Thursday 31 March 2016

Cooper, spinners push West Indies Women to maiden final

   
The West Indies players are ecstatic after their six-run win over New Zealand in the semifnials. PHOTO: VIVEK BENDRE
The West Indies players are ecstatic after their six-run win over New Zealand in the semifnials. PHOTO: VIVEK BENDRE

Britney Cooper dazzles with 61 to guide the team into its maiden summit clash

A jinx has been broken, and how!
The West Indies women turned in an utterly professional display to stun New Zealand by six runs at the Wankhede on Thursday afternoon.
A compact all-round show enabled Stafanie Taylor’s boisterous outfit to ward off its infamous ICC World T20 semifinal curse at the fourth time of asking. The women in Maroon will now take on the rampaging Southern Stars from Australia in Sunday’s final at the Eden.
The White Ferns from Kiwiland, like their male counterparts, won every group game but perished at the most inopportune of times. But, it was the West Indies’s day.
Promoted to No. 3, Britney Cooper smashed her way to a dazzling 61 off 48 balls (5x4, 2x6) as the West Indies posted a healthy 143 for the loss of six wickets on a dry surface.
Sara McGlashan (38, 39b, 2x4), Amy Satterthwaite (24, 29b, 1x4) and their fourth-wicket stand of 59 did worry the Windies, but the duo’s departure off successive deliveries put paid to New Zealand’s hopes.
Cooper came into this game with just 11 runs from three outings. Naturally, she was desperate to make amends on Thursday. The manner in which the busy 26-year-old right-hander from Trinidad took apart the Kiwi attack was simply awesome. Employing minimum risk, she negotiated both pace and spin with ease and ensured that the team had its nose in front after Morna Nielsen got rid of Hayley Matthews in the third over.
In a statement of intent, Cooper hit consecutive sixes off-spinner Leigh Kasperek in the 17th over. When on 48, she danced down the wicket and whacked the bowler over long-on. The very next ball, she smashed the white cherry over long-off.
Cooper stitched two crucial partnerships — 60 for the second wicket with Taylor (25, 26b, 2x4) and 44 for the next with Deandra Dottin (20, 17b, 2x4).
Kasperek, the leading wicket-taker in this edition of the tournament, went wicketless but the Kiwis couldn’t stop Sophie Devine from registering career-best figures of four for 22. Devine would contribute 22 (14b, 4x4) with the bat.
McGlashan and Satterthwaite rescued New Zealand from dire straits — 49 for three — but Taylor would bring her team back in the contest with her unique brand of ‘hopping’ off-spin to have both caught in the deep when the Kiwis needed 37 off four overs with enough wickets in hand.
New Zealand needed 30 off the last three, 25 off two and 19 off the final over. Windies sealed the match with another run-out to cap off a great day in the field.
The resulting celebrations would have put Gayle, Bravo and the rest to shame. Probably it was the ladies’ way of telling the men, “Over to you, now.”
The scores: West Indies 143 for six in 20 overs (Stafanie Taylor 25, Britney Cooper 61, Deandra Dottin 20, Sophie Devine four for 22) bt New Zealand 137 for eight in 20 overs (Sara McGlashan 38, Stafanie Taylor three for 26).
Toss: New Zealand Women.
Player-of-the-match: Britney Cooper.

Windies women defeat New Zealand to enter World T20 finals

West Indies made its maiden entry into the summit clash against three-time defending champions Australia at Kolkata on April 3. Photo: Vivek Bendre
West Indies made its maiden entry into the summit clash against three-time defending champions Australia at Kolkata on April 3.

 T20 World Cup 2016

West Indies women entered the finals the ICC World T20, beating New Zealand by 6 runs in an exciting second semifinal on Thursday.
Chasing a target of 144, New Zealand appeared to be cruising along till they lost a clutch of wickets and were stopped at 137 for 8 by West Indies, who made its maiden entry into the summit clash against three-time defending champions Australia at Kolkata on April 3. 
 
WIW 143/6 (20.0 Ovs)
NZW 137/8 (20.0 Ovs)
West Indies Women won by 6 runs
PLAYER OF THE MATCH
Britney Cooper

