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Men's T20 World Cup 2009

Men's T20 World Cup 2009

England
তথ্যাদি
Dates5 June – 21 June 2009
AdministratorInternational Cricket Council
Cricket formatTwenty20 International
Tournament format(s)Group stage and knockout
HostEngland
ChampionsPakistan (1st title)
Runners-upSri Lanka
Participants12 (from 16 entrants)
Matches27
Attendance579,975 (21,481 per match)
Player of the seriesTillakaratne Dilshan
Most runsTillakaratne Dilshan (317)
Most wicketsUmar Gul (13)
Official websitewww.icc-cricket.com
The 2009 ICC World Twenty20 was the second edition of the Men's T20 World Cup, formerly known as the ICC World Twenty20 that took place in England in June 2009. As before, the tournament featured 12 male teams – nine of the ten Test-playing nations and three associate nations, which earned their places through a qualification tournament. ICC Full member Zimbabwe were expelled from the tournament due to political reasons. Matches were played at three English grounds – Lord's and The Oval in London, and Trent Bridge in Nottingham. The tournament was organised in parallel with the women's tournament, with the men's semi-finals and final being preceded by the semi-finals and final from the women's event. The final took place at Lord's on Sunday 21 June with Pakistan beating Sri Lanka by eight wickets and England beating New Zealand by six wickets in the women's final.

Background

In June 2006, The Daily Telegraph reported that the Marylebone Cricket Club and Surrey CCC had put in a joint bid to host the tournament at Lord's and The Oval. In December 2007, the ICC provisionally approved a Women's World Twenty20 to run alongside the men's event which, subject to the approval of the ICC's finance and commercial affairs committee, would come into effect for the 2009 tournament in England. In early January 2008, speculation arose that the tournament could be held elsewhere as the British government have banned Zimbabwe from touring England in 2009. However, it was later confirmed that the tournament would definitely take place in the country. In April 2008, the third venue was confirmed as Nottingham's Trent Bridge; the 17,500 seater stadium was chosen to hold one of the semi-finals, among other earlier matches. Lord's and The Oval are the two other confirmed venues, with the opening match and final being played at Lord's. Old Trafford Cricket Ground had bid for the third venue, but Trent Bridge was chosen for its closer proximity to the two London grounds.

Qualification

Teams from every ICC Region : Bangladesh , India , Pakistan , Sri Lanka East Asia-Pacific (2) Australia , New Zealand England (host) , Ireland , Netherlands , Scotland Although early reports suggested the 2009 event may involve just eight teams in a nine-day event, the full twelve-team tournament was confirmed, featuring the Test-playing nations and two qualifying associate nations. However, in July 2008 Zimbabwe, under pressure from South Africa and England over political matters related to Robert Mugabe, pulled out of the tournament of their own volition, creating an additional space for an associate nation. Qualification was achieved by the finalists of an ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier held in Belfast from 2–4 August 2008, between Kenya, Scotland, Ireland, Netherlands, Canada and Bermuda. Ireland and the Netherlands, having reached the final, qualified outright, while Scotland won the third place playoff beating Kenya to also qualify.

Venues

The matches were played at the following three grounds:

NottinghamLondonLondon
Trent BridgeLord'sThe Oval
Capacity: 17,500Capacity: 28,000Capacity: 23,500
Trent BridgeThe OvalLord's

Rules and regulations

During the group stage and Super Eight, points are awarded to the teams as follows: In case of a tie (i.e. both teams score the same number of runs at the end of their respective innings), a Super Over decides the winner. This applies in all stages of the tournament. Within each group (both group stage and Super Eight stage), teams are ranked against each other based on the following criteria:

ResultPoints
Win2 points
No result1 point
Loss0 points

Groups

The groups were announced on 31 October 2007, based on finishing positions at the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 and the successful qualifying associate nations. The initial four group format is the same as that used at the 2007 tournament. Team seed in brackets.

Group A India (1) , Bangladesh (8) , Ireland (9)Group B Pakistan (2) , England (7) , Netherlands (10)Group C Australia (3) , Sri Lanka (6) , West Indies (11)Group D New Zealand (4) , South Africa (5) , Scotland (12)

Match officials

The International Cricket Council announced the officials for the group stages of tournament on 28 May 2009. The officials for Super-8 stage, knockout stage and final were revealed later. Appointments were also made for the men's and women's warm-up matches at Lord's, The Oval and Trent Bridge from June 1–3. Umpiring duties was shared by all twelve members of the Elite Panel of ICC Umpires along with 4 members from the ICC International umpire panel. The three match referees selected were members of the Panel of ICC Referees, and were responsible for all matches.

