresnan – the one change on either side – formed a Yorkshire coalition in an attempt to heave England towards a respectable total but a loose drive from Root gave Ishant his second wicket and the spinners quickly cleaned up the tail.

 

Before the start, there was already a palpable sense of anticipation in the ground at the return of Dhoni, India’s captain and their standard-bearer during a testing recent run in ODI cricket. A light aircraft trailed a message in coloured smoke across the milky blue sky as Dhoni was interviewed at the toss. “It’s a big moment for me but it’s important to be focused,” he said.

Dhoni also suggested that he may have played cricket with “at least 15,000” of the crowd, during his tennis-ball days as a youngster in Jharkhand, but his ten team-mates on the pitch were more than enough to rout a dismal England.

Brisbane Heat Win The BBL Title


Brisbane Heat cruise to BBL title

January 19, 2013

 

Brisbane Heat 5 for 167 (Burns 43) beat Perth Scorchers 9 for 133 (Voges 49, Roach 3-18) by 34 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

 

 

  Joe Burns top scored for the Heat with 43 off 27 balls, Perth Scorchers v Brisbane Heat, BBL final, Perth, January 19, 2013

Joe Burns made an important 43 for the Heat.
 
  

 

Kemar Roach, the Brisbane Heat’s big-name international signing, entered the BBL final having taken only two wickets in his seven games, but he stepped up when it mattered most to help deliver the title against the Perth Scorchers. Roach collected 3 for 18 from his four overs and together with Man-of-the-Match Nathan Hauritz, who bowled tightly and took three terrific outfield catches, ensured the Heat would defend their 5 for 167 with relative ease.

In the end the Heat won by 34 runs as the Scorchers’ chase petered out and they finished their 20 overs at 9 for 133, too much work having been left for the lower order. For the second consecutive year, the Scorchers suffered the disappointment of hosting the final, entering it as favourites, and emerging without the trophy, but by reaching this stage they at least qualified to take part in a second consecutive Champions League later in the year.

Still, they would have felt at the halfway point of this game that they were in with a strong chance. On a good batting pitch, 168 was the kind of chase that would require a very solid batting performance, and was certainly gettable. But the absence from their top order of Herschelle Gibbs, who injured his hamstring in the semi-final against the Melbourne Stars, hurt the Scorchers more than the loss of captain James Hopes (hamstring) did the Heat.

Marcus Stoinis, in his third match of the tournament, was asked to replace Gibbs at the top of the order and was undone by Roach’s pace and bounce, when his top edge was brilliantly caught at third man by Hauritz. An even better outfield take from Hauritz got rid of Shaun Marsh, who on 16 pulled Ben Cutting and was caught when Hauritz leapt and snared the ball above his head at deep backward square leg.

The runs just weren’t flowing for the Scorchers, who had started slowly against the offspin of Hauritz, who bowled the first over of the innings. At precisely the halfway point of the chase, Marcus North top-edged a pull off Daniel Christian and was caught for 24 off 23 balls and the Scorchers still needed a further 102 runs from their final 10 overs, which despite a fighting innings from Adam Voges, proved out of reach.

Nathan Coulter-Nile, sent up the order as a pinch-hitter, holed out on 16 to the part-time spin of Chris Lynn and provided Hauritz with a third catch, and batting at No.6 Michael Hussey couldn’t conjure the magic required and was caught at long-off for 10. The Scorchers’ remaining hopes ended when Roach picked up Simon Katich for a duck and Voges for 49 in the 18th over, both caught in the deep by Chris Sabburg.

As it turned out, the Heat had accumulated more than enough runs after choosing to bat. They had Joe Burns and Christian to thank for that, after the openers Luke Pomersbach and Peter Forrest made a steady but far from spectacular start. Jason Behrendorff got rid of both openers, Forrest for 17 off 16 balls and Pomersbach for 37 from 38, although Brad Hogg’s tight spin-bowling had been a major factor in building the pressure that brought the wickets at the other end.

