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Month: June 2017

Eight takeaways from Guha’s resignation letter

Eight takeaways from Guha’s resignation letter

Ramachandra Guha, the prominent historian who stepped down from the Supreme Court-appointed committee of administrators (CoA), has left with a scathing resignation letter that expresses frustration with inaction over conflicts of interest, superstar culture, poor treatment of domestic players who don’t play IPL, among other issues.

 

“It has been clear for some time now that my thoughts and views are adjacent to, and sometimes at odds with, the direction the Committee is taking as a whole,” Guha wrote.

 

Here is a summary of Guha’s concerns:

Conflict of interest of coaches

Guha was unhappy with the system where national coaches are contracted for 10 months a year and then go away for IPL duty. Rahul Dravid, R Sridhar, Sanjay Bangar and Bharat Arun are examples of coaches who are, or have been, part of the support staff of both national teams and IPL franchises.

 

Guha also alleged preferential treatment when it came to awarding these contracts. “The more famous the former player-turned-coach, the more likely was the BCCI to allow him to draft his own contract that left loopholes that he exploited to dodge the conflict of interest issue,” he wrote. “I had first raised this issue to my COA colleagues in an email of 1st February, and have raised it several times since. I had urged that coaches and support staff for national teams be paid an enhanced compensation, but that this conflict of interest be stopped.”

 

Guha went on to mention an NCA camp where at least one national coach was not available because of IPL duties.

 

Conflict of interest of commentators

Guha said Sunil Gavaskar was a BCCI-contracted commentator and the director of PMG, a player management company, which has Shikhar Dhawan, Rishabh Pant and Sarfaraz Khan on its rolls.

 

“Sunil Gavaskar is head of a company which represents Indian cricketers while commenting on those cricketers as part of the BCCI TV commentary panel,” Guha had written to his colleagues on March 19. “This is a clear conflict of interest. Either he must step down/withdraw himself from PMG completely or stop being a commentator for BCCI.”

 

Without naming possibly Sourav Ganguly, Guha wrote: “One famous former cricketer is contracted by media houses to comment on active players while serving as President of his State Association.”

 

Superstar culture in awarding national contracts

Even though the new contracts rewarded Cheteshwar Pujara’s Test performances, Guha also noted: “As you will recall, I had pointed out that awarding MS Dhoni an ‘A’ contract when he had explicitly ruled himself out from all Test matches was indefensible on cricketing grounds, and sends absolutely the wrong message.”

 

Superstar captain

In all likelihood, India’s coach Kumble will not get an extension of his contract even though India have won every series bar one – a rain-affected T20 dash against West Indies in USA – under his watch. The reason being given by BCCI officials is that Kumble has lost the trust of the captain Kohli. The news broke a day after Kumble made a presentation for better contracts for all stakeholders.

 

“Kumble was left hanging, and then told the post would be re-advertised afresh,” Guha wrote. “Clearly, the issue has been handled in an extremely insensitive and unprofessional manner by the BCCI CEO and the BCCI office-bearers, with the COA, by its silence and inaction, unfortunately being complicit in this regard.”

 

Guha questioned the timing and intent of the advertisement for the coaching job. “If indeed the captain and the Head Coach were not getting along, why was not this attended to as soon as the Australia series was over in late March?

 

“Surely giving senior players the impression that they may have a veto power over the coach is another example of superstar culture gone berserk?”

 

Poor payments for domestic cricketers

Domestic cricketers end up making about INR 1.4 lakh for a Ranji Trophy match, but they are paid only INR 10,000 upfront. The balance is often delayed.

 

“There are many more Indian cricketers who make their living via the Ranji Trophy than via IPL; besides, for us to have a consistently strong Test team (especially overseas) we need a robust inter-state competition and therefore must seek to compensate domestic players betters,” Guha wrote. “And yet, shockingly, Ranji match fees have remained at a very low level (a mere Rs 30,000 odd for each day of play); moreover, cheques for match fees sent by the BCCI are sometimes not passed on by the state associations to the players.”

 

CoA complicit in Champions Trophy pullout threats

Guha did not spare the CoA for its inaction until the last minute when the BCCI delayed the team selection for the Champions Trophy because they were unhappy with the outcomes of the ICC meetings.

 

The BCCI meetings that decided this course of action were attended by disqualified officials such as N Srinivasan and Niranjan Shah. “All these illegalities were widely reported in the press; yet the COA did not bring them to the notice of the Court, and did not issue clear directions asking the offenders to desist either,” Guha wrote.

 

Not everyone kept in loop

In perhaps the most damning indictment of the CoA, Guha accused the commitee of changing its lawyer without informing him. “There were several crucial decisions made where all the COA members were not brought into the loop,” Guha said. “For instance, a capable, non-political Senior Counsel representing the COA and the BCCI in the Supreme Court was abruptly replaced by another Senior Counsel who is a party politician.”

 

Male cricketer missing

Guha said he believed CoA’s inaction was down to the absence of a senior male cricketer in the committee. He said he had suggested the names of Bishan Bedi and S Venkataraghavan to the committee, but both of them were disqualified by the virtue of their age over 70. He then suggested the name of Javagal Srinath, but this was not acted upon. He ended the letter saying he hoped he would be replaced by a senior male cricketer.

Article courtesy – www.espncricinfo.com

Four or more wickets by bowlers in the Champions Trophy

Four or more wickets by bowlers in the Champions Trophy

LE Plunkett  of England captured four  for  59 against Bangladesh at The Oval on 01.06.17 to  provide  the  41st  occasion of a bowler capturing four or  more wickets in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Player O M R W Team Oppn Ground Match Date
1 SR Tendulkar 9.1 0 38 4 Ind v Aus Dhaka 28 Oct 1998
2 KLT Arthurton 10.0 0 31 4 Win v Pak Dhaka 29 Oct 1998
3 JH Kallis 7.3 0 30 5 RSA v Win Dhaka 01 Nov 1998
4 PJ Wiseman 9.2 0 45 4 NZl v Zim Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
5 SB O’Connor 9.2 0 46 5 NZl v Pak Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
6 Azhar Mahmood 10.0 0 65 4 Pak v NZl Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
7 M Dillon 10.0 1 60 4 Win v RSA Colombo (SSC) 13 Sep 2002
8 Z Khan 10.0 2 45 4 Ind v Zim Colombo (RPS) 14 Sep 2002
9 DT Hondo 9.0 1 62 4 Zim v Ind Colombo (RPS) 14 Sep 2002
10 GD McGrath 7.0 1 37 5 Aus v NZl Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
11 M Muralitharan 5.3 2 15 4 Srl v Net Colombo (RPS) 16 Sep 2002
12 RC Irani 10.0 0 37 4 Eng v Zim Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
13 DT Hondo 6.0 0 45 4 Zim v Eng Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
14 SE Bond 5.0 0 21 4 NZl v Ban Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
15 JDP Oram 9.4 1 36 5 NZl v USA The Oval 10 Sep 2004
16 MS Kasprowicz 7.0 1 14 4 Aus v USA Southampton 13 Sep 2004
17 JN Gillespie 6.0 1 15 4 Aus v USA Southampton 13 Sep 2004
18 Shahid Afridi 6.0 1 11 5 Pak v Ken Birmingham 14 Sep 2004
19 M Dillon 10.0 4 29 5 Win v Ban Southampton 15 Sep 2004
20 Naved-ul-Hasan 9.0 1 25 4 Pak v Ind Birmingham 19 Sep 2004
21 Shoaib Akhtar 9.5 1 36 4 Pak v Ind Birmingham 19 Sep 2004
22 MF Maharoof 9.0 2 14 6 Srl v Win Mumbai (BS) 14 Oct 2006
23 Abdul Razzaq 7.2 0 50 4 Pak v Srl Jaipur 17 Oct 2006
24 JE Taylor 10.0 0 49 4 Win v Aus Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
25 M Muralitharan 10.0 1 23 4 Srl v NZl Mumbai (BS) 20 Oct 2006
26 SL Malinga 9.0 0 53 4 Srl v RSA Ahmedabad 24 Oct 2006
27 M Ntini 6.0 2 21 5 RSA v Pak Mohali 27 Oct 2006
28 KD Mills 10.0 1 38 4 NZl v Aus Mohali 01 Nov 2006
29 GC Tonge 10.0 3 25 4 Win v Pak Johannesburg 23 Sep 2009
30 WD Parnell 8.0 0 57 5 RSA v NZl Centurion 24 Sep 2009
31 A Nehra 10.0 0 55 4 Ind v Pak Centurion 26 Sep 2009
32 GD Elliott 8.0 0 31 4 NZl v Eng Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
33 SCJ Broad 8.1 1 39 4 Eng v NZl Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
34 IG Butler 10.0 0 44 4 NZl v Pak Johannesburg 03 Oct 2009
35 SL Malinga 10.0 2 34 4 Srl v NZl Cardiff 09 Jun 2013
36 MJ McClenaghan 8.5 0 43 4 NZl v Srl Cardiff 09 Jun 2013
37 R McLaren 8.0 3 19 4 RSA v Pak Birmingham 10 Jun 2013
38 RA Jadeja 10.0 2 36 5 Ind v Win The Oval 11 Jun 2013
39 MJ McClenaghan 10.0 0 65 4 NZl v Aus Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
40 KD Mills 4.3 0 30 4 NZl v Eng Cardiff 16 Jun 2013
41 LE Plunkett 10.0 0 59 4 Eng v Ban The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