UmpirePanel
Mark BensonElite
Billy BowdenElite
Aleem DarElite
Steve DavisElite
Asoka de SilvaElite
Billy DoctroveElite
Ian GouldElite
Daryl HarperElite
Tony HillElite
Rudi KoertzenElite
Asad RaufElite
Simon TaufelElite
Marais ErasmusInternational
Nigel LlongInternational
Amiesh SahebaInternational
Rod TuckerInternational
Referee
Chris Broad
Alan Hurst
Ranjan Madugalle

Warm-up matches

Bangladesh won the toss and chose to field. Bangladesh won the toss and chose to bat. Bangladesh won the toss and chose to bat. Chairman's XI won the toss and chose to field. Chairman's XI won the toss and chose to field. Bangladesh won the toss and chose to bat. New Zealand won the toss and chose to field. Ireland won the toss and chose to bat. Scotland won the toss and chose to field. Netherlands won the toss and chose to field. PCA Masters XI won the toss and chose to field. Bangladesh won the toss and chose to field. Ireland won the toss and chose to bat. New Zealand won the toss and chose to bat. Scotland won the toss and chose to bat. Australia won the toss and chose to bat. Netherlands won the toss and chose to bat. India won the toss and chose to field. South Africa won the toss and chose to bat. Ireland won the toss and chose to bat. Bangladesh won the toss and chose to bat. New Zealand won the toss and chose to bat. Scotland won the toss and chose to bat. South Africa won the toss and chose to field. Netherlands won the toss and chose to field. West Indies won the toss and chose to bat. Pakistan won the toss and chose to bat. South Africa won the toss and chose to bat.

12 May 2009 Scorecard
Bangladesh A129/6 (20 overs)vBangladesh123/7 (20 overs)
Nafees Iqbal 35 (39) Abdur Razzak 2/21 (4 overs)Junaid Siddique 33 (27) Mahmudullah 2/13 (4 overs)
Bangladesh A won by 6 runs Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur Umpires: Abdullah Al Matin (Ban) and Gazi Sohel (Ban)
13 May 2009 Scorecard
Bangladesh 133/9 (20 overs)vBangladesh A134/4 (19.4 overs)
Tamim Iqbal 66 (52) Mehrab Hossain, Jr. 2/12 (2 overs)Mehrab Hossain, Jr. 48 (45) Syed Rasel 3/25 (4 overs)
Bangladesh A won by 6 wickets Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur Umpires: Abdullah Al Matin (Ban) and Gazi Sohel (Ban)
14 May 2009 Scorecard
Bangladesh 140/7 (20 overs)vBangladesh A91 (16.5 overs)
Mohammad Mithun 25 (20) Sharifullah 2/12 (3 overs)Hannan Sarkar 32 (31) Shakib Al Hasan 3/35 (4 overs)
Bangladesh won by 49 runs Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur Umpires: Abdullah Al Matin (Ban) and Aflajur Rahman (Ban)
20 May 2009 Scorecard
Pakistan Cricket Board Patron's XI143/3 (20 overs)vPakistan Cricket Board Chairman's XI145/3 (18 overs)
Salman Butt 60 (53) Wahab Riaz 1/16 (3 overs)Shahzaib Hasan 39 (28) Yasir Shah 2/28 (4 overs)
Chairman's XI won by 7 wickets Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Umpires: Shozab Raza (Pak) and Zameer Haider (Pak)
21 May 2009 Scorecard
Pakistan Cricket Board Chairman's XI145/8 (20 overs)vPakistan Cricket Board Patron's XI142/4 (20 overs)
Mohammad Hafeez 79 (57) Shoaib Malik 2/25 (4 overs)Shoaib Malik 71 (62) Iftikhar Anjum 2/24 (4 overs)
Chairman's XI won by 3 runs Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Umpires: Nadeem Ghauri (Pak) and Rasheed Bhatti (Pak)
22 May 2009 Scorecard
Pakistan Cricket Board Patron's XI154/5 (20 overs)vPakistan Cricket Board Chairman's XI158/5 (19.3 overs)
Ahmed Shehzad 58 (48) Mohammad Hafeez 1/18 (2 overs)Nasir Jamshed 50* (39) Sohail Tanvir 2/29 (4 overs)
Chairman's XI won by 5 wickets Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Umpires: Akram Raza (Pak) and Ehtesham-ul-Haq (Pak)
26 May 2009 18:00 Scorecard
Bangladesh 146/6 (20 overs)vNew Zealand147/6 (20 overs)
Mahmudullah 43 (41) Ian Butler 2/32 (4 overs)Martin Guptill 61 (42) Shakib Al Hasan 1/15 (4 overs)