But Burns managed to lift the tempo and his innings of 43 from 27 balls was all the more frustrating for the Scorchers because he could have been out from the next delivery after Pomersbach fell. Burns pulled Behrendorff and the ball seemed destined to find Marsh at deep square leg, but the sun appeared to distract Marsh and he was unable even to get a hand on the ball, which then bounced away for four.

Burns eventually skied a catch to long-on from the bowling of Michael Beer but Christian was able to keep the boundaries flowing until he was bowled by Coulter-Nile in the second-last over for 37 from 21 balls. The Heat had picked up 48 runs in their final five overs, the kind of finish the Scorchers required later in the match. But unlike the Heat, they ran out of batting firepower.

Brisbane Heat beat Perth Scorchers by 34 runs to win the BBL final at the WACA.

Image

 

 

 

Big Bash League, 2012/13 / Scorecard

 
 
Big Bash League – Final

Perth Scorchers v Brisbane Heat

Brisbane Heat won by 34 runs

  • Twenty20 match | 2012/13 season
  • Played at Western Australia Cricket Association Ground, Perth
  • 19 January 2013 – day/night (20-over match)
               
  Brisbane Heat innings (20 overs maximum) R B 4s 6s SR  
View dismissal LA Pomersbach c Stoinis b Behrendorff 37 38 2 1 97.36  
View dismissal PJ Forrest c Coulter-Nile b Behrendorff 17 16 2 0 106.25  
View dismissal JA Burns c Hogg b Beer 43 27 4 2 159.25  
View dismissal DT Christian b Coulter-Nile 37 21 5 1 176.19  
View dismissal CA Lynn c Coulter-Nile b Hogg 5 5 0 0 100.00  
  BCJ Cutting not out 7 9 0 0 77.77  
  CD Hartley*† not out 7 5 1 0 140.00  
  Extras (lb 6, w 7, nb 1) 14          
           
  Total (5 wickets; 20 overs) 167 (8.35 runs per over)
Did not bat CJM Sabburg, NM Hauritz, KAJ Roach, AC McDermott
Fall of wickets 1-26 (Forrest, 4.2 ov), 2-82 (Pomersbach, 12.1 ov), 3-113 (Burns, 14.1 ov), 4-121 (Lynn, 15.3 ov),5-158 (Christian, 18.5 ov)
                 
  Bowling O M R W Econ    
View wicket MA Beer 4 0 26 1 6.50 (1w)  
  AC Thomas 4 0 32 0 8.00 (3w)  
View wickets JP Behrendorff 4 0 38 2 9.50 (1nb)  
View wicket NM Coulter-Nile 4 0 46 1 11.50 (3w)  
View wicket GB Hogg 4 0 19 1 4.75    
               
  Perth Scorchers innings (target: 168 runs from 20 overs) R B 4s 6s SR  
View dismissal MP Stoinis c Hauritz b Roach 1 4 0 0 25.00  
View dismissal SE Marsh c Hauritz b Cutting 16 24 2 0 66.66  
View dismissal MJ North c Forrest b Christian 24 23 1 1 104.34  
View dismissal AC Voges c Sabburg b Roach 49 32 4 0 153.12  
View dismissal NM Coulter-Nile c Hauritz b Lynn 16 13 0 1 123.07  
View dismissal MEK Hussey† c Christian b McDermott 10 9 1 0 111.11  
View dismissal SM Katich* c Sabburg b Roach 0 2 0 0 0.00  
View dismissal AC Thomas c †Hartley b Cutting 2 5 0 0 40.00  
View dismissal GB Hogg c Christian b McDermott 1 3 0 0 33.33  
  JP Behrendorff not out 1 4 0 0 25.00  
  MA Beer not out 2 2 0 0 100.00  
  Extras (lb 6, w 4, nb 1) 11          
           