LE Plunkett of England captured four  for  59 against Bangladesh at The Oval on 01.06.17 to  provide  the  third  occasion of a bowler capturing four or  more wickets in the Champions Trophy against Bangladesh. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Player O M R W Team Oppn Ground Match Date
1 SE Bond 5.0 0 21 4 NZl v Ban Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
2 M Dillon 10.0 4 29 5 Win v Ban Southampton 15 Sep 2004
3 LE Plunkett 10.0 0 59 4 Eng v Ban The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

LE Plunkett of England captured four  for  59 against Bangladesh at The Oval on 01.06.17 to  provide  the  third  occasion of a England bowler capturing four or  more wickets in the Champions Trophy . All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Player O M R W Team Oppn Ground Match Date
1 RC Irani 10.0 0 37 4 Eng v Zim Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
2 SCJ Broad 8.1 1 39 4 Eng v NZl Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
3 LE Plunkett 10.0 0 59 4 Eng v Ban The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

Conflicts of interests and superstar culture: Full text of Ramchandra Guha’s letter

Conflicts of interests and superstar culture: Full text of Ramchandra Guha’s letter

Historian Ramachandra Guha, one of the four members of the Committee of Administrators (CoA) appointed by the Supreme Court to run the BCCI, on Thursday announced his resignation from the committee, citing personal reasons.

 

Mr. Guha had informed a Vacation Bench of Justices M.M. Shantanagoudar and Deepak Gupta that he had resigned from his post and discussed the issue with the committee’s chairperson and former Comptroller and Auditor General Vinod Rai.

 

Dear Vinod,

 

It has been a privilege working with Diana, Vikram and you in the Supreme Court appointed Committee of Administrators. It has been an educative experience, spending long hours with three top-flight professionals from whom I have learned a lot in these past few months. However, it has seemed clear for some time now that my thoughts and views are adjacent to, and sometimes at odds with, the direction the Committee is taking as a whole. That is why I eventually decided to request the Supreme Court to relieve me of the responsibility, and submitted my letter of resignation to the Court on the morning of the 1st of June.

 

For the record, and in the interests of transparency, I am here listing the major points of divergence as I see it:

 

  1. The question of conflict of interest, which had lain unaddressed ever since the Committee began its work, and which I have been repeatedly flagging since I joined. For instance, the BCCI has accorded preferential treatment to Some national coaches, by giving them ten month contracts for national duty, thus allowing them to work as IPL coaches/mentors for the remaining two months. This was done in an adhoc and arbitrary manner; the more famous the former player-turned-coach, the more likely was the BCCI to allow him to draft his own contract that left loopholes that he exploited to dodge the conflict of interest issue.

 

I have repeatedly pointed out that it is contrary to the spirit of the Lodha Committee for coaches or the support staff of the Indian senior or junior teams, or for staff at the National Cricket Academy, to have contracts in the Indian Premier League. One cannot have dual loyalties of this kind and do proper justice to both. National duty must take precedence over club affiliation.

 

I had first raised this issue to my COA colleagues in an email of 7″ February, and have raised it several times since. I had urged that coaches and support staff for national teams be paid an enhanced compensation, but that this conflict of interest be stopped. When, on the 11″ of March, I was told that that there was a camp scheduled for young players at the National Cricket Academy but at least one national coach was likely to be away on IPL work and might not attend the camp, I wrote to you:

 

No person under contract with an India team, or with the NCA, should be allowed to moonlight for an IPL team too.

 

BCCI in its carelessness (or otherwise) might have drafted coaching/support staff contracts to allow this dual loyalty business, but while it might be narrowly legal as per existing contracts, it is unethical, and antithetical to team spirit, leading to much jealousy and heart-burn among the coaching staff as a whole. This practice is plainly wrong, as well as antithetical to the interests of Indian cricket.

 

I would like an explicit and early assurance from the BCCI management that such manifestly inequitous loopholes in coaching/support staff contracts will be plugged forthwith.

 

Yet no assurance was given, and no action was taken. The BCCI management and office-bearers have, in the absence of explicit directions from the COA, allowed the status quo to continue.

 

  1. I have also repeatedly pointed to the anomaly whereby BCCI-contracted Commentators simultaneously act as player agents. In a mail of 19 March to the COA I wrote:

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

Please have a look at this news report: (http://indianexpress.com/article/Sports/cricket/pmg-signs-up-shikhar-dhawan-for-3- years-277.63291)

 

Sunil Gavaskar is head of a company which represents Indian cricketers while commenting on those cricketers as part of the BCCITV commentary panel. This is a clear conflict of interest. Either he must step down, withdraw himself from PMG completely or stop being a commentator for BCCI.

 

I think prompt and swift action on this matter is both just and necessary. COA’s credibility and effectiveness hinges on our being able to take bold and correct decisions on such matters. The ‘superstar’ culture that afflicts the BCCI means that the more famous the player (former or present) the more leeway he is allowed in violating norms and procedures. (Dhoni was captain of the Indian team while holding a stake in a firm that represented some current India players.) This must stop – and only we can stop it.

 

… Yet, despite my warnings, no action has been initiated in the several months that the Committee has been in operation.

 

As the mail quoted above noted, one reason the conflict of interest issue has lingered unaddressed is that several of the game’s superstars, past and present, have been guilty of it. The BCCI management is too much in awe of these superstars to question their violation of norms and procedures. For their part, BCCI office-bearers like to enjoy discretionary powers, so that the coaches or commentators they favour are indebted to them and do not ever question their own mistakes or malpractices. But surely a Supreme Court appointed body should not be intimidated by the past or present achievements of a cricketer, and instead seek to strive to be fair and just.

 

Conflict of interest is rampant in the State Associations as well. One famous former cricketer is contracted by media houses to comment on active players while serving as President of his State Association. Others have served as office-bearers in one Association and simultaneously as coaches or managers in another. The awarding of business contracts to friends and relatives by office-bearers is reported to be fairly widespread.

 

Had we been more proactive in stopping conflict of interest within the BCCI (as per the Lodha Committee recommendations, endorsed by the Court), this would surely have had a ripple effect downwards, putting pressure on State Associations to clean up their act as well.

 

  1. Unfortunately, this superstar syndrome has also distorted the system of Indian team contracts. As you will recall, I had pointed out that awarding M. S. Dhoni an ‘A’ contract when he had explicitly ruled himself out from all Test matches was indefensible on cricketing grounds, and sends absolutely the wrong message.

 

  1. The way in which the contract of Anil Kumble, the current Head Coach of the senior team, has been handled. The Indian team’s record this past season has been excellent; and even if the players garner the bulk of the credit, surely the Head Coach and his support staff also get some. In a system based on justice and merit, the Head Coach’s term would have been extended. Instead, Kumble was left hanging, and then told that the post would be re-advertised afresh.

 

Clearly, the issue has been handled in an extremely insensitive and unprofessional manner by the BCCI CEO and the BCCI office-bearers, with the COA, by its silence and inaction, unfortunately being complicit in this regard. (Recall that the Court Order of 30 January had expressly mandated us to supervise the managament of the BCCI.) In case due process had to be followed since Kumble’s original appointment was only for one year, why was this not done during April and May, when the IPL was on? If indeed the captain and the head coach were not getting along, why was not this not attended to as soon as the Australia series was over in late March? Why was it left until the last minute, when a major international tournament was imminent, and when the uncertainty would undermine the morale and ability to focus of the coach, the captain, and the team? And surely giving senior players the impression that they may have a veto power over the coach is another example of the superstar culture gone berserk? Such a veto power is not permitted to any other top level professional team in any other sport in any other country. Already, in a dismaying departure from international norms, current Indian players enjoy a veto power on who can be members of the commentary team. If it is to be coaches next, then perhaps selectors and even office-bearers will follow?

 

  1. Ever since the Supreme Court announced the formation of the COA, we have been inundated, individually and collectively, by hundreds of mails asking us to address various ills that afflict Indian cricket and its administration. While many of these issues were trivial or clearly beyond our purview, there was one concern that we should have done far more to address. This concerns the callous treatment of domestic cricket and cricketers, namely, those who represent their state in the Ranji Trophy, the Mushtaq Ali Trophy, and other inter-state tournaments. The IPL may be Indian cricket’s showpiece, but surely the enormous revenues it generates should be used to make our domestic players more financially secure? There are many more Indian cricketers who make their living via the Ranji Trophy than via the IPL, besides, for us to have a consistently strong Test team (especially overseas) we need a robust inter-state competition and therefore must seek to compensate domestic players better.