As it happened: West Indies enters finals

Simmons played a charmed innings.
Simmons played a charmed innings.
  • Jasprit Bumrah celebrates after dismissing Chris Gayle.
    Jasprit Bumrah celebrates after dismissing Chris Gayle.
  • Kohli plays a shot in Mumbai on Thursday.
    Kohli plays a shot in Mumbai on Thursday.
  • Ajinkya Rahane bats during their World Twenty20 semi-final match.
    Ajinkya Rahane bats during their World Twenty20 semi-final match.
Welcome to the over-by-over commentary of the semi-finals of the World Twenty20 championship between West Indies and India at the Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai. This is Sriram Srinivasan bringing you the updates.
What a powerful performance it has been by the West Indies team! That too, after Gayle’s early exit. Simmons, a late replacement for the injured Fletcher, won’t forget this innings in a hurry. He has scored 83 of 51 balls to put his team with a chance at winning the world T20 crown for the second time. Don’t forget how he was dismissed twice of no balls and was once caught by Jadeja while his foot was touching the boundary rope.
On the Indian side, what more could have Kohli done, especially after his stupendous batting and effective bowling. Shouldn’t Dhoni have brought him for his second over earlier? The captain may probably feel let down by both his spinners. In the end, the wicket did seem to be a batting paradise, one in which 192 wasn’t a good enough target. West Indies now plays England for the cup.
>> India has lost. Russell hits a six to seal the deal.
>> This is less edge-of-the-seat stuff than a nervous resignation to an impending West Indies win. Kohli bowls the last over.
>> For four balls, Jadeja seems to be bowling a dream 19th over, hardly letting anything go. On the fifth, Russell hits a length ball for six. And on the sixth, another four. The Windies need just eight of the last over. Can the Windies mess this up?
>> After 18 overs Can anyone get Simmons out today? After three fantastic dot balls by Bumrah, Simmons manages to hit him to the long on where Jadeja on the boundary edge catches the ball before lobbing it to Kohli. Only, Jadeja is found to have stepped on to the boundary rope. He is called back by the umpires for the third time today. Result: a six. Simmons ends the over with another boundary. 2 overs to go. 20 to win. India’s only hope is that West Indies messes this up.
>> After 17 overs Nehra ends his spell with a 10-run over, including a six that showed how powerful Russell is. It didn’t immediately seem as if he was in the right position for the shot nor did he time it as well as he would have liked it. Three to go, 32 runs to get. Run rates don’t matter anymore. India needs wickets. The match is West Indies’ to lose.
>> After 16 overs Why isn’t Kolhi bowling this over? Bumrah is given the ball and delivers a decent performance till Simmons spoils it all with a beautiful straight six. Four overs to go. 42 to win. Who does Dhoni go to now?
>> After 15 overs Simmons is playing a charmed innings. Twice he has been caught off a no ball. This time, the culprit is Pandya. And the free hit that follows it is dispatched nonchalantly over mid-wicket. West Indies quickly shrug off the Kohli over, and the momentum is back with them. 18 runs from this over, including 10 from Russell. One six hit from him was so long that even the umpire seemed in awe of it.
>> After 14 overs There is nothing that Virat Kohli can’t do, I hear on TV in the brief moment my eyes are off it. Dhoni throws the ball at him, and Kohli obliges first ball. Kohli is the unlikely wrecker of the brilliant partnership between Charles and Simmons. Charles departs. What more, Kohli gives away just four runs. For sure, he will get another over. He has to! What will West Indies do from here?
>> After 13 overs Ah, the Win Predictor now favours West Indies to win this one. Not only are Charles and Simmons working the target well and with momentum, India seems a bit clueless about this. Not many chances also being created. In fact, not one if I look beyond Bumrah’s catch of an Ashwin no ball. The stadium is quiet. And that’s quite another indicator. In the meantime, Simmons helps his team get 12 runs from a Jadeja over.
>> After 12 overs Charles gets his 50 but Pandya pulls it back a bit. Just seven of this over. 89 required from 48 balls now.
>> Simmons joining the party now. Jadeja is hit for a six and then a four by Simmons. 13 of the over. The required rate is coming down each over. Who will Dhoni turn to to turn the tide again in India’s favour?
>> Charles is putting his hand up for the Windies. He has repeated the six and four routine, with Pandya this time. Pandya beats Charles with some late movement but not before leaking 12 runs in the over. Charles has built some serious momentum now. Game on!
>> After nine overs, Who would have guessed prior to the match that the Windies would target Ashwin with relish. Charles does it on his team’s behalf, with a six over mid-wicket and a four. Ashwin’s economy rate is 10 after two overs. After nine overs, West Indies needs 121 from 11 overs. That's exactly 11 an over.
>> After eight overs, Hardik Pandya is now in operation, and is largely sticking to his short of a length zone. Eight runs of the over. India will take that gladly.
>> After seven overs, What a catch by Bumrah! No, wait. It’s off a no ball, and Simmons lives to play another delivery. Ashwin, off all bowlers, is the culprit. The following ‘free hit’ delivery yields nothing, as Ashwin tactically bowls wide of the batsman but of course not wide enough to be called so by the umpire.
>> Simmons hits Ravindra Jadeja’s third delivery for a handsome straight six. Eleven runs of the over. Enough momentum?
>> After five overs, Nehra is angry with himself for giving a short-pitch gift to Lendl Simmons, who dispatches it for a boundary. You have to give it to Nehra. What a comeback he has had at this age. In three overs, even after that boundary, he has given away just 15 runs.
>> After four overs, could Charles be that man? He scores two boundaries of Bumrah’s first two deliveries around the mid-wicket, fine leg regions. The rest of the over is quiet. West Indies has a mountain to climb. It definitely seems a mountain with Gayle not in the equation anymore.
>> Samuels plays a bizarre shot to get caught off Nehra. Three boundaries have been scored in the eleven balls since Bumrah bowled the magical full-lengther to get rid of Gayle. But the runs are far from being a big deal. With Gayle out, and now Samuels, can West Indies make a match of it?
>> Jasprit Bumrah is the man of the moment. He claims Gayle, clean bowled, off his first delivery. It’s a masterstroke by Dhoni. Ashwin was expected to bowl the second over. And Dhoni threw the ball at Bumrah! And the bowler hasn't given enough time for the commentators to debate whether it should have been Ashwin instead. India is clearly on top.
>> Gayle is known to show patience in the initial stages of an innings. So how long can you keep Gayle quiet? Nehra manages to do so for three balls before Gayle employs an elegant pull to earn his first boundary. Not much action beyond that.