  Total (9 wickets; 20 overs) 133 (6.65 runs per over)
Fall of wickets 1-5 (Stoinis, 1.5 ov), 2-38 (Marsh, 7.2 ov), 3-66 (North, 9.6 ov), 4-97 (Coulter-Nile, 13.5 ov),5-124 (Hussey, 16.6 ov), 6-124 (Katich, 17.2 ov), 7-126 (Voges, 17.4 ov), 8-129 (Thomas, 18.5 ov), 9-129 (Hogg, 19.1 ov)
                 
  Bowling O M R W Econ    
  NM Hauritz 3 0 11 0 3.66 (1w)  
View wickets KAJ Roach 4 0 18 3 4.50 (1nb, 1w)  
View wickets AC McDermott 4 0 20 2 5.00 (1w)  
View wickets BCJ Cutting 4 0 31 2 7.75 (1w)  
View wicket DT Christian 2 0 24 1 12.00    
View wicket CA Lynn 3 0 23 1 7.66    
Match details
Toss Brisbane Heat, who chose to bat
Series Brisbane Heat won the 2012/13 Big Bash League
Player of the match NM Hauritz (Brisbane Heat)
Player of the series AJ Finch
Umpires SD Fry and MD Martell
TV umpire P Wilson
Match referee PL Marshall

England tour of India, 2012/13 3rd ODI


England tour of India, 2012/13 / Scorecard 

 

England in India ODI Series – 3rd ODI

India v England

India won by 7 wickets (with 131 balls remaining)

  • ODI no. 3322 | 2012/13 season
  • Played at HEC International Cricket Stadium Complex, Ranchi
  • 19 January 2013 – day/night (50-over match)
               
  England innings (50 overs maximum) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal AN Cook* lbw b Shami Ahmed 17 35 28 3 0 60.71
View dismissal IR Bell c †Dhoni b Kumar 25 71 43 3 0 58.13
View dismissal KP Pietersen c †Dhoni b Sharma 17 31 20 2 0 85.00
View dismissal JE Root c †Dhoni b Sharma 39 92 57 4 0 68.42
View dismissal EJG Morgan c Yuvraj Singh b Ashwin 10 38 30 1 0 33.33
View dismissal C Kieswetter† b Jadeja 0 4 3 0 0 0.00
View dismissal SR Patel lbw b Jadeja 0 3 4 0 0 0.00
View dismissal TT Bresnan b Ashwin 25 46 37 3 0 67.56
  JC Tredwell not out 4 25 18 0 0 22.22
View dismissal ST Finn c Yuvraj Singh b Raina 3 18 12 0 0 25.00
View dismissal JW Dernbach b Jadeja 0 3 2 0 0 0.00
  Extras (lb 6, w 9) 15          
           
  Total (all out; 42.2 overs) 155 (3.66 runs per over)
Fall of wickets 1-24 (Cook, 7.6 ov), 2-68 (Pietersen, 14.5 ov), 3-68 (Bell, 15.2 ov), 4-97 (Morgan, 23.4 ov),5-98 (Kieswetter, 24.2 ov), 6-98 (Patel, 24.6 ov), 7-145 (Root, 36.4 ov), 8-145 (Bresnan, 37.2 ov), 9-155 (Finn, 41.5 ov),10-155 (Dernbach, 42.2 ov)
                 
  Bowling O M R W Econ    
View wicket B Kumar 10 2 40 1 4.00 (3w)  
View wicket Shami Ahmed 8 0 23 1 2.87 (2w)  
View wickets I Sharma 7 0 29 2 4.14 (3w)  
View wickets RA Jadeja 6.2 0 19 3 3.00    
View wickets R Ashwin 10 0 37 2 3.70 (1w)  
View wicket SK Raina 1 0 1 1 1.00    
               