 

And yet, shockingly, Ranji match fees have remained at a very low level (a mere ₹30,000 odd for each day of play); moreover, cheques for match fees sent by the BCCI are sometimes not passed on by State associations to the players. We need to learn from best practices in other countries, where domestic players are awarded annual contracts like those in the national team, while their match fees are reasonably competitive too.

 

Several months ago, the experienced cricket administrator Amrit Mathur prepared an excellent note on the need for better and fairer treatment of domestic players. Both Diana and I have repeatedly urged action, but this has not happened.

 

  1. I believe it was a mistake for the COA to have stayed silent and inactive when the Supreme Court judgment was being so flagrantly violated by people clearly disqualified to serve as office-bearers of state and even BCCI run cricket bodies. These disqualified men were openly attending BCCI meetings, claiming to represent their state association, and indeed played a leading role in the concerted (if fortunately in the end aborted) attempt to get the Indian team to boycott the Champions Trophy. All these illegalities were widely reported in the press; yet the COA did not bring them to the notice of the Court, and did not issue clear directions asking the offenders to desist either.

 

  1. I believe that the lack of attention to these (and other such issues) is in part due to the absence of a senior and respected male cricketer on our Committee. Allow me to quote from a mail I wrote on 1 February 2017, before our first full meeting:

 

Dear fellow members,

 

I much look forward to meeting you all later today. I know Vikram already, and greatly admire both Vinod and Diana for their remarkable work in their chosen fields, and am truly honoured to be working with them as well.

 

I presume apart from discussing IPL, etc, with the BCCI representatives we will get some time to discuss the way forward separately. I have several ideas which I wish to share with you about our collective responsibility, and wanted in this mail to flag what is the most important of these. This is that we must incorporate into our committee of administrators, either as a full member or as a special invitee, a senior male cricketer with the distinction and integrity that Diana has. That will greatly enhance both our credibility and our ability to make informed decisions.

 

The absence of a respected male cricketer in the COA has attracted a great deal of criticism already, much of it from important stakeholders in Indian cricket. It must be addressed and remedied. The amicus curae had suggested two outstanding names, Venkat and Bedi, both of whom were rejected because they are over seventy. However, there are some cricketers of the right age and experience who fit the bill. Based on my knowledge of the subject, I would say Javagal Srinath would be an excellent choice. He is a world-class cricketer, was a successful and scandal-free Secretary of the Karnataka State Cricket Association, and is an ICC match referee, and comes from an educated technical background to boot. I strongly urge the Chairman and the other members to consider approaching him in this regard. He would complement Diana perfectly, and the combination of these two respected and top class former cricketers would enhance our credibility and effectiveness enormously.

 

While Srinath is in my view the best choice, there are other alternative names too. I hope we can set aside some time at our meeting to discuss and resolve this issue.

 

With regards

 

Ram

 

P.S. Needless to say, I have not discussed this with Srinath or with anyone else.

 

I raised this issue in a formal meeting of the COA as well, but unfortunately my proposal to invite a senior male cricketer to join the committee was not acted upon. We should have approached the Court to take the necessary action, or else incorporated a senior, respected, male cricketer as a special invitee. With such a person on board the COA would have gained in experience, knowledge, understanding, and, not least, credibility. Indeed, had we had such a person on board, the BCCI management and the office-bearers would have been compelled to be far more proactive in implementing the Lodha Committee recommendations than they have been thus far.

 

As the only cricketer on the COA, Diana’s contributions have been invaluable; on many issues of administration and the rights of players she has brought a perspective based on a first-hand experience that the rest of us lacked. A male counterpart would have complemented and further enriched her contributions, but perhaps it is not too late to make amends.

 

  1. While all our meetings were held in a cordial atmosphere, between meetings perhaps there was not adequate consultation, and there were several crucial decisions made where all the COA members were not brought into the loop. For instance, a capable, non-political Senior Counsel representing the COA and the BCCI in the Supreme Court was abruptly replaced by another Senior Counsel who is a party politician. Surely other COA members should have been consulted by email or by phone before this important change was made.

 

I have taken too much of your time already, but permit me to make one last suggestion. This is that the place vacated by me on the Committee of Administrators be filled by a senior, respected, male cricketer with administrative experience.

 

Let me in conclusion thank you for your courtesy and civility these past few months, and wish you and the Committee all the best in your future endeavours.

 

With best wishes,

 

Ramachandra Guha

 

Virat Kohli-Anil Kumble saga: India coach to step down post ICC Trophy?

Virat Kohli-Anil Kumble saga: India coach to step down post ICC Trophy?

It is reported Kohli and a few other Indian cricketers are not happy with Kumble’s style of functioning.

The alleged Virat Kohli versus Anil Kumble saga has a new twist as it is now reported that Kumble is unlikely to continue as Team India head coach post ICC Champions Trophy in England.

Kumble, who took over from Team India Director Ravi Shastri last year, was given a one-year contract which comes to an end at the conclusion of the ICC event in England. While Kumble has results on his side – only a series defeat across formats – the alleged differences of opinion with Kohli are likely to cut short his future as team’s head coach.

“The problem between Kumble and Kohli isn’t recent but has apparently been festering on for a while. The early signs were seen at the start of the England series in Rajkot in November last year. Not just Virat, we have been told that a few players are also not too happy with Kumble’s style of functioning. When the captain especially isn’t happy, then there is little that we or anybody from outside can do,” a report in Indian Express quoted a BCCI official as saying.

However, the same report quoted an unnamed member of COA criticising Kohli’s behaviour.

“Kohli is behaving like a spoilt child. The committee should be fair. Kumble has had great results and that should be a big factor when it comes to renewing his contract.”

While it is indicated that Supreme Court-appointed Committee of Administrators (COA) and BCCI officials are finding ways to broker peace between the two, it seems unlikely that the former leg-spinner will continue as Team India head coach post Champions Trophy.

It was earlier indicated that Kumble and Kohli were not on a same page over the team selection for the third India versus Australia Test in Ranchi. While Kumble wanted to pick Kuldeep Yadav, Kohli was not in favour of the same. The young left-arm chinaman bowler made his debut in Dharamsala Test as Ajinkya Rahane led the team in absence of injured Kohli.

“This may or may not be the reason. But we believe the people in the corridors of power have been told that Kumble is overbearing and doesn’t give freedom to the players. It’s sad that aspersions are cast on a legend of Indian cricket,” a BCCI official had earlier told The Hindu.

It was also reported that there were a number of cricketers who were not pleased with Kumble’s style of functioning.

“It’s just not the captain alone. A few months back, a bowler landed at the national cricket academy in Bangalore. Rest, recuperation, and some fitness work was on his mind. Some bit of bowling too. He was told he had to put in hours of bowling, get Test-match fit. He wasn’t initially keen but was told he had no choice. For what it’s worth, his bowling improved at the end of the stint. Sometimes, as a coach, you have to tread on fragile egos, be sensitive. A couple of players felt Kumble wasn’t,” said a report in the Indian Express.

The same report also quoted a source close to Indian team about Kohli’s apprehensions over Kumble.

“He (Kohli) would throw a word or two about what he thought about the new coach. You know, nothing bad, but there was enough there to realise he wasn’t sure or had some doubts. Kohli would have loved to have a team atmosphere like the one MS Dhoni had.”

A report in DNA also said that Kumble leaked private WhatsApp conversations with Team India cricketers to his friends in media.

“We’ve been told that there is a WhatsApp group created by Kumble of his few trusted media friends and few confidential talks between him and senior players were leaked through that,” a report in DNA quoted an unnamed senior BCCI official as saying.

New Zealand in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

New Zealand in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

Champions Trophy 2017 starte from yesterday with the first  game being  played between England and Bangaldesh. www.hrgcricstats.com brings it netizens, the performance of each of  the eight playing teams  in the tournament with  inumerable stats table. Here is New Zealand’s performance

 

MATCH RESULTS
No Team Result Margin BR Opposition Ground Start Date
1 New Zealand won 5 wickets 0 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 New Zealand lost 5 wickets 51 v Sri Lanka Dhaka 26 Oct 1998
3 New Zealand won 64 runs   v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
4 New Zealand won 4 wickets 6 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
5 New Zealand won 4 wickets 2 v India Nairobi (Gym) 15 Oct 2000
6 New Zealand lost 164 runs   v Australia Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
7 New Zealand won 167 runs   v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
8 New Zealand won 210 runs   v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
9 New Zealand lost 7 wickets 76 v Australia The Oval 16 Sep 2004
10 New Zealand won 87 runs   v South Africa Mumbai (BS) 16 Oct 2006
11 New Zealand lost 7 wickets 84 v Sri Lanka Mumbai (BS) 20 Oct 2006
12 New Zealand won 51 runs   v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
13 New Zealand lost 34 runs   v Australia Mohali 01 Nov 2006
14 New Zealand lost 5 wickets 53 v South Africa Centurion 24 Sep 2009
15 New Zealand won 38 runs   v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
16 New Zealand won 4 wickets 137 v England Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
17 New Zealand won 5 wickets 13 v Pakistan Johannesburg 03 Oct 2009
18 New Zealand lost 6 wickets 28 v Australia Centurion 05 Oct 2009
19 New Zealand won 1 wickets 81 v Sri Lanka Cardiff 09 Jun 2013
20 New Zealand NR   v Australia Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
21 New Zealand lost 10 runs   v England Cardiff 16 Jun 2013

