Thursday, January 27, 2011

ICC Cricket World Cup 1983


The 1983 Cricket World Cup (aka Prudential Cup, 1983) was the third edition of the tournament. It was held from 9 June to 25 June 1983 in England and was won byIndia. Eight countries participated in the event. The preliminary matches were played in two groups of four teams each, and each country played the others in its group twice. The top two teams in each group qualified for the semi-finals.
The matches consisted of 60 overs per team and were played in traditional white clothing and with red balls. They were all played during the day.
The 1983 World Cup was full of dramatic cricket right from the start. Teams like India and Zimbabwe who were not playing well at those times scored upset victories over the West Indies and Australia respectively. England, Pakistan, India and tournament favorites West Indies qualified for the semifinals.

Contents

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[edit]Format

The format of the 1983 world cup was 2 groups of four teams, each team playing each other twice. The top two team from each group then advance to the Semi Finals where the winners then advance to the finals.

[edit]Participants

The following 8 teams qualified for the final tournament.


ACA (1)
ACA (1)

ACC (3)

EAP (2)
ECC (1)

[edit]Venues

LondonNottinghamLeedsLondonBirmingham
Lord's Cricket GroundTrent BridgeHeadingley StadiumThe OvalEdgbaston Cricket Ground
Capacity: 30,000Capacity: 15,350Capacity: 14,000Capacity: 23,500Capacity: 21,000
Lord's Pavillion.jpgTrent Bridge Pavilion End.jpgGloucestershire County Cricket Ground.jpgThe Oval Pavilion.jpgEdgbaston Cricket Ground Pavillion.jpg
DerbyBristolTaunton
County Cricket Ground, DerbyCounty Cricket Ground, BristolCounty Ground, Taunton
Capacity: 9,500Capacity: 16,000Capacity: 6,500
Photo from Racecourse end.JPGGloucestershire County Cricket Ground.jpgCounty ground taunton churches.jpg
ChelmsfordSwanseaWalesLeicester
County Cricket Ground, ChelmsfordSt. Helen's Rugby and Cricket GroundGrace Road
Capacity: 6,500Capacity: 4,500Capacity: 12,000
Country ground chemlsford.jpgSt Helen's.DSC00503.JPGGrace Road Cricket Ground - 1 - geograph-387387jpg.jpg
ManchesterSouthamptonWorcesterTunbridge Wells
Old Trafford Cricket GroundCounty Ground, SouthamptonNew RoadNevill Ground
Capacity: 19,000Capacity: 7,000Capacity: 4,500Capacity: 6,000
Old Trafford Pavilion.JPGNew Road Worcester - 2 - aerial - geograph-1609995.jpgNevill Ground - geograph-1895670.jpg

[edit]Trophy

The physical trophy won by the Indian cricket team was damaged during a violent rampage on the Indian cricket board's headquarters, allegedly carried out by members of the Hindu nationalist group Shiv Sena[1] According to Shiv Sena Leaders, they were protesting against the entry of Pakistan Cricket Team in India after the Kargil War conflict which brought the two nations on the brink of a major war like situation.

[edit]Squads

[edit]Group stage

[edit]Group A

TeamPtsPldWLNRRR
 England2065104.671
 Pakistan1263304.014
 New Zealand1263303.927
 Sri Lanka461503.752
9 June 1983
England 322/6 - 216 New ZealandThe OvalLondon
9 June 1983
Pakistan 338/5 - 288/9 Sri LankaSt Helen'sSwanseaWales
11 June 1983
England 333/9 - 286 Sri LankaCounty GroundTaunton
11 June 1983
New Zealand 238/9 - 186 PakistanEdgbastonBirmingham
13 June 1983
England 199/2 - 193/8 PakistanLord'sLondon
13 June 1983
New Zealand 209/5 - 206 Sri LankaCounty GroundBristol
15 June 1983
England 234 - 238/8 New ZealandEdgbastonBirmingham
16 June 1983
Pakistan 235/7 - 224 Sri LankaHeadingleyLeeds
18 June 1983
England 233/3 - 232/8 PakistanOld TraffordManchester
18 June 1983
New Zealand 181 - 184/7 Sri LankaCounty GroundDerby
20 June 1983
England 137/1 - 136 Sri LankaHeadingleyLeeds
20 June 1983
New Zealand 250 - 261/3 PakistanTrent BridgeNottingham