Group A

India won the toss and elected to bat. Ireland won the toss and elected to field. , Bangladesh were eliminated, India and Ireland qualified for the Super 8s as a result. India won the toss and elected to field. , Rain prior to the match delayed the start and shortened the game to 18 overs a side.

Group B

Netherlands won the toss and elected to field. , Adil Rashid, Eoin Morgan, James Foster, Rob Key (all Eng), Dirk Nannes, Alexei Kervezee and Bas Zuiderent (all Neth) made their T20I debuts. Pakistan won the toss and elected to field. , England go through to the Super 8 stage as a result of this match. , Mohammad Amir (Pak) made his T20I debut and international debut. Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat. , Netherlands were eliminated, Pakistan go through to the Super 8 stage as a result of this match.

Group C

Australia won the toss and elected to bat. Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to field. , Australia were eliminated, Sri Lanka and the West Indies advance to the Super 8s as a result. , Ricky Ponting's last T20I match. West Indies won the toss and elected to field

Group D

New Zealand won the toss and elected to field. , Match reduced to 7 overs per side. Scotland won the toss and elected to field. , Scotland were eliminated, South Africa and New Zealand go through to the Super 8 stage as a result. New Zealand won the toss and elected to field.

Super 8s

The Super 8s consisted of two groups: Group E and Group F. Group E consisted of A1, B2, C1, D2 and Group F consisted of A2, B1, C2, D1, where X1 is the first seed from Group X and X2 is the second seed from Group X. The seedings were based on performance in the last ICC T20 (2007). If a non-seeded team knocks out a seeded team, the non-seeded team inherits the seed of the team it knocked out.

Group E

England won the toss and elected to bat. India won the toss and elected to bat. West Indies won the toss and elected to field. India won the toss and elected to field. , South Africa qualified for the semi-finals and India were eliminated as a result of this match. England won the toss and elected to bat. , Rain revised the West Indies' target to 80 runs from 9 overs according to the Duckworth–Lewis method. , West Indies qualified for the semi-finals and England were eliminated as a result of this match. South Africa won the toss and elected to bat.

Group F

Ireland won the toss and elected to field. Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat. , Umar Gul became the first bowler to take five wickets in a Twenty20 international. , Shahzaib Hasan (Pak) made his T20I debut. Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat. , Ireland were eliminated as a result of this match. Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat. , Pakistan qualified for the semi-finals as a result of this match. Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat. , Sri Lanka qualified for the semi-finals and New Zealand were eliminated as a result of this match.

Semi-finals

Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat. West Indies won the toss and elected to field. , Dilshan scored 60.76% of Sri Lanka's runs, which was a new Twenty20 International record. However, this only stood for a matter of hours, as Chris Gayle scored 62.38% of West Indies' total. , Chris Gayle became the first player in Twenty20 to carry his bat.