 

MATCH RESULTS – LOST
No Team Result Margin BR Opposition Ground Start Date
1 New Zealand lost 5 wickets 51 v Sri Lanka Dhaka 26 Oct 1998
2 New Zealand lost 164 runs   v Australia Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
3 New Zealand lost 7 wickets 76 v Australia The Oval 16 Sep 2004
4 New Zealand lost 7 wickets 84 v Sri Lanka Mumbai (BS) 20 Oct 2006
5 New Zealand lost 34 runs   v Australia Mohali 01 Nov 2006
6 New Zealand lost 5 wickets 53 v South Africa Centurion 24 Sep 2009
7 New Zealand lost 6 wickets 28 v Australia Centurion 05 Oct 2009
8 New Zealand lost 10 runs   v England Cardiff 16 Jun 2013
MATCH RESULTS – NO RESULT GAME
No Team Result Margin BR Opposition Ground Start Date
1 New Zealand NR   v Australia Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
MATCH RESULTS – WON
No Team Result Margin BR Opposition Ground Start Date
1 New Zealand won 5 wickets 0 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 New Zealand won 64 runs   v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
3 New Zealand won 4 wickets 6 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
4 New Zealand won 4 wickets 2 v India Nairobi (Gym) 15 Oct 2000
5 New Zealand won 167 runs   v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
6 New Zealand won 210 runs   v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
7 New Zealand won 87 runs   v South Africa Mumbai (BS) 16 Oct 2006
8 New Zealand won 51 runs   v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
9 New Zealand won 38 runs   v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
10 New Zealand won 4 wickets 137 v England Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
11 New Zealand won 5 wickets 13 v Pakistan Johannesburg 03 Oct 2009
12 New Zealand won 1 wickets 81 v Sri Lanka Cardiff 09 Jun 2013

 

TEAM TOTALS – 250 PLUS RUNS
No Team Score Overs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 New Zealand 347/4 50.0 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
2 New Zealand 315/7 50.0 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
3 New Zealand 274/7 50.0 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
4 New Zealand 265/7 50.0 1 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
5 New Zealand 265/6 49.4 2 v India Nairobi (Gym) 15 Oct 2000
6 New Zealand 260/5 50.0 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
7 New Zealand 255/6 49.0 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
TEAM DISMISSED ALL OUT
No Team Score Overs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 New Zealand 214 47.5 1 v South Africa Centurion 24 Sep 2009
2 New Zealand 206 46.0 2 v Australia Mohali 01 Nov 2006
3 New Zealand 195 45.4 1 v South Africa Mumbai (BS) 16 Oct 2006
4 New Zealand 188 49.5 1 v Sri Lanka Dhaka 26 Oct 1998
5 New Zealand 165 49.2 1 v Sri Lanka Mumbai (BS) 20 Oct 2006
6 New Zealand 132 26.2 2 v Australia Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002

 

CENTURIONS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 NJ Astle 145* 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
2 CL Cairns 102* 2 v India Nairobi (Gym) 15 Oct 2000
INDIVIDUAL NINETIES
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 SP Fleming 96 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998

 

FIFTIES
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 SP Fleming 96 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 AC Parore 52 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
3 AC Parore 54 1 v Sri Lanka Dhaka 26 Oct 1998
4 RG Twose 85 1 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
5 CD McMillan 52 1 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
6 RG Twose 87 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
7 CD McMillan 51* 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
8 CL Cairns 102* 2 v India Nairobi (Gym) 15 Oct 2000
9 MS Sinclair 70 1 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
10 NJ Astle 145* 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
11 SB Styris 75 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
12 CD McMillan 64* 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
13 SP Fleming 89 1 v South Africa Mumbai (BS) 16 Oct 2006
13 SP Fleming 80 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
15 SB Styris 86 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
16 DL Vettori 79 2 v Australia Mohali 01 Nov 2006
17 LRPL Taylor 72 1 v South Africa Centurion 24 Sep 2009
18 JD Ryder 74 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
19 MJ Guptill 66 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
20 MJ Guptill 53 2 v England Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
21 GD Elliott 75* 2 v Pakistan Johannesburg 03 Oct 2009
22 KS Williamson 67 2 v England Cardiff 16 Jun 2013

 

FIFTIES – TWO OR MORE
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 CD McMillan 52 1 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
2 CD McMillan 51* 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
3 CD McMillan 64* 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
             
1 SP Fleming 96 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 SP Fleming 89 1 v South Africa Mumbai (BS) 16 Oct 2006
3 SP Fleming 80 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
             
1 AC Parore 52 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 AC Parore 54 1 v Sri Lanka Dhaka 26 Oct 1998
             
1 MJ Guptill 66 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
2 MJ Guptill 53 2 v England Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
             
1 RG Twose 85 1 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
2 RG Twose 87 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
             
1 SB Styris 75 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
2 SB Styris 86 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006

 

FIFTIES – TWO OR MORE IN AN  INNINGS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 NJ Astle 145* 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
2 SB Styris 75 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
3 CD McMillan 64* 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
             
1 SP Fleming 96 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 AC Parore 52 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
             
1 RG Twose 85 1 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
2 CD McMillan 52 1 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
             
1 RG Twose 87 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
2 CD McMillan 51* 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
             
1 SP Fleming 80 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
2 SB Styris 86 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
             
1 JD Ryder 74 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
2 MJ Guptill 66 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009

 

FIFTIES BY CAPTAINS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 SP Fleming 96 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 SP Fleming 89 1 v South Africa Mumbai (BS) 16 Oct 2006
3 SP Fleming 80 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006

 

FIFTIES BY WICKET KEEPERS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 AC Parore 52 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 AC Parore 54 1 v Sri Lanka Dhaka 26 Oct 1998

 

FOUR OR MORE  WICKETS IN AN INNINGS
No Player O M R W Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 PJ Wiseman 9.2 0 45 4 2 v Zimbabwe Nairobi (Gym) 09 Oct 2000
2 SB O’Connor 9.2 0 46 5 1 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
3 SE Bond 5.0 0 21 4 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
4 JDP Oram 9.4 1 36 5 2 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
5 KD Mills 10.0 1 38 4 1 v Australia Mohali 01 Nov 2006
6 GD Elliott 8.0 0 31 4 1 v England Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
7 IG Butler 10.0 0 44 4 1 v Pakistan Johannesburg 03 Oct 2009
8 MJ McClenaghan 8.5 0 43 4 1 v Sri Lanka Cardiff 09 Jun 2013
9 MJ McClenaghan 10.0 0 65 4 1 v Australia Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
10 KD Mills 4.3 0 30 4 1 v England Cardiff 16 Jun 2013

 

THREE FIGURE PARTNERSHIPS
No Partners Wkt Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 SP Fleming, AC Parore 4 125 2 v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
2 NJ Astle, RG Twose 3 135 2 v Pakistan Nairobi (Gym) 11 Oct 2000
3 CL Cairns, CZ Harris 6 122 2 v India Nairobi (Gym) 15 Oct 2000
4 NJ Astle, SB Styris 3 163 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
5 NJ Astle, CD McMillan 5 136* 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
6 SP Fleming, SB Styris 4 108 1 v Pakistan Mohali 25 Oct 2006
7 JDP Oram, DL Vettori 7 103 2 v Australia Mohali 01 Nov 2006
8 BB McCullum, JD Ryder 1 125 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
9 GD Elliott, DL Vettori 5 104 2 v Pakistan Johannesburg 03 Oct 2009

 

HIGHEST PARTNERSHIPS FOR EACH WICKET
Wkt Runs Partners Opposition Ground Match Date
1st 125 BB McCullum, JD Ryder v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
2nd 66 SP Fleming, MS Sinclair v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
3rd 163 NJ Astle, SB Styris v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
4th 125 SP Fleming, AC Parore v Zimbabwe Dhaka 24 Oct 1998
5th 136* NJ Astle, CD McMillan v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
6th 122 CL Cairns, CZ Harris v India Nairobi (Gym) 15 Oct 2000
7th 103 JDP Oram, DL Vettori v Australia Mohali 01 Nov 2006
8th 35 CZ Harris, BB McCullum v Australia The Oval 16 Sep 2004
9th 68 BB McCullum, DL Vettori v Australia The Oval 16 Sep 2004
10th 50 KD Mills, SE Bond v Australia Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002

 

Match No 01 – England go past Bangladesh – wins by eight wickets

Match No 01 – England go past Bangladesh – wins by eight wickets

Match Number 01 – England vs Bangladesh – at The Oval – on 01 Jun 2017 – England  won by eight wickets

 

Bangladesh posed 305 for 6 in this game to provide the 12th occasion of a team posting a total of 300 plus runs in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are tabulated below.