>> Kohli was again unstoppable, ending unbeaten on 89 from a mere 47 balls. Actually, West Indies could have had him early. He could have been run out thrice in two balls. Two catches were missed. A charmed life?
The focus during the run up to this match was on just two players: Gayle and Kohli. The latter has delivered. Will Gayle do the same? Has India got enough on the board?
Who will bowl first for India? Who will Gayle face first? The crafty veteran Ashish Nehra? Or the versatile R. Ashwin?
>> After 20 overs, India 192/2. You can trust Kohli and Dhoni to run a three at the Wankhede stadium. Of course, it helped that there was an overthrown. But, what energy! Bravo does his best not to give any pace. Still, India ekes out 12 of that over. India makes 192 at the end of 20 overs.
Not a typical Wankhede wicket, says Rahane on TV. The ball was stopping a bit, especially when the slower bowlers were in operation, he suggests. That would be reassuring for India.
>> Kohli ups the rate and how! Two fours and a six off Russell, whose economy rate looks poor even by T20 standards. He has given away 19 in his last over. On another note, it’s such a treat to watch Kohli and Dhoni run between the wickets.
>> India may feel they aren’t on full gear, as Bravo keeps India’s tally from the 18th over to 11 runs. It would have been worse, if Brathwaite had pulled off what could have been a sensational catch to dismiss Kohli. His straight pull instead reached the ropes. He earns another boundary through a handsome drive.
>> Was it a sweep? Was it a scoop? Dhoni begins Brathwaite’s last over with, let’s say a sweepy scoop, for a boundary. Kohli effects a reluctant pull to the long-on region but not before a handsome pull for four. The over ends with a mis-hit to the third man boundary. This 17-run over is the gear shift India was looking for.
>> Indian fans would be expecting fireworks now, as Dhoni joins Kohli. That’s because Rahane is out trying to up the scoring rate, mistiming to the square leg boundary where Bravo takes the catch and breaks into a celebration. Just six runs from this Russell over. The gear shift hasn’t really come about. Just 24 more balls to go.
>> Both Kohli and Rahane are on 40 after the 15th over. Kohli beautifully slices, on the bounce, a full ball over two fielders in the point region for a boundary. But little joy for India apart from that one this over. Brathwaite concedes just seven in that over. That’s something!
>> This is better. Two eleven-run overs, back to back. Benn ends his quota wicketless, going for 36 runs. That doesn’t seem such a bad economy rate in a ground where 200-plus targets have been easily achieved.
>> India is doing well but is it enough. Boundaries seem hard to come by. Kohli gets one of Bravo finally in this over, after 17 deliveries. The ball is whipped to the square leg region where Russell tries in vain to keep the ball from getting to the boundary.
>> Seven runs an over at this stage wouldn’t bother West Indies much. So, they should be happy with Benn’s effort. It is over in a flash.
>> After 11 overs, India 91/1. It’s a no-boundary over from Brathwaite. The running between the wickets of this pair is superlative. India just adds five runs to end the eleventh over at 91 for one.
>> Badree ends his four-over spell without damaging his opponents further. Largely a quiet one but for a long hop, which is promptly pulled by Rahane for four.
>> Bravo’s first has enough drama. Kohli escapes getting run out thrice in two balls – yes THRICE! After getting beaten by a slower ball, Kohli cheekily tries a bye. Wicket-keeper Ramdin’s throw misses the stumps. Then, Bravo picks it up on the follow through and tries to thrown the stumps down. On both occasions, the target is missed by a whisker and Kohli lives on. The next delivery, Kohli comes back for a tight two and Ramdin fails to collect the throw cleanly. Kohli was clearly struggling. Could these be costly misses for the West Indies?
>> After 8, India 66-1. Badree strikes, removing Rohit Sharma with a straight one. That brings Kohli in. Badree keeps it tight, and India ends over eight at 66 for one.
>> After 7, India 62-0. Benn is back for a relatively quiet over – 7 runs this time. India gets to 62 without loss. It does seem an easy wicket for batsmen. So while the going is good for India, it would be worth pondering as to what would be a good score here. 200-plus scores have been easily surmounted here in earlier matches.
>> After six overs, India 55-0. The crowd has come alive in this over, as Sharma treats them to back-to-back sixers and backs it with a pull for a four. The first six was off a Russell delivery that was no-balled for being over the waist. The second six was a beauty, a straight six. India rush to 55 without loss at the end of powerplay.
>> So we know why Benn replaced Badree. The leg spinner skips an over to bowl from the other end. The scoreboard for India continues to tick, nonetheless. Rahane gets a boundary this time through the third man region, courtesy a miscued inside out shot. Bravo saves another boundary with some nifty footwork – he could well have collected it with his hands!
>> Two consecutive fours by Sharma of the 6 ft. 7 inch tall Sulieman Benn is the momentum India needed after a relatively quiet start. Eleven runs of that over. Can’t help feeling Badree should have continued.
>> After three overs, India 15-0. Carlos Brathwaite replaces Andre Russell and is promptly dispatched for six over long on by Sharma. Still, need more evidence that it’s a batsman’s paradise! India end the third over without much further fuss at 15-0.
>> Badree quickly gets his over done, as he always does. He bowls tightly – just four runs let in the second over – and for a moment has Sharma in some trouble with a googly. No damage for India, though.
>> Just two runs off the first over, one of them thanks to Samuel Badree’s misfield. It doesn’t seem as easy a batting surface as it was made out to be, on the evidence of the first six balls. Sharma was beaten by a ball that deviated off the pitch, and Rahane had some extra bounce to reckon with.
The anthems have been sung, and Rohit Sharma ready to face Andre Russell.
Sanjay Manjrekar says in his pitch report on TV that the pitch is full of runs. "It's a batting paradise." Pity the bowlers!
West Indies have brought in Gayle and Lendl Simmons – no surprises here. Evin Lewis misses out. And of course, Simmons was in for the injured Andre Fletcher.
The battle is between two Twenty20 teams filled with stars and yet how difficult is it not to keep the focus on just two of them: Chris Gayle and Virat Kohli. Yesterday, when asked about the Kohli factor, West Indies captain Darren Sammy couldn’t resist asking back, “…have you ever heard of Chris Gayle?”
But the other factor that had kept the energy levels in the pre-match chatter up was the absence of Yuvraj Singh owing to injury. It was seen as a toss up between right-handed batsman Manish Pandey and left-arm spinner Pawan Negi. Pandey has got a look in. India has also included Ajinkya Rahane in the place of Shikhar Dhawan.