[edit]Group B

TeamPtsPldWLNRRR
 West Indies2065104.308
 India1664203.870
 Australia862403.808
 Zimbabwe461503.492
9 June 1983
Australia 226/7 - 239/6 ZimbabweTrent BridgeNottingham
9 June 1983
India 262/8 - 228 West IndiesOld TraffordManchester
11 June 1983
Australia 151 - 252/9 West IndiesHeadingleyLeeds
11 June 1983
India 157/5 - 155 ZimbabweGrace RoadLeicester
13 June 1983
Australia 320/9 - 158 IndiaTrent BridgeNottingham
13 June 1983
West Indies 218/2 - 217/7 ZimbabweNew RoadWorcester
15 June 1983
India 216 - 282/9 West IndiesThe OvalLondon
16 June 1983
Australia 272/7 - 240 ZimbabweCounty GroundSouthampton
18 June 1983
Australia 273/6 - 276/3 West IndiesLord'sLondon
18 June 1983
India 266/8 - 235 ZimbabweNevill GroundRoyal Tunbridge Wells
20 June 1983
Australia 129 - 247 IndiaCounty GroundChelmsford
20 June 1983
West Indies 172/0 - 171 ZimbabweEdgbastonBirmingham

[edit]Knockout stage

 Semi-finalsFinal
22 June - England Old Trafford,Manchester
  England213 
  India217/4 
 
25 June - England Lord'sLondon
    India183
   West Indies140
22 June - England The OvalLondon
  Pakistan184/8
  West Indies188/2 

[edit]Semi-finals

In the first semi-final, at Old Trafford on 22 June, England won the toss and batted first. The English batsmen mistimed many balls and used the bat's edge frequently, as the restrictive Indian bowling led England to score 213 (all out, 60 overs). Graeme Fowler (33 from 59 balls, 3 fours) top scored, and Kapil Dev took 3 for 35 in eleven overs, with Mohinder Amarnath and Roger Binny taking two wickets each. In reply,Yashpal Sharma (61 from 115 balls, 3 fours, 2 sixes) and Sandeep Patil (51 from 32 balls, 8 fours) made half-centuries, as India reached their target in 54.4 overs, winning by 6 wickets in a classic victory over the previous tournament's runner-ups. Mohinder Amarnath (46 from 92 balls, 4 fours, 1 six) picked up the man-of-the-match award for his all round performance, which saw him add 46 runs to his earlier bowling success (2/27 in 12 overs). [2]
The second semi-final, between Pakistan and the West Indies, was staged at The Oval on the same day. West Indies won the toss and inserted Pakistan, whom they restricted to just 184 (8 wickets, 60 overs). Mohsin Khan (70 from 176 balls, 1 four) fought his way past 50 against the superb West Indies Bowling (he was the only Pakistani batsman to reach 50). Malcolm Marshall (3-28) and Andy Roberts (2-25) starred with the ball. The West Indies innings was based around a superb innings by Viv Richards (80 from 96 balls, 11 fours, 1 six), who took the man-of-the-match award, and an unbeaten half-century by Larry Gomes (50 from 100 balls, 3 fours) as the defending champions reached their target for the loss of just two wickets. [3]
22 June 1983
England 213 - 217/4 IndiaOld TraffordManchester
22 June 1983
West Indies 188/2 - 184/8 PakistanThe OvalLondon

[edit]Final

In the final, India lost the toss and were asked to bat first against a West Indies team that arguably boasted the world's best bowling attack. Only Kris Srikkanth (38 from 57 balls) and Mohinder Amarnath (26 from 80 balls) put up any significant resistance as Roberts, Marshall, Joel Garner and Michael Holding ripped through the Indian batsmen, ably supported by Gomes. Surprising resistance by the tail allowed India to compile 183 (all out, 54.4 overs). Only three sixes were hit in the Indian innings, one from Srikkanth, one from Sandeep Patil (27 from 29 balls), and one from Madan Lal (17 from 27 balls). However, the Indian bowling exploited the weather and pitch conditions perfectly to bowl out the best batting lineup of the era for 140 from 52 overs in return, winning by 43 runs and completing one of the most stunning upsets in cricket history, defeating the previously invincible West Indies. Amarnath and Madan Lal (3-31) each took three wickets, and one memorable moment was the sight of Kapil Dev running a great distance (about 18-20 yards) to take a catch to dismiss Richards, the West Indies top scorer with 33 from 28 balls. Amarnath was the most economical bowler, conceding just 12 runs from his seven overs while taking 3 wickets, and was once again awarded the Man of the Match award for his all-round performance. [4] There was no 'Man of the Series' awarded in 1983.
21 June 1975
India 183 - 140 West IndiesLord'sLondon

[edit]Team rankings

All 8 teams are ranked based on matches played and won.
RTeamGPWTLNRRFRARDNRRPts.
Final
1 IndiaB8602024
2 West IndiesB8602024
Eliminated in the semifinals
3 EnglandA7502020
4 PakistanA7304012
Eliminated in the group stage
5 New ZealandA63030+3.92712
6 AustraliaB62040+3.8088
7 Sri LankaA61050+3.7524
8 ZimbabweB61050+3.4924

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