 

No Team Score Overs Inns Opposition Ground Match Date
1 New Zealand 347/4 50.0 1 v U.S.A. The Oval 10 Sep 2004
2 India 331/7 50.0 1 v South Africa Cardiff 06 Jun 2013
3 England 323/8 50.0 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
4 Sri Lanka 319/8 50.0 1 v South Africa Centurion 22 Sep 2009
5 South Africa 316/5 50.0 1 v Kenya Colombo (RPS) 20 Sep 2002
6 New Zealand 315/7 50.0 1 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
7 India 307/8 50.0 1 v Australia Dhaka 28 Oct 1998
8 South Africa 305 50.0 2 v India Cardiff 06 Jun 2013
9 Bangladesh 305/6 50.0 1 v England The Oval 01 Jun 2017
10 Sri Lanka 302/8 50.0 1 v Bangladesh Mohali 07 Oct 2006
11 Pakistan 302/9 50.0 1 v India Centurion 26 Sep 2009
12 South Africa 301/9 50.0 2 v England Centurion 27 Sep 2009

 

It also provides the first  occasion of Bangladesh posting 300 plus runs in the Champions Trophy and is also the highest ever team total by Bangladesh in the tournament. It’s previous highest was 265 for 9 against Sri Lanka at Mohali on 07.10.06

 

Bangladesh’s 305 for 6 in this game  provides the 601st occasion of a team posting a total  of 300 plus runs in the  history of one  day internationals. It also provides the eleventh occasion of Bangladesh posting a total of 300 plus runs in one day internationals. It also provides the first occasion of Bangladesh posting a total of 300 plus runs in one day internationals against England. Its previous best was 288 all out at Dhaka on 07.10.06

 

Bangladesh’s 305 for 6  in this game provides the 53rd occasion of a team posting a total of 300 plus runs against England in one  day internationals. It also provides the 23rd occasion of a team posting a total of 300 plus runs against England in England. It also provides the fifth occasion of a team posting a total of 300 plus runs against England at The Oval. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Team Score Overs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Sri Lanka 319/8 50.0 1 v England The Oval 20 Jun 2006
2 India 317/8 49.4 2 v England The Oval 05 Sep 2007
3 New Zealand 398/5 50.0 1 v England The Oval 12 Jun 2015
4 Sri Lanka 305/5 42.0 1 v England The Oval 29 Jun 2016
5 Bangladesh 305/6 50.0 1 v England The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

Tamim Iqbal scored 128 in this game to provide 41st the occasion of a batsman scoring a century in Champions Trophy. It also provides the second century by a Bangladesh batsman in the tournament. Shahriar Nafees had scored 123 not out against Zimbabwe at Jaipur on 13.10.06. Thus Tamim Iqbal’s 128 represent the highest score by a Bangladesh batsman in the champions Trophy

 

Tamim Iqbals’s 128 provide the eighth occasion of a batsman scoring a century against England in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are listed below

 

No Player Runs Inns Team Oppn Ground Start Date
1 V Sehwag 126 2 Ind Eng Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
2 SC Ganguly 117* 2 Ind Eng Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
3 CH Gayle 101 1 Win Eng Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
4 DJ Bravo 112* 1 Win Eng Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
5 GC Smith 141 2 RSA Eng Centurion 27 Sep 2009
6 SR Watson 136* 2 Aus Eng Centurion 02 Oct 2009
7 RT Ponting 111* 2 Aus Eng Centurion 02 Oct 2009
8 KC Sangakkara 134* 2 Srl Eng The Oval 13 Jun 2013
9 Tamim Iqbal 128 1 Ban Eng The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

Tamim Iqbal’s 128 provide the 135th occasion of a batsman scoring a century against England in one day internationals. It also provides the 50th occasion of a batsman scoring a century against England in England in one day internationals.

 

Tamim Iqbal’s 128 in this game provide the 31st occasion of an opening batsman scoring a century in the Champions Trophy. It also provides the second century by a Bangladesh opening batsman in the tournament. Shahriar Nafees had scored 123 not out against Zimbabwe at Jaipur on 13.10.06. Thus Tamim Iqbal’s 128 represent the highest score by a Bangladesh opening batsman in the champions Trophy.

 

Tamim Iqbal and Mushfiqur Rahim added 166 for the third wicket in this game to provide the 63rd occasion of batsmen posting a three figure partnership in the Champions Trophy. It also provides the first occasion of Bangladesh batsmen posting a three figure partnership in the tournament. Its previous best was 85 runs for the second wicket between Aftab Ahmed and Shahriar Nafees against West Indies at Jaipur on 11.10.06

 

Tamim Iqbal and Mushfiqur Rahim added 166 for the third wicket in this game to provide the 63rd occasion of batsmen posting a three figure partnership in the Champions Trophy. It also provides the first occasion of Bangladesh batsmen posting a three figure partnership for the third wicket in the tournament. Its previous best was 83 runs for the third wicket between Shakib Al Hasan and Shahriar Nafees against Zimbabwe at Jaipur on 13.10.06

 

Tamim Iqbal and Mushfiqur Rahim added 166 for the third wicket in this game to provide the 18th occasion of batsmen posting a 150 plus runs partnership in the Champions Trophy.

 

No Partners Wkt Runs Inns Team Oppn Ground Start Date
1 SC Ganguly, V Sehwag 1 192 2 Ind Eng Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
2 DJ Bravo, CH Gayle 2 174 1 Win Eng Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
3 RT Ponting, SR Watson 2 252* 2 Aus Eng Centurion 02 Oct 2009
4 M Rahim, Tamim Iqbal 3 166 1 Ban Eng The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

Mushfiqur Rahim’s 79 in this game provide the 23rd occasion of a wicket keeper batsman scoring a fifty in the Champions Trophy. It also provides the first occasion of a Bangladesh wicket keeper batsman scoring a fifty in the tournament. It also provides the second occasion of a wicket keeper batsman scoring a fifty against England in the tournament. KC Sangakkara of Sri Lanka has scored 134 not out at The Oval on 13.06.13. By a coincidence KC Sangakkara and Mushfiqur Rahim have scored their fifties against England at the same venue – The Oval

 

JT Ball returned with figures of 1 for 82 in this game to provide the seventh occasion of a bowler conceding 80 plus runs in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are listed below

 

No Player O M R W Inns Team Oppn Ground Start Date
1 T Panyangara 10.0 0 86 1 1 Zim Eng Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
2 SL Malinga 10.0 0 85 1 1 Srl NZl Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
3 SE Bond 9.0 0 82 0 2 NZl Srl Johannesburg 27 Sep 2009
4 LL Tsotsobe 10.0 0 83 2 1 RSA Ind Cardiff 06 Jun 2013
5 RK Kleinveldt 10.0 0 81 0 1 RSA Ind Cardiff 06 Jun 2013
6 RMS Eranga 10.0 0 80 2 1 Srl Eng The Oval 13 Jun 2013
7 JT Ball 10.0 1 82 1 1 Eng Ban The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

JT Ball became the first England bowler to concede 80 plus runs in the tournament and thus gets the tag of becoming the most expensive England bowler in terms of runs  conceded in the  tournament. The previous record for conceding most runs by an England bowler in the Champions Trophy was credited to JM Anderson for his none for 72 against West Indies at Ahmedabad on 28.10.06.

 

AD Hales scored 95 in this game to provide the 14th occasion of a batsman scoring a ninety in the Champions Trophy. He also became the fifth England batsman to score a ninety in the tournament.

 

No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 KP Pietersen 90* 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
3 OA Shah 98 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
4 IR Bell 91 1 v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
5 AD Hales 95 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

England posted 308 for 2 in this game to provide the 13th occasion of a team posting 300 plus runs in the Champions Trophy. It also provides the second occasion of England posting a total of 300 plus runs  in the tournament. The first such occasions was its 323 for 8 against South Africa on 27.09.09

 

England posted 308 for 2 in this game in the second innings of the match to provide the third  occasion of a team posting 300 plus runs  in the  second innings in the tournament. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Team Score Overs Inns Opposition Ground Match Date
1 South Africa 305 50.0 2 v India Cardiff 06 Jun 2013
2 South Africa 301/9 50.0 2 v England Centurion 27 Sep 2009
3 England 308/2 47.2 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

Bangladesh posted 305 for 6 and England posted 308 for 2 in this game to provide the first occasion of both the teams posting 300 plus runs in the Champions Trophy.