Lucky Simmons sees West Indies through

SharLendl Simmons played a memorable innings to put paid to India's hopes in the semifinal of the ICC World T20.— PHOTO: VIVEK BENDRE
Lendl Simmons played a memorable innings to put paid to India's hopes in the semifinal of the ICC World T20.

Kohli’s heroics and India’s challenging total not enough to carry the day

No team has won a Twenty20 International at the Wankhede Stadium after losing the toss.
India made a strong case to reverse the trend, but Lendl Simmons had other ideas. West Indies won the World Twenty20 semifinal encounter by seven wickets and two balls to spare.
Man-of-the-match Simmons, who led a charmed life — twice out on a no ball — led the charge with a 51-ball 83 not out. His knock included seven fours and five sixes.
Andre Russell 43 (20b, 3x5, 4x6), who hit the winning run, gave Simmons good company from the 14th over when the West Indies was 116 for three.
Superb yorker
When Chris Gayle went for 5 done in by a superb yorker by Jasprit Bumrah, India hopes soared.
Bumrah then thought he had Simmons of a low catch off Ashwin only to realise the offie had bowled a no-ball.
That turned out to be a turning point of the game, for Simmons led West Indies through to its second final of the tournament.
India put up a challenging total thanks to a cohesive top-order effort led by the unstoppable Virat Kohli, by putting on 192 for two.
With the West Indies having made easy meat of a target of 183 set by England in the group stage, it may not look like much.
Surprise selection
India began the evening by springing a surprise, roping in Ajinkya Rahane in a struggling Shikhar Dhawan’s place instead of including Manish Pandey in place of the injured Yuvraj Singh.
The move came as a surprise since Rahane had been warming the bench all through the league stage.
However, the Mumbai batsman played his role to perfection by holding up one end and letting Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli take the attack to the opposition.
After a relatively sedate start, Sharma took on Andre Russell in the last of the PowerPlay overs.
The stylish batsman pulled a high full-toss over backward square and followed it up with a lofted six to the right of the sightscreen off what was a free hit. The over yielded 20 runs, resulting in India’s best PowerPlay total of the tournament — 55 for no loss.
When Sharma was trapped in front by Samuel Badree just when he was set to cut loose, in came Kohli, in the eighth over.
This was the latest he was taking guard in the tournament but such stupendous form was he in that at the end of the innings, Kohli had not only registered his highest score in WT20s but found himself just one run short of his personal best of 90 in T20Is.
The secret of India’s huge total did not lie in the 17 fours and four sixes the four batsmen combined to get, but the number of ones and twos they ran.
That the innings saw only 26 dot balls speaks a lot about the manner in which the Indians sprinted between wickets.
The last over also elucidated it, with Dhoni and Kohli — whose unbeaten 27-ball 64-run association saw just one dot ball — adding 12 runs despite hitting just one boundary.
 
IND 192/2 (20.0 Ovs)
WI 196/3 (19.4 Ovs)
West Indies won by 7 wkts
PLAYER OF THE MATCH
Lendl Simmons

Wednesday 30 March 2016

New Zealand Women vs West Indies Women, 2nd Semi-Final

Windies women have the wherewithal to stun New Zealand

 Series: ICC Womens World T20, 2016 Venue: Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai Date & Time: Mar 31,  02:30 PM  LOCAL 

  • Stafanie Taylor at the press conference on Wednesday.
  • New Zealand cricket team captain Suzie Bates. Photo: Vivek Bendre
    New Zealand cricket team captain Suzie Bates.
On one side, you have a two-time finalist. And, on the other, there is a perennial semifinalist.
This means that either New Zealand or the West Indies will suffer another dose of heartbreak at the Wankhede on Thursday. Then again, those are the kind of emotions you associate an enormous contest like an ICC Women’s World Twenty20 semifinal with. Bring it on!
Much like their male counterparts, the ‘White Ferns’ won all their group matches, including the big-ticket game against Australia in which off-spinner Leigh Kasperek bowled an astonishing first spell to reduce the arch-rival to an unbelievable four for four in four overs!
Apart from that stunning performance in Nagpur, Suzie Bates’s side notched up wins over Sri Lanka, Ireland and South Africa.
Never mind the logistical nightmare the team underwent at one stage of the tournament in which it had to undertake a ‘Bharat Darshan’ of sorts to cover the 1,200-km distance from Chandigarh to Nagpur.
‘Good vibes’
Up against New Zealand will be a bustling bunch from the Caribbean. On Wednesday, the West Indies skipper Stefanie Taylor spoke of the “good vibes” she felt during the team’s training session.
For a team that’s stumbled at the last-four stage on no less than three occasions in this tournament, those positive sensations mean a lot.
If nothing, they indicate the team’s desire to go one step closer to the trophy. With three wins, including a defining one against Mithali Raj’s India, the West Indies have the wherewithal to stun New Zealand.
The boundary ropes have been brought in by a few yards, and with the pitch expected to play true, the ladies will be expected to play out a relatively high-scoring afternoon game. The same pitch will be used for the men’s semifinal in the evening.
Both Bates and Taylor acknowledged the contribution of their respective men’s teams in terms of cricketing advice and motivation.
While Bates thanked Brendon McCullum for always being there, Taylor left the media in splits by declaring that “Chris Gayle is a hard guy to find”.
She, however, expressed her gratitude to Darren Sammy, who she said makes it a point to talk to the girls every now and then.