Final

Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat. In the final at Lord's, the home of cricket in London, Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat. The first over was bowled by Mohammad Amir. After failing to score off the first four balls – all short – Dilshan went for his scoop and mistimed it, resulting in him being caught at short fine-leg. Soon after this, Jehan Mubarak top edged a delivery by Abdul Razzaq which went high in the air and was caught by Shahzaib Hasan, leaving Sri Lanka at 2 for 2. Sanath Jayasuriya was able to stabilise the innings for Sri Lanka hitting 17 runs off 10 balls, however, Jayasuriya soon fell as he dragged a good length ball back on to the stumps. Mahela Jayawardene followed after edging a shot into the hands of Misbah-ul-Haq, leaving Sri Lanka on 32/4. Sangakkara and Chamara Silva added further runs, before the latter was caught by Saeed Ajmal playing a pull shot off the bowling of Umar Gul. Shahid Afridi soon after, took the wicket of Isuru Udana with a googly which drifted into the right-hander, knocking the off-stump. This brought in Angelo Mathews, who along with Sangakkara took the score from 70/6 to 138/6, with 17 runs being scored off the last over bowled by Mohammad Amir. Sri Lanka finished on 138/6 from 20 overs. Pakistan started off well with openers Kamran Akmal and Shahzaib Hasan adding 48 runs for the 1st wicket, before Kamran Akmal was stumped by Kumar Sangakkara by the first delivery of Sanath Jayasuriya. Pakistan reached the target in 18.4 overs, with Shahid Afridi, who hit the winning runs, earning Man of the Match while Tillakaratne Dilshan was declared Man of the Series for his 317 runs at an average of 63.40. Pakistan's win, often cheered on by crowds of fans from England's Pakistani communities, marked its first world title since Imran Khan's "cornered tigers" had won the 1992 World Cup.

Most Runs

Tillakaratne Dilshan of Sri Lanka scored the most runs in the 2009 tournament (317 from 7 innings)

Most Wickets

Umar Gul of Pakistan took the most 13 wickets in the 2009 tournament (13 wickets from 24.3 overs)

স্কোয়াড

Australia

No. Player
Ricky Ponting (c) 19 December 1974
Nathan Bracken 29 December 1977
Michael Clarke 2 April 1981
Brad Haddin 23 October 1977
Nathan Hauritz 18 October 1981
Ben Hilfenhaus 15 March 1983
James Hopes 24 October 1978
David Hussey 15 July 1977
Michael Hussey 27 May 1975
Mitchell Johnson 2 November 1981
Brett Lee 8 November 1976
Peter Siddle 25 November 1984
David Warner 27 October 1986
Shane Watson 17 June 1981
Cameron White 18 August 1983

Bangladesh

No. Player
Mohammad Ashraful (c) 7 July 1984
Shakib Al Hasan 24 March 1987
Mithun Ali 13 February 1990
Raqibul Hasan 8 October 1987
Rubel Hossain 1 January 1990
Shahadat Hossain 7 August 1986
Tamim Iqbal 20 March 1989
Naeem Islam 31 December 1986
Mashrafe Mortaza 5 October 1983
Mahmudullah 4 February 1986
Mushfiqur Rahim 1 September 1988
Shamsur Rahman 5 June 1988
Syed Rasel 3 July 1984
Abdur Razzak 15 June 1982
Junaid Siddique 30 October 1987

England

No. Player
Paul Collingwood (c) 26 May 1976
James Anderson 30 July 1982
Ravi Bopara 4 May 1985
Stuart Broad 24 June 1986
James Foster 15 April 1980
Rob Key 12 May 1979
Dimitri Mascarenhas 30 October 1977
Eoin Morgan 10 September 1986
Graham Napier 6 January 1980
Kevin Pietersen 27 June 1980
Adil Rashid 17 February 1988
Owais Shah 22 October 1978
Ryan Sidebottom 15 January 1978
Graeme Swann 24 March 1979
Luke Wright 7 March 1985

India

No. Player
Mahendra Singh Dhoni (c) 7 July 1981
Gautam Gambhir 14 October 1981
Ravindra Jadeja 6 December 1988
Zaheer Khan 7 October 1978
Praveen Kumar 2 October 1986
Pragyan Ojha 5 September 1986
Irfan Pathan 27 October 1984
Yusuf Pathan 17 November 1982
Suresh Raina 27 November 1986
** Virender Sehwag
Ishant Sharma 2 September 1988
Rohit Sharma 30 April 1987
Harbhajan Singh 3 July 1980
R. P. Singh 6 December 1985
Yuvraj Singh 12 December 1981
Replacement players
Dinesh Karthik 1 June 1985

Ireland

No. Player
William Porterfield (c) 6 September 1984
Andre Botha 12 September 1975
Jeremy Bray 30 November 1973
Peter Connell 13 August 1981
Alex Cusack 29 October 1980
Trent Johnston 29 April 1974
Kyle McCallan 27 August 1975
John Mooney 10 February 1982
Kevin O'Brien 4 March 1984
Niall O'Brien 8 November 1981
Boyd Rankin 5 July 1984
Paul Stirling 3 September 1990
Regan West 27 April 1979
Andrew White 3 July 1980
Gary Wilson 5 February 1986