 

England’s 308 for 2 in this game provide the 602nd occasion of a team posting a total of 300 plus runs in the history of one day internationals. It also provides the 56th occasion of England posting a total of 300 plus runs in one day internationals

 

England’s 308 for 2 in this game provide the 44th occasion of a team posting a total of 300 plus runs in the history of one day internationals against Bangladesh. It also provides the fourth occasion of England posting a total of 300 plus runs in one day internationals against Bangladesh

 

JE Root scored 133 not out in this game to provide the 42nd occasion of a batsman  scoring a century in  the Champions Trophy. It also provides the  occasion of an England batsman scoring a century in the tournament. All such occasions are listed below

 

No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 ME Trescothick 119 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
2 A Flintoff 104 1 v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
3 ME Trescothick 104 1 v West Indies The Oval 25 Sep 2004
4 JE Root 133* 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

JE Root’s 133 not out in this game represent the highest individual score by an England batsman in the Champions Trophy. The previous best was 119 by ME Trescothick against Zimbabwe at Col-RPS on 18.09.02

 

AD Hales-JE Root added 159  runs  for the second wicket and JE Root-EJG Morgan added 143 runs in  an unfinished stand for the third wicket in this game to provide the tenth and eleventh occasion of England batsmen posting a three figure  partnership in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Partners Wkt Runs Opposition Ground Start Date
1 NH Fairbrother, AJ Hollioake 6 112 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 N Hussain, AJ Stewart 2 175 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
3 N Hussain, ME Trescothick 2 141 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
4 ID Blackwell, AJ Stewart 6 104 v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
5 ME Trescothick, MP Vaughan 2 140 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
6 PD Collingwood, OA Shah 3 163 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
7 TT Bresnan, LJ Wright 7 107 v Australia Centurion 02 Oct 2009
8 IR Bell, IJL Trott 2 111 v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
9 JE Root, IJL Trott 3 105 v South Africa The Oval 19 Jun 2013
10 AD Hales,JE Root 2 159 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017
11 JE Root, EJG Morgan 4 143* v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

AD Hales-JE Root added 159 runs  for the second wicket to provide the fifth occasion of England batsmen posting a three figure partnership for the  second wicket in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Partners Wkt Runs Opposition Ground Start Date
1 N Hussain, AJ Stewart 2 175 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 AD Hales,JE Root 2 159 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017
3 N Hussain, ME Trescothick 2 141 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
4 ME Trescothick, MP Vaughan 2 140 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
5 IR Bell, IJL Trott 2 111 v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013

 

JE Root-EJG Morgan added 143 runs in  an unfinished stand for the third wicket in this game to provide the third occasion of England batsmen posting a three figure partnership for the third  wicket in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Partners Wkt Runs Opposition Ground Start Date
1 PD Collingwood, OA Shah 3 163 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
2 JE Root, EJG Morgan 3 143* v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017
3 JE Root, IJL Trott 3 105 v South Africa The Oval 19 Jun 2013

 

Tamim Iqbal-M Rahim added 166 runs for the third wicket in Bangladesh’s innings and AD Hales and JE Root added 159  runs for the second wicket in England’s innings to  provide the first occasion of rival teams  posting 150 plus runs partnerships in the Champions Trophy.

 

Tamim Iqbal-M Rahim added 166 runs for the third wicket in Bangladesh’s innings and AD Hales and JE Root added 159  runs for the second wicket in England’s innings to  provide the 24th occasion of rival teams  posting 150 plus runs partnerships in the history of one day internationals

 

Bangladesh posted 305 for 6 and England posted 308 for 2 in this game to provide the 105th occasion of both the teams posting 300 plus runs in the same match in the history of one day internationals.

 

Bangladesh lost the game after posting 300 plus runs to provide the 107th occasion of a team losing the game after it had posted 300 plus runs  in the  history of one day internationals. It also provides the second such occasion for Bangladesh. Both the occasions are listed below

 

No Team Score Overs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Bangladesh 326/3 50.0 1 v Pakistan Dhaka 04 Mar 2014
2 Bangladesh 305/6 50.0 1 v England The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

AD Hales {95},JE Root {133*} and EJG Morgan {75*} scored fifties in this game to provide the fifth occasion of three England batsman scoring fifties in an innings in the Champions Trophy. All such occasions are listed below

 

No No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 1 ME Trescothick 81 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
  2 MP Vaughan 86 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
  3 AJ Strauss 52* 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
               
2 1 AJ Strauss 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
  2 IR Bell 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
  3 KP Pietersen 90* 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
               
3 1 OA Shah 98 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
  2 PD Collingwood 82 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
  3 EJG Morgan 67 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
               
4 1 AN Cook 59 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
  2 IJL Trott 76 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
  3 JE Root 68 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
               
5 1 AD Hales 95 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 June 2017
  2 JE Root 133* 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 June 2017
  3 EJG Morgan 75* 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 June 2017

 

EJG Morgan scored 75 not out in this game to provide the 42nd occasion of a captain scoring a fifty in the Champions Trophy. It also provides the seventh occasion of an England captain scoring a fifty in the tournament. All such occasions are tabulated below

 

No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 AJ Hollioake 83* 1 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
3 N Hussain 75 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
4 MP Vaughan 86 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
5 AN Cook 59 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
6 AN Cook 64 1 v New Zealand Cardiff 16 Jun 2013
7 EJG Morgan 75* 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

EJG Morgan scored 75 not out in this game to provide the second occasion of an England captain scoring a fifty in the tournament against Bangladesh. N Hussain had scored 95 at Nairobi {G} on 05.10.00

 

No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 EJG Morgan 75* 2 v Bangladesh The Oval 01 Jun 2017

 

 

Australia in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

Australia in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

Champions Trophy 2017 starts from today with the first  game being  played between England and Bangaldesh. www.hrgcricstats.com brings it netizens, the performance of each of  the eight playing teams  in the tournament with  inumerable stats table. Here is Australia’s performance

 

MATCH RESULTS
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Australia Lost 44 runs   won 2nd v India Dhaka 28 Oct 1998
2 Australia Lost 20 runs   won 2nd v India Nairobi (Gym) 07 Oct 2000
3 Australia Won 164 runs   won 1st v New Zealand Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
4 Australia Won 9 wickets 176 lost 2nd v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
5 Australia Lost 7 wickets 60 won 1st v Sri Lanka Colombo (RPS) 27 Sep 2002
6 Australia Won 9 wickets 253 won 2nd v U.S.A. Southampton 13 Sep 2004
7 Australia Won 7 wickets 76 won 2nd v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
8 Australia Lost 6 wickets 21 lost 1st v England Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
9 Australia Lost 10 runs   lost 2nd v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
10 Australia Won 6 wickets 79 won 2nd v England Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
11 Australia Won 6 wickets 26 lost 2nd v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
12 Australia Won 34 runs   lost 1st v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
13 Australia Won 8 wickets 41 lost 2nd v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 05 Nov 2006
14 Australia Won 50 runs   lost 1st v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
15 Australia NR   won 1st v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
16 Australia Won 2 wickets 0 won 2nd v Pakistan Centurion 30 Sep 2009
17 Australia Won 9 wickets 49 lost 2nd v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
18 Australia Won 6 wickets 28 lost 2nd v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009
19 Australia Lost 48 runs   lost 2nd v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
20 Australia NR   won 1st v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
21 Australia Lost 20 runs   won 2nd v Sri Lanka The Oval 17 Jun 2013

 

MATCH RESULTS – LOST
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Australia lost 44 runs   won 2nd v India Dhaka 28 Oct 1998
2 Australia lost 20 runs   won 2nd v India Nairobi (Gym) 07 Oct 2000
3 Australia lost 7 wickets 60 won 1st v Sri Lanka Colombo (RPS) 27 Sep 2002
4 Australia lost 6 wickets 21 lost 1st v England Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
5 Australia lost 10 runs   lost 2nd v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
6 Australia lost 48 runs   lost 2nd v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
7 Australia lost 20 runs   won 2nd v Sri Lanka The Oval 17 Jun 2013
MATCH RESULTS – NO RESULT GAMES
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Australia NR   won 1st v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
2 Australia NR   won 1st v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
MATCH RESULTS – WON
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Australia won 164 runs   won 1st v New Zealand Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
2 Australia won 9 wickets 176 lost 2nd v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
3 Australia won 9 wickets 253 won 2nd v U.S.A. Southampton 13 Sep 2004
4 Australia won 7 wickets 76 won 2nd v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
5 Australia won 6 wickets 79 won 2nd v England Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
6 Australia won 6 wickets 26 lost 2nd v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
7 Australia won 34 runs   lost 1st v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
8 Australia won 8 wickets 41 lost 2nd v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 05 Nov 2006
9 Australia won 50 runs   lost 1st v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
10 Australia won 2 wickets 0 won 2nd v Pakistan Centurion 30 Sep 2009
11 Australia won 9 wickets 49 lost 2nd v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
12 Australia won 6 wickets 28 lost 2nd v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009

 

FIFTIES
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 ME Waugh 74 2 v India Dhaka 28 Oct 1998
2 DR Martyn 73 1 v New Zealand Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
3 AC Gilchrist 54 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
4 ML Hayden 67* 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
5 DR Martyn 60* 2 v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
6 A Symonds 71* 2 v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
7 DR Martyn 65 1 v England Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
8 AC Gilchrist 92 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
9 DR Martyn 78 2 v England Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
10 SR Watson 50 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
11 RT Ponting 58 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
12 DR Martyn 73* 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
13 RT Ponting 58 1 v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
14 A Symonds 58 1 v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
15 SR Watson 57* 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 05 Nov 2006
16 RT Ponting 79 1 v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
17 MG Johnson 73* 1 v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
18 TD Paine 56 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
19 RT Ponting 65 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
20 MEK Hussey 67 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
21 MEK Hussey 64 2 v Pakistan Centurion 30 Sep 2009
22 SR Watson 136* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
23 RT Ponting 111* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
24 SR Watson 105* 2 v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009
25 CL White 62 2 v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009
26 GJ Bailey 55 2 v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
27 JP Faulkner 54* 2 v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
28 GJ Bailey 55 1 v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
29 AC Voges 71 1 v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013