Australia stays on course for fourth

Meg Lanning (left) and her team are an happy lot after besting England in the first semifinal on Wednesday.

 T20 World Cup 2016

Chasing 133 for victory, England’s batting capitulates to fall short by by five runs

There are matches that teams win. And then there are games that teams contrive to lose, inexplicably, from a position of strength.
The England women’s team would place firmly in the second category after its World T20 semifinal against defending champion Australia, imploding miserably to lose by five runs here on Wednesday.
The last time the two met in the semifinals of the competition, England had come off the winner, going on to lift the title in the inaugural edition on 2009. There was to be no repeat this time as the unbeaten side’s middle order was exposed brutally by the Aussies, who booked their fourth straight final spot. Chasing 133, England was only able to reach 127 for seven in 20 overs with a combination of nerves of reckless shots.
Aggressive skipper
Australia captain Meg Lanning, named Player of the Match, had said her team would be aggressive and she stuck to her promise both with the bat and the ball. Her 50-ball 55 was the highlight of the Aussie innings and her two brilliant catches to dismiss well-set England openers Charlotte Edwards and Tamsin Beaumont ensured the chase would not materialise.
England elected to field on a good batting wicket and it looked for a while that Charlotte had taken the right call before her batters failed to cope with the pressure of the climbing run rate.
Despite Lanning’s innings, and a quick start by openers Alyssa Healy and Elyse Villani, Australia would have felt at least 15 runs short, thanks mainly to some exceptional fielding from the English including two direct run outs from the deep by Natalie Scriver and and Anya Shrubsole, the latter sending back Lanning.
England’s chase disintegrated in the last seven overs, going from 61 for no loss in nine overs to 127 for seven in 20, losing six wickets for just 39 runs. Australia fought back to prove why it is a three-time defending champion, diving around to save runs and bowling a tight line that forced England to go for the big shots.
Those came off occasionally but more often than not, found a fielder in the deep. Edwardsand Beaumont farmed the field, the placing and timing of their shots a delight to watch.
Batting looked easy and everything Lanning tried in terms of fielding and bowling changes was swept away. With 17 extras, it looked like England would finally exact revenge for its previous two losses in the final.
That wasn’t to be as Lanning stepped up to finally break the partnership with a brilliant catch at mid-off to dismiss her opposite number in the 10th over.
The scoring rate dropped but the runs kept coming till Beaumont was at the crease before Lanning, running in from cover, dived in front to snap up another catch.
The rest of the batting just couldn’t measure up to the job at hand as Ellyse Perry and Co. tightened the screws to keep the Southern Stars shining.
The scores: Australia 132 for six in 20 overs (Meg Lanning 55, Alyssa Healy 25; Natalie Sciver two for 22) bt England 127 for seven in 20 overs (Tamsin Beaumont 32, Charlotte Edwards 31; Megan Schutt two for 15) by five runs. Player-of-the-match: Meg Lanning.

AUSW 132/6 (20.0 Ovs)
ENGW 127/7 (20.0 Ovs)
Australia Women won by 5 runs
PLAYER OF THE MATCH
Meg Lanning