Netherlands

No. Player
Jeroen Smits (c) 21 June 1972
Peter Borren 21 August 1983
Mudassar Bukhari 26 December 1983
Tom de Grooth 14 May 1979
Maurits Jonkman 20 March 1986
Alexei Kervezee 11 September 1989
Dirk Nannes 16 May 1976
Ruud Nijman 15 June 1982
Darron Reekers 26 May 1973
Edgar Schiferli 17 May 1976
Pieter Seelaar 2 July 1987
Daan van Bunge 19 October 1982
Bas Zuiderent 3 March 1977
Ryan ten Doeschate 30 June 1980
Eric Szwarczynski 13 February 1983

New Zealand

No. Player
Daniel Vettori (c) 27 January 1979
Neil Broom 20 November 1983
Ian Butler 24 November 1981
Brendon Diamanti 30 April 1981
James Franklin 7 November 1980
Martin Guptill 30 September 1986
Brendon McCullum 27 September 1981
Nathan McCullum 1 September 1980
Peter McGlashan 22 June 1979
Kyle Mills 15 March 1979
Iain O'Brien 10 July 1976
Jacob Oram 28 July 1978
Jesse Ryder 6 August 1984
Scott Styris 10 July 1975
Ross Taylor 8 March 1984
Replacement players
Aaron Redmond 23 September 1979

Pakistan

No. Player
Younus Khan (c) 29 November 1977
Ahmed Shehzad 23 November 1991
Fawad Alam 8 October 1985
Iftikhar Anjum 1 December 1980
Kamran Akmal 13 January 1982
Misbah-ul-Haq 28 May 1974
Mohammad Amir 13 April 1992
Saeed Ajmal 14 October 1977
Salman Butt 7 October 1984
Shahid Afridi 1 March 1980
Shahzaib Hasan 25 December 1989
Shoaib Malik 1 February 1982
Sohail Tanvir 12 December 1984
Umar Gul 14 April 1984
Yasir Arafat 12 March 1982
Replacement players
Abdul Razzaq 2 December 1979

South Africa

No. Player
Graeme Smith (c) 1 February 1981
Yusuf Abdulla 17 January 1983
Johan Botha 2 May 1982
Mark Boucher 3 December 1976
AB de Villiers 17 February 1984
JP Duminy 14 April 1984
Herschelle Gibbs 23 February 1974
Jacques Kallis 16 October 1975
Albie Morkel 10 June 1981
Morné Morkel 6 October 1984
Justin Ontong 4 January 1980
Wayne Parnell 30 July 1989
Robin Peterson 4 August 1979
Dale Steyn 27 June 1983
Roelof van der Merwe 31 December 1984

Sri Lanka

No. Player
Kumar Sangakkara (c) 27 October 1977
Indika de Saram 2 September 1973
Tillakaratne Dilshan 14 October 1976
Sanath Jayasuriya 30 June 1969
Mahela Jayawardene 27 May 1977
Nuwan Kulasekara 22 July 1982
Farveez Maharoof 7 September 1984
Lasith Malinga 28 August 1983
Angelo Mathews 2 June 1987
Ajantha Mendis 11 March 1985
Jehan Mubarak 10 January 1981
Muttiah Muralitharan 17 April 1972
Chamara Silva 14 December 1979
Thilan Thushara 1 March 1981
Isuru Udana 17 February 1988

West Indies

No. Player
Chris Gayle (c) 21 September 1979
Lionel Baker 6 September 1984
Sulieman Benn 22 July 1981
Dave Bernard Jnr. 19 July 1981
Dwayne Bravo 7 October 1983
Shivnarine Chanderpaul 16 August 1974
Fidel Edwards 6 February 1982
Andre Fletcher 28 November 1987
Xavier Marshall 27 March 1986
Kieron Pollard 21 May 1987
Denesh Ramdin 13 March 1985
Darren Sammy 20 December 1983
Ramnaresh Sarwan 23 June 1980
Lendl Simmons 25 January 1985
Jerome Taylor 22 June 1984

তথ্যসূত্র: Wikipedia