 

CENTURIONS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 SR Watson 105* 2 v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009
2 RT Ponting 111* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
3 SR Watson 136* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
INDIVIDUAL NINETIES
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 AC Gilchrist 92 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006

 

FIFTIES – ON  TWO OR MORE OCCASIONS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 DR Martyn 73 1 v New Zealand Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
2 DR Martyn 60* 2 v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
3 DR Martyn 65 1 v England Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
4 DR Martyn 78 2 v England Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
5 DR Martyn 73* 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
             
1 RT Ponting 58 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
2 RT Ponting 58 1 v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
3 RT Ponting 79 1 v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
4 RT Ponting 65 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
5 RT Ponting 111* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
             
1 SR Watson 50 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
2 SR Watson 57* 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 05 Nov 2006
3 SR Watson 136* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
4 SR Watson 105* 2 v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009
             
1 A Symonds 71* 2 v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
2 A Symonds 58 1 v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
             
1 AC Gilchrist 54 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
2 AC Gilchrist 92 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
             
1 GJ Bailey 55 2 v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
2 GJ Bailey 55 1 v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
             
1 MEK Hussey 67 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
2 MEK Hussey 64 2 v Pakistan Centurion 30 Sep 2009

 

FIFTIES – TWO OR MORE IN AN INNINGS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 SR Watson 50 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
2 RT Ponting 58 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
3 DR Martyn 73* 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
             
1 TD Paine 56 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
2 RT Ponting 65 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
3 MEK Hussey 67 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
             
1 AC Gilchrist 54 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
2 ML Hayden 67* 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
             
1 DR Martyn 60* 2 v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
2 A Symonds 71* 2 v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
             
1 RT Ponting 58 1 v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
2 A Symonds 58 1 v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
             
1 RT Ponting 79 1 v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
2 MG Johnson 73* 1 v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
             
1 SR Watson 136* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
2 RT Ponting 111* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
             
1 SR Watson 105* 2 v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009
2 CL White 62 2 v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009
             
1 GJ Bailey 55 2 v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
2 JP Faulkner 54* 2 v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
             
1 GJ Bailey 55 1 v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013
2 AC Voges 71 1 v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013

 

CENTURIONS – TWO  IN AN  INNINGS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 SR Watson 136* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
2 RT Ponting 111* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009

 

FIFTIES BY CAPTAINS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 RT Ponting 58 2 v India Mohali 29 Oct 2006
2 RT Ponting 58 1 v New Zealand Mohali 01 Nov 2006
3 RT Ponting 79 1 v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
4 RT Ponting 65 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009
5 RT Ponting 111* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
6 GJ Bailey 55 2 v England Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
7 GJ Bailey 55 1 v New Zealand Birmingham 12 Jun 2013

 

FIFITES BY WICKET KEEPERS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 AC Gilchrist 54 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
2 AC Gilchrist 92 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
3 TD Paine 56 1 v India Centurion 28 Sep 2009

 

FOUR OR MORE WICKETS IN AN INNINGS
No Player O M R W Inns Oppn Ground Start Date
1 GD McGrath 7.0 1 37 5 2 NZl Colombo (SSC) 15 Sep 2002
2 MS Kasprowicz 7.0 1 14 4 1 USA Southampton 13 Sep 2004
3 JN Gillespie 6.0 1 15 4 1 USA Southampton 13 Sep 2004

 

THREE FIGURE PARTNERSHIPS
No Partners Wkt Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 AC Gilchrist, ML Hayden 1 113 2 v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
2 DR Martyn, A Symonds 4 100* 2 v New Zealand The Oval 16 Sep 2004
3 MJ Clarke, AC Gilchrist 5 101 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
4 MEK Hussey, DR Martyn 4 118 2 v England Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
5 DR Martyn, SR Watson 3 103* 2 v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 05 Nov 2006
6 RT Ponting, SR Watson 2 252* 2 v England Centurion 02 Oct 2009
7 SR Watson, CL White 3 128 2 v New Zealand Centurion 05 Oct 2009

 

HIGHEST PARTNERSHIPS FOR EACH WICKET
Wkt Runs Partners Opposition Ground Match Date
1st 113 AC Gilchrist, ML Hayden v Bangladesh Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
2nd 252* SR Watson, RT Ponting v England Centurion 2 Oct 2009
3rd 128 SR Watson, CL White v New Zealand Centurion 5 Oct 2009
4th 118 DR Martyn, MEK Hussey v England Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
5th 101 AC Gilchrist, MJ Clarke v West Indies Mumbai (BS) 18 Oct 2006
6th 47 AC Voges, MS Wade v Sri Lanka The Oval 17 Jun 2013
7th 39 MJ Clarke, B Lee v England Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
8th 70 MG Johnson, B Lee v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
9th 34* MG Johnson, NM Hauritz v West Indies Johannesburg 26 Sep 2009
10th 41 CJ McKay, XJ Doherty v Sri Lanka The Oval 17 Jun 2013

 

Bangladesh in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

Bangladesh in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

Champions Trophy 2017 starts from today with the first  game being  played between England and Bangaldesh. www.hrgcricstats.com brings it netizens, the performance of each of  the eight playing teams  in the tournamentswith  inumerable stats table. Here is Bangladesh’s performance

MATCH RESULTS
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Bangladesh Lost 8 wickets 37 won 1st v England Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 Bangladesh Lost 9 wickets 176 won 1st v Australia Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
3 Bangladesh Lost 167 runs   won 2nd v New Zealand Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
4 Bangladesh Lost 9 wickets 193 won 1st v South Africa Birmingham 12 Sep 2004
5 Bangladesh Lost 138 runs   won 2nd v West Indies Southampton 15 Sep 2004
6 Bangladesh Lost 37 runs   won 2nd v Sri Lanka Mohali 07 Oct 2006
7 Bangladesh Lost 10 wickets 80 won 1st v West Indies Jaipur 11 Oct 2006
8 Bangladesh Won 101 runs   lost 1st v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006

 

MATCH RESULTS – LOST
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Bangladesh Lost 8 wickets 37 won 1st v England Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 Bangladesh Lost 9 wickets 176 won 1st v Australia Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002
3 Bangladesh Lost 167 runs   won 2nd v New Zealand Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002
4 Bangladesh Lost 9 wickets 193 won 1st v South Africa Birmingham 12 Sep 2004
5 Bangladesh Lost 138 runs   won 2nd v West Indies Southampton 15 Sep 2004
6 Bangladesh Lost 37 runs   won 2nd v Sri Lanka Mohali 07 Oct 2006
7 Bangladesh Lost 10 wickets 80 won 1st v West Indies Jaipur 11 Oct 2006
MATCH RESULTS – WON
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Bangladesh Won 101 runs   lost 1st v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006

 

FIFTY PLUS RUNS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Javed Omar 63* 1 v England Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 Shakib Al Hasan 67* 2 v Sri Lanka Mohali 07 Oct 2006
3 Aftab Ahmed 59 1 v West Indies Jaipur 11 Oct 2006
4 Shahriar Nafees 123* 1 v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006

 

CENTURION
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Shahriar Nafees 123* 1 v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006

 

THREE WICKETS  IN AN INNINGS
No Player O M R W Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Shakib Al Hasan 10.0 1 18 3 2 v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006
2 Mohammad Ashraful 5.0 1 26 3 1 v New Zealand Colombo (SSC) 23 Sep 2002

 

FIFTY PLUS RUNS PARTNERSHIPS
No Partners Wkt Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 Aftab Ahmed, Shahriar Nafees 2 85 1 v West Indies Jaipur 11 Oct 2006
2 Shahriar Nafees, Shakib Al Hasan 3 83 1 v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006
3 Habibul Bashar, Shahriar Nafees 4 80 1 v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006
4 Javed Omar, Naimur Rahman 5 64 1 v England Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
5 Farhad Reza, Shakib Al Hasan 5 63 2 v Sri Lanka Mohali 07 Oct 2006

 

HIGHEST PARTNERSHIPS FOR EACH WICKET
Wkt Runs Partners Opposition Ground Match Date  
1st 33 Javed Omar, Al Sahariar v England Nairobi (Gym) 5 Oct 2000  
2nd 85 Shahriar Nafees, Aftab Ahmed v West Indies Jaipur 11 Oct 2006  
3rd 83 Shahriar Nafees, Shakib Al Hasan v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006  
4th 80 Shahriar Nafees, Habibul Bashar v Zimbabwe Jaipur 13 Oct 2006  
5th 64 Javed Omar, Naimur Rahman v England Nairobi (Gym) 5 Oct 2000  
6th 45 Aftab Ahmed, Mushfiqur Rahman v West Indies Southampton 15 Sep 2004  
7th 33 Alok Kapali, Khaled Mahmud v Australia Colombo (SSC) 19 Sep 2002  
8th 49 Shakib Al Hasan, Mashrafe Mortaza v Sri Lanka Mohali 7 Oct 2006  
9th 38 Shakib Al Hasan, Abdur Razzak v Sri Lanka Mohali 7 Oct 2006  
10th 26 Khaled Mahmud, Nazmul Hossain v West Indies Southampton 15 Sep 2004  