2nd semifinal: Another run feast on the cards


West Indies vs India, 2nd Semi-Final 

Series: ICC World T20, 2016 Venue: Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai Date & Time: Mar 31,  07:00 PM  LOCAL
In a tournament that has so far been dominated by low-scoring wickets, where the ball has stopped and turned rather than coming on to the bat, the Wankhede track has been the biggest exception.
They came into the World Twenty20 on the back of contrasting build-ups. While India was identifying potential match-winners during a string of T20 internationals ahead of the marquee event, its Caribbean counterpart was involved in a long-drawn payment dispute with the administrators. While the Indian team was trying out various combinations, the West Indies players were mulling pull-outs.
When it came to the big stage, however, the two teams’ journey to the semifinals has been paradoxical in another way. India stuttered at the start and was fortunate in the middle, before relying on its key batsman for scraping into the semifinals. The Caribbeans, on the other hand, started off in a rampaging manner and stumbled only after sealing a last-four spot.
No wonder then that the semifinal face-off between both the teams will be billed as the battle between method and madness; panache and power; host and hunter.
If India has Virat Kohli’s flair, the West Indies has been relying heavily on Chris Gayle’s robust hitting at the top of the order. If India has Ashish Nehra’s experience to bank on, the West Indies has relied on Andre Russell’s surprise elements. If India has Jasprit Bumrah’s yorkers at the death, the Caribbeans have banked on Dwayne Bravo’s variations. It's a team game, says Gambhir
As Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Darren Sammy will walk out for the toss at the Wankhede Stadium, hoping that it won’t be the last time for them in national colours, they will realise that besides the headaches that have cropped due to a major injury in each set-up, they will have to deal with a tricky Wankhede wicket. Pandey replaces Yuvraj
In a tournament that has so far been dominated by low-scoring wickets, where the ball has stopped and turned rather than coming on to the bat, the Wankhede track has been the biggest exception. All the three games at the stadium, in the league stage, saw teams scoring at above eight runs an over. However, none of those three games, including the West Indies’ tournament opener against England which saw Gayle score a stunning hundred, was played on the centre wicket.
The centre strip, usually reserved for India games at the Wankhede, will be used for the first time in this tournament. The fact that the curators preferred to expose it under the baking sun all through Wednesday could result in it starting to break down as the double-header progresses on Thursday.
That aside, both the teams will have a common concern to address. That of their middle and lower middle order batsmen’s performance with the willow. While India’s batting unit has been heavily reliant on Kohli all through the league stage, there has hardly been anything to talk about the rest of the batting line-up, including openers Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma.
West Indies, on the other hand, couldn’t bank on its prolonged battery of all-rounders as all of them faltered when put under pressure, especially against a decent spin attack. As a result, both the bowling units will be hoping for early breakthroughs to keep the opponent under check.
If that doesn’t happen, while the packed Wankhede crowd will enjoy a run feast, it could put either team in serious trouble of keeping alive its chances of lifting the trophy for the second time.
HEAD TO HEAD
Overall
Played 4, India 2, West Indies 2
In World Twenty20
Played 3, India 1, West Indies 2
PITCH & WEATHER
With back-to-back games to be played, the strip will obviously get slower as the day progresses. It would be interesting to see if it turns out to be a belter which it was during the league stage. Lesser said about the Mumbai heat, even in the evenings, the better.
KEYS TO SUCCESS
Royal challenge
They are team-mates in the IPL. They both shoulder the heavy burden of expectations from their respective batting sides. And their teams have been trying to not let their respective units as a one-man army. The fact, however, remains that Virat Kohli and Chris Gayle hold the key to India and West Indies’ success, especially in the shortest format. Who will end up justifying his reputation on Thursday?
A-B power
T20 cricket is synonymous with big-hitters. However, R. Ashwin and Samuel Badree have consistently tied up opposition batsmen, especially while bowling with the new ball. In fact, they have made early inroads even in World T20. As a result, Ashwin’s duel with Gayle and Badree’s battle against Kohli could well be defining moments during the semifinal.
Star replacement?
Both the teams have suffered a major injury blow in the lead-up to the semifinals. India has brought in Manish Pandey in place of Yuvraj Singh and the West Indies has replaced Andre Fletcher with Lendl Simmons. While it’s a fairly easy choice for the West Indies, with Simmons set to open the batting with Gayle, India is in a conundrum to replace Yuvraj with either Ajinkya Rahane or Pandey or left-arm spinner Pawan Negi, who can hit lusty blows. Whoever it is, the performance of the replacement players will hold the key to the team’s success.
The teams (from):
India: Mahendra Singh Dhoni (captain, wk), Rohit Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina, Manish Pandey, Ravindra Jadeja, Hardik Pandya, R. Ashwin, Jasprit Bumrah, Ashish Nehra, Ajinkya Rahane, Mohammed Shami, Pawan Negi and Harbhajan Singh.
West Indies: Darren Sammy (captain), Chris Gayle, Johnson Charles, Marlon Samuels, Lendl Simmons, Dwayne Bravo, Andre Russell, Carlos Brathwaite, Denesh Ramdin (wk), Samuel Badree, Sulieman Benn, Jason Holder, Evin Lewis, Ashley Nurse and Jerome Taylor.

What decides India-West Indies T20 matches?

India will face West Indies in the second semifinal at Wankhede in Mumbai on Thursday.
India will face West Indies in the second semifinal at Wankhede in Mumbai on Thursday.

A look at what decides India-West Indies Twenty20 matches ahead of the semifinal.

As India versus West Indies World T20 championships 2016 semifinal will be played in Mumbai on Thursday, we will have a look at some of the interesting aspects between the teams.
A look at what decides India-West Indies Twenty20 matches ahead of the semifinal.
India wins every time
>> When Virat Kohli bats at No.3
>> When Badree's first three ovrs yield four boundaries
>> When it makes more than 45 in the powerplay
>> When West Indies is led by Darren Sammy
West Indies wins every time
>>When Chris Gayle hits at least four fours
>> When two or more wickets fall in the powerplay
>> When it dismisses Rohit Sharma for 5.
>> When it forces M.S. Dhoni out to bat
Head to Head: India 2, West Indies 2
Ground Reality: No one knows what's safe at the Wankhede. Targets of 183 and 230 have proven inadequate this tournament.
Average first-innings score: 206.7
Average second innings score: 195
West Indies captain Darren Sammy said: "As I said, it is six steps to the Cup. We have taken four. We had little potholes in the road, but we have dusted ourselves off.
Ravi Shastri, Indian Team Director said: We have played to 70 per cent of our abilities in this tournament. So there's still 30 per cent in areas we need to improve.

Roy's 78 sets up England charge to final

England 159 for 3 (Roy 78) beat New Zealand 153 for 8 (Munro 46, Stokes 3-26) by seven wickets

NZ 153/8 (20.0 Ovs)
ENG 159/3 (17.1 Ovs)
England won by 7 wkts
PLAYER OF THE MATCH