  India innings (target: 156 runs from 50 overs) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal G Gambhir c Root b Tredwell 33 82 53 4 0 62.26
View dismissal AM Rahane b Finn 0 16 4 0 0 0.00
  V Kohli not out 77 110 79 9 2 97.46
View dismissal Yuvraj Singh b Tredwell 30 31 21 6 0 142.85
  MS Dhoni*† not out 10 12 12 2 0 83.33
  Extras (b 1, lb 1, w 5) 7          
           
  Total (3 wickets; 28.1 overs; 128 mins) 157 (5.57 runs per over)
Did not bat SK Raina, RA Jadeja, R Ashwin, B Kumar, I Sharma, Shami Ahmed
Fall of wickets 1-11 (Rahane, 2.5 ov), 2-78 (Gambhir, 17.3 ov), 3-144 (Yuvraj Singh, 25.3 ov)
                 
  Bowling O M R W Econ    
View wicket ST Finn 9.1 0 50 1 5.45 (2w)  
  JW Dernbach 5 0 45 0 9.00 (2w)  
  TT Bresnan 7 2 31 0 4.42 (1w)  
View wickets JC Tredwell 7 1 29 2 4.14    
Match details
Toss India, who chose to field
Series India led the 5-match series 2-1
Player of the match V Kohli (India)
Umpires SJ Davis (Australia) and S Ravi
TV umpire VA Kulkarni
Match referee AJ Pycroft (Zimbabwe)
Reserve umpire PG Pathak
Match notes
  • England innings
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 34 runs, 1 wicket)
  • England: 50 runs in 11.4 overs (70 balls), Extras 5
  • Drinks: England – 68/3 in 15.2 overs (JE Root 0)
  • England: 100 runs in 25.3 overs (153 balls), Extras 12
  • Drinks: England – 123/6 in 33.0 overs (JE Root 28, TT Bresnan 14)
  • Powerplay 2: Overs 35.1 – 40.0 (Batting side – 20 runs, 2 wickets)
  • England: 150 runs in 38.6 overs (234 balls), Extras 15
  • Innings Break: England – 155/10 in 42.2 overs (JC Tredwell 4)
  • India innings
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 48 runs, 1 wicket)
  • India: 50 runs in 10.3 overs (63 balls), Extras 4
  • 2nd Wicket: 50 runs in 68 balls (G Gambhir 15, V Kohli 36, Ex 2)
  • Drinks: India – 73/1 in 16.0 overs (G Gambhir 28, V Kohli 41)
  • V Kohli: 50 off 58 balls (8 x 4)
  • India: 100 runs in 20.5 overs (125 balls), Extras 5
  • 3rd Wicket: 50 runs in 38 balls (V Kohli 27, Yuvraj Singh 22, Ex 1)
  • India: 150 runs in 26.4 overs (160 balls), Extras 7

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England in India ODI Series 2013 3rd ODI


 
 

Match scheduled to begin at 12:00 local time (06:30 GMT)

 
Current time: 03:30 local, 22:00 GMT

England in India ODI Series

India v England

  • One-Day International | 2012/13 season
  • Played at HEC International Cricket Stadium Complex, Ranchi
  • 19 January 2013 – day/night (50-over match)
  India squad
  MS Dhoni*†, R Ashwin, AB Dinda, G Gambhir, RA Jadeja, V Kohli, B Kumar, A Mishra, CA Pujara, AM Rahane, SK Raina, Shami Ahmed, I Sharma, RG Sharma, Yuvraj Singh
  England squad
  AN Cook*, IR Bell, TT Bresnan, DR Briggs, SCJ Broad, JC Buttler, JW Dernbach, ST Finn, C Kieswetter†, SC Meaker, EJG Morgan, SR Patel, KP Pietersen, JE Root, JC Tredwell, CR Woakes
Match details
Toss 
Umpires SJ Davis and S Ravi
TV umpire VA Kulkarni
Match referee AJ Pycroft
Reserve umpire PG Pathak

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