English cricket's makeover has delivered a place in the World Twenty20 final in Kolkata on Sunday. New Zealand's first defeat of the tournament, by seven wickets with 17 balls to spare, ended their involvement. Instead, it is England, an adventurous England freed of old baggage, who lie in wait for the winners of Thursday's semi-final between India and West Indies in Mumbai.
Jason Roy electrified England's reply to New Zealand's far-from-imposing 153 for 8, his 78 from 44 balls ended by Ish Sodhi's dragged-down legbreak that beat his advance down the pitch and crashed into the timber. "I've got to realise I'm not a robot," Roy said earlier in the tournament. He is precisely the opposite. At his best, he is humanity at its most tempestuous - a mini adrenalin rush - and his first T20I half-century, perfectly timed at the 13th attempt, was the second fastest in England T20 history as he racked it up in 26 balls.
There was wildness about the four boundaries he took from the first over from Corey Anderson, but he middled the ball with increasing certainty, tattooed forearms whirring. A sumptuous straight drive against Mitchell McClenaghan possessed particular poise. After such a scintillating start, he could have reined himself in against Mitchell Santner's left-arm slows, such has been Santner's effectiveness throughout the tournament, but instead despatched him with successive straight drive and sweep.
This was England's third appearance at Delhi - New Zealand, by contrast, had toured the country and were playing at their fifth different venue - and, much to their liking, the Kotla pitch became quicker with each appearance. New Zealand brought in in an extra pace bowler, Adam Milne instead of Nathan McCullum, but England prospered.
England's three group-stage victories had all been keen affairs, wins by two wickets, 15 runs and 10 runs. When New Zealand were 89 for 1 at halfway, they must have anticipated being stretched to the limit in chasing something close to 200. To be met by nearly 50 less, especially with New Zealand's most talented pace bowlers, Tim Southee and Trent Boult, again omitted as they have been all tournament, was an immense relief.
The architects of New Zealand's fade out were Ben Stokes and Chris Jordan. Stokes finished with the best figures, 3 for 26, relishing his good fortune as he took wickets with successive full tosses, but it was Jordan, eyes as wide as if he was peering into a coal cellar and gold chain dangling, who once again displayed solidity beneath the bling.
Roy's opening partner, Alex Hales, once the epitome of licentious attack, is now an old hand by comparison, a batsman who likes a quiet little look at the top of the innings: they shared a stand of 82 in 8.1 before Hales perished at long-on. Eoin Morgan, once credited with changing England's one-day batting approach, is almost formulaic by comparison: he was lbw to Sodhi's legbreak propping forward, another first-baller to go with the one against Afghanistan, his uncertain run overshadowed by England's growth under his leadership.
England, at 110 for 3 in 12.2, needed less than a run a ball and Joe Root and Jos Buttler were shrewd enough to settle matters. In Sodhi's last over they suddenly decided the celebrations had waited long enough - 22 followed; another pulled six from Buttler at the start of the next over gave him three in four balls and took England to Kolkata.
New Zealand had lost only one wicket in the Powerplay but it was the one England will have most craved. Martin Guptill, rested from New Zealand's last match because of the hint of a hamstring strain, stayed leg side of the ball to counter David Willey's inswing, and twice bludgeoned him for off-side boundaries in the opening over, but the tactic proved his undoing in the first ball of Willey's second over as he flayed a catch on the angle to the wicketkeeper.
With a little more sharpness in the field from England, New Zealand might have been more hamstrung than their Powerplay score of 51 for 1 indicated. Morgan might have run out Guptill third ball had he picked up cleanly as he bore down from mid-off; Liam Plunkett's leg-stump loosener fell to Rashid on the half volley, diving forward at short fine; and there was the hint of a stumping chance for Buttler, too, as Kane Williamson was beaten by Rashid's leg-side wide. Generally, though, their outfielding was brisk and purposeful.
Munro, an ungainly, gum-chewing slugger, served New Zealand well with 46 from 32. The left-hander had little subtlety about him but his danger was evident as he arose from his crouch to batter the leg side. Stokes was not best pleased when two thick edges disappeared through Munro's legs for fine-leg boundaries: it was not a time for trick shots.
Munro's murderous reputation against spinners left Morgan grateful for the options in a six-strong attack. Moeen Ali did briefly appear for two overs immediately after halfway to remove Williamson with a skied return catch. Then Plunkett found an answer to Munro, directing his pace as wide outside off stump as he dared. Munro flayed and Moeen took a neat catch at third man. Plunkett allowed himself a sniff of contentment.
Then came England's final squeeze. The pitch had enough life to encourage back-of-the-length options with the new ball, and the addition of two reliable death overs gave Jordan 1 for 24. New Zealand failed to score off half his deliveries and he took two safe catches in the outfield for good measure. He has arisen from uncertain beginnings to be a key player in this tournament.
The lark, though, belonged to Stokes. He was again given two England death overs because of a combative nature and ability to deliver a mean yorker. Such skills momentarily deserted him as he delivered two successive full tosses, but he was celebrating all the same as Luke Ronchi and Corey Anderson both fell to outfield catches. The sense then was that it would be England's day.

Tuesday 29 March 2016

Australia Women vs England Women, 1st Semi-Final

England will look to break the spell   

Series: ICC Womens World T20, 2016 Venue: Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi Date & Time: Mar 30,  02:30 PM  LOCAL  
An edge over the opposition: Having won its last two league games at the same venue, Australia has the advantage over England of being more acclimatised to both the conditions and the surface. Photo: Sandeep Saxena
An edge over the opposition: Having won its last two league games at the same venue, Australia has the advantage over England of being more acclimatised to both the conditions and the surface. Photo: Sandeep Saxena
And with the English men and women playing their semifinals of the World T20 here on Wednesday, albeit against different opponents, Charlotte Edwards’s girls will be hoping to not only avenge their defeat to Australia in the previous two editions, but also set a template for the men to follow.
The England and Australian women have faced each other in a World T20 title clash in the last two editions, with the Southern Stars emerging winners on both occasions. In terms of T20I results, though, England has the upper hand, having won 14 of its 24 battles with Australia.
The world’s top-two ranked sides have quite a history between them and neither has made a secret of its intent to continue the same.
England has been unbeaten in the competition so far despite a few scares, including against host India, and Charlotte knows the team will have to be on top of its game in every department if it has to have a chance of bettering its record against the defending champion.
Having won its last two league games at the same venue, with a dominant performance, Meg Lanning-led Australia has the advantage of being more acclimatised to both the conditions and the surface.
Barring the blip against New Zealand, Australia’s bowling has struck consistently. The only issue for the team will be its untested middle order.
England, on the other hand, has been hugely reliant on veteran captain Charlotte Edwards, the side’s top-scorer, and tournament’s joint-top, so far.
It has the seam attack to make any batting uncomfortable, but is matched in that department.
“We weren’t favourites to win the semifinal in 2009 so this is a similar kind of situation and I hope to have a similar result,” Charlotte admitted, making no secret of her wish for Wednesday.
England as host had won the first meeting between the two in the competition seven years back, though a lot of water has flown under the bridge since.
With both sides promising to play hard, aggressive cricket “on the front foot” as Lanning said, it would be a delight for the fans.

England vs New Zealand, 1st Semi-Final

A battle of equals at the Kotla

Series: ICC World T20, 2016 Venue: Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi Date & Time: Mar 30,  07:00 PM  LOCAL 
Kane Williamson
Kane Williamson

Form favours the Kiwis, familiarity points to the Englishmen

When this edition of the World T20 began, not many would have backed New Zealand and England to clash for a place in the final.
Better balanced teams like Australia and South Africa, consisting of some of the most accomplished performers in the shortest format of the game, have returned home. This only goes to prove that, sometimes, a resilient bunch is better than a reputed one.
Creditably, New Zealand and England have covered the distance in impressive ways. The Kiwis, the only unbeaten side so far, are ready for an upbeat England which has won its last three games.
On form, New Zealand begins as the obvious favourite, having won four matches – all batting first – at four different venues. England, softened up by the West Indies in the opener, made its presence felt by chasing down 229 against South Africa and never looked back.
New Zealand, powered mainly by the pyrotechnics of opener Martin Guptill, has not scored big in most of its matches while playing on pitches assisting spin. England’s batting has come good in three games, while its bowlers underlined their presence in the last two matches at the Kotla.
Therefore, in a limited sense, England is playing a ‘home’ game, knowing the conditions much better than New Zealand. Ben Stokes, the Christchurch-born all-rounder who bowled an excellent final over in England’s 10-run victory over Sri Lanka, summed up England’s approach.
“We’re not going into this game thinking we’ve won it already, because we know New Zealand are the form team and they’re hard to beat, especially in this format at the moment. It’s going to be tough to get out into the middle and try and perform our skills against the form side. But, if we can perform anything like we have done over the last two games, we should do well.”
New Zealand’s tactics of trying out 13 players and resting pacemen Trent Boult and Tim Southee have worked well, with spinners Mitchell Santner and Ish Sodhi turning out to be the surprise weapons. It will be interesting to see how the Kiwi duo performs against a line-up that has stroke-makers like Jason Roy, Alex Hales, Joe Root and Jos Buttler, not to forget skipper Eoin Morgan.
On the other hand, the England bowlers seem to be getting better with every match. However, the Kiwis bat deep, though several of their explosive batsmen are yet to come good in this competition. Against Pakistan, after Guptill set the pace, the lower-order batsmen did their job reasonably well as the team crossed the 150-run mark for the first time.
It will be a good contest between the New Zealand batsmen and the England bowlers, should the former bat first for the fifth straight time.
It will also be interesting if England bats first and sets a target, taking New Zealand out of its comfort zone of putting runs on the board and defending them. Though chasing is not such a bad option on the Kotla pitch, it is
likely that, given a choice, New Zealand will take first strike.
Overall, a battle of equals with form pointing to New Zealand and familiarity England.
The teams (from):
New Zealand: Kane Williamson (capt.), Martin Guptill, Colin Munro, Ross Taylor, Corey Anderson, Grant Elliott, Luke Ronchi (wk), Mitchell Santner, Ish Sodhi, Mitchell McClenaghan, Nathan McCullum, Trent Boult, Tim Southee, Henry Nicholls, and Adam Milne.
England: Eoin Morgan (capt.), Alex Hales, Jason Roy, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan, Jos Buttler (wk), Moeen Ali, Adil Rashid, Chris Jordan, David Willey, Liam Plunkett, James Vince, Reece Topley, Liam Dawson, and Sam Billings.

Monday 28 March 2016

Final Fixture of Women Semifinal

Mar 30, Wed
09:00 AM GMT / 02:30 PM LOCAL
 
Mar 31, Thu
09:00 AM GMT / 02:30 PM LOCAL
 
Apr 03, Sun
TBC vs TBC, Final
Eden Gardens, Kolkata
09:00 AM GMT / 02:30 PM LOCAL

Final Point table for Women


Points Table                  
                   
Group A                  
                   
Teams Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
New Zealand Women 4 4 0 0 0 8 2.43 492/66.4 396/80.0
Australia Women 4 3 1 0 0 6 0.613 425/69.3 420/76.2
Sri Lanka Women 4 2 2 0 0 4 -0.24 476/80.0 455/73.3
South Africa Women 4 1 3 0 0 2 0.173 461/80.0 408/73.0
Ireland Women 4 0 4 0 0 0 -2.817 379/80.0 554/73.2
                   
Group B                  
                   
Teams Mat Won Lost Tied N/R Pts Net RR For Against
England Women 4 4 0 0 0 8 1.417 502/79.0 395/80.0
West Indies Women 4 3 1 0 0 6 0.688 473/80.0 418/80.0
Pakistan Women 4 2 2 0 0 4 -0.673 370/72.3 439/76.0
India Women 4 1 3 0 0 2 0.79 439/76.0 374/75.0
Bangladesh Women 4 0 4 0 0 0 -2.306 420/80.0 578/76.3