 

England in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

England in Champions Trophy – Stats Tables

Champions Trophy 2017 starts from today with the first  game being  played between England and Bangaldesh. www.hrgcricstats.com brings it netizens, the performance of each of  the eight  playing teams  in the tournamentswith  inumerable stats table. To start with here is England’s performance

MATCH RESULTS
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 England lost 6 wickets 20 won 1st v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 England won 8 wickets 37 lost 2nd v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
3 England lost 8 wickets 65 won 1st v South Africa Nairobi (Gym) 10 Oct 2000
4 England won 108 runs   won 1st v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
5 England lost 8 wickets 63 won 1st v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
6 England won 152 runs   lost 1st v Zimbabwe Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
7 England won 49 runs   lost 1st v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
8 England won 6 wickets 21 won 2nd v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
9 England lost 2 wickets 7 lost 1st v West Indies The Oval 25 Sep 2004
10 England lost 4 wickets 123 lost 1st v India Jaipur 15 Oct 2006
11 England lost 6 wickets 79 lost 1st v Australia Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
12 England won 3 wickets 9 lost 2nd v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
13 England won 6 wickets 30 won 2nd v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 25 Sep 2009
14 England won 22 runs   won 1st v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
15 England lost 4 wickets 137 lost 1st v New Zealand Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
16 England lost 9 wickets 49 won 1st v Australia Centurion 02 Oct 2009
17 England won 48 runs   won 1st v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
18 England lost 7 wickets 17 lost 1st v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
19 England won 10 runs   lost 1st v New Zealand Cardiff 16 Jun 2013
20 England won 7 wickets 75 won 2nd v South Africa The Oval 19 Jun 2013
21 England lost 5 runs   won 2nd v India Birmingham 23 Jun 2013

 

MATCH RESULTS – LOST
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 England lost 6 wickets 20 won 1st v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 England lost 8 wickets 65 won 1st v South Africa Nairobi (Gym) 10 Oct 2000
3 England lost 8 wickets 63 won 1st v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
4 England lost 2 wickets 7 lost 1st v West Indies The Oval 25 Sep 2004
5 England lost 4 wickets 123 lost 1st v India Jaipur 15 Oct 2006
6 England lost 6 wickets 79 lost 1st v Australia Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
7 England lost 4 wickets 137 lost 1st v New Zealand Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009
8 England lost 9 wickets 49 won 1st v Australia Centurion 02 Oct 2009
9 England lost 7 wickets 17 lost 1st v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
10 England lost 5 runs   won 2nd v India Birmingham 23 Jun 2013
MATCH RESULTS – WON
No Team Result Margin BR Toss Bat Opposition Ground Start Date
1 England won 8 wickets 37 lost 2nd v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 England won 108 runs   won 1st v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
3 England won 152 runs   lost 1st v Zimbabwe Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
4 England won 49 runs   lost 1st v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
5 England won 6 wickets 21 won 2nd v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
6 England won 3 wickets 9 lost 2nd v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
7 England won 6 wickets 30 won 2nd v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 25 Sep 2009
8 England won 22 runs   won 1st v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
9 England won 48 runs   won 1st v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
10 England won 10 runs   lost 1st v New Zealand Cardiff 16 Jun 2013
11 England won 7 wickets 75 won 2nd v South Africa The Oval 19 Jun 2013

 

INIDIVIDUAL NINETIES
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 OA Shah 98 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
2 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
3 IR Bell 91 1 v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
4 KP Pietersen 90* 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
CENTURIONS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 ME Trescothick 119 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
2 A Flintoff 104 1 v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
3 ME Trescothick 104 1 v West Indies The Oval 25 Sep 2004

 

FIFTIES
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 NH Fairbrother 56 1 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 AJ Hollioake 83* 1 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
3 AJ Stewart 87* 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
4 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
5 GA Hick 65 1 v South Africa Nairobi (Gym) 10 Oct 2000
6 ME Trescothick 119 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
7 N Hussain 75 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
8 NV Knight 50 1 v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
9 ID Blackwell 82 1 v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
10 VS Solanki 62 1 v Zimbabwe Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
11 PD Collingwood 80* 1 v Zimbabwe Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
12 ME Trescothick 66 1 v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
13 A Flintoff 104 1 v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
14 ME Trescothick 81 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
15 MP Vaughan 86 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
16 AJ Strauss 52* 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
17 ME Trescothick 104 1 v West Indies The Oval 25 Sep 2004
18 AJ Strauss 56 1 v Australia Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
19 AJ Strauss 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
20 IR Bell 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
21 KP Pietersen 90* 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
22 EJG Morgan 62* 2 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 25 Sep 2009
23 OA Shah 98 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
24 PD Collingwood 82 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
25 EJG Morgan 67 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
26 TT Bresnan 80 1 v Australia Centurion 02 Oct 2009
27 IR Bell 91 1 v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
28 AN Cook 59 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
29 IJL Trott 76 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
30 JE Root 68 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
31 AN Cook 64 1 v New Zealand Cardiff 16 Jun 2013
32 IJL Trott 82* 2 v South Africa The Oval 19 Jun 2013

 

FIFTIES – TWO OR MORE OCCASIONS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 ME Trescothick 119 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
2 ME Trescothick 66 1 v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
3 ME Trescothick 81 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
4 ME Trescothick 104 1 v West Indies The Oval 25 Sep 2004
             
1 AJ Strauss 52* 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
2 AJ Strauss 56 1 v Australia Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
3 AJ Strauss 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
             
1 PD Collingwood 80* 1 v Zimbabwe Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
2 PD Collingwood 82 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
             
1 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 N Hussain 75 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
             
1 IR Bell 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
2 IR Bell 91 1 v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
             
1 IJL Trott 76 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
2 IJL Trott 82* 2 v South Africa The Oval 19 Jun 2013
             
1 EJG Morgan 62* 2 v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 25 Sep 2009
2 EJG Morgan 67 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
             
1 AN Cook 59 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
2 AN Cook 64 1 v New Zealand Cardiff 16 Jun 2013

 

FIFTIES BY CAPTAINS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 AJ Hollioake 83* 1 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 5 Oct 2000
3 N Hussain 75 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
4 MP Vaughan 86 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
5 AN Cook 59 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
6 AN Cook 64 1 v New Zealand Cardiff 16 Jun 2013
FIFTIES BY WICKET KEEPERS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 AJ Stewart 87* 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 5 Oct 2000
2 EJG Morgan 67 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009

 

FIFTIES –  TWO OR MORE IN AN INNINGS
No Player Runs Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 ME Trescothick 81 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
2 MP Vaughan 86 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
3 AJ Strauss 52* 2 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
             
1 AJ Strauss 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
2 IR Bell 50 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
3 KP Pietersen 90* 2 v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
             
1 OA Shah 98 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
2 PD Collingwood 82 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
3 EJG Morgan 67 1 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
             
1 AN Cook 59 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
2 IJL Trott 76 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
3 JE Root 68 1 v Sri Lanka The Oval 13 Jun 2013
             
1 NH Fairbrother 56 1 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 AJ Hollioake 83* 1 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
             
1 AJ Stewart 87* 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
2 N Hussain 95 2 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
             
1 ME Trescothick 119 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
2 N Hussain 75 1 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
             
1 NV Knight 50 1 v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
2 ID Blackwell 82 1 v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
             
1 VS Solanki 62 1 v Zimbabwe Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
2 PD Collingwood 80* 1 v Zimbabwe Birmingham 10 Sep 2004
             
1 ME Trescothick 66 1 v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
2 A Flintoff 104 1 v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004

 

FOUR WICKETS IN AN INNINGS
No Player O M R W Inns Opposition Ground Start Date
1 RC Irani 10.0 0 37 4 2 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
2 SCJ Broad 8.1 1 39 4 2 v New Zealand Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009

 

THREE FIGURE PARTNERSHIPS
No Partners Wkt Runs Opposition Ground Start Date
1 NH Fairbrother, AJ Hollioake 6 112 v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
2 N Hussain, AJ Stewart 2 175 v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
3 N Hussain, ME Trescothick 2 141 v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
4 ID Blackwell, AJ Stewart 6 104 v India Colombo (RPS) 22 Sep 2002
5 ME Trescothick, MP Vaughan 2 140 v Australia Birmingham 21 Sep 2004
6 PD Collingwood, OA Shah 3 163 v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
7 TT Bresnan, LJ Wright 7 107 v Australia Centurion 02 Oct 2009
8 IR Bell, IJL Trott 2 111 v Australia Birmingham 08 Jun 2013
9 JE Root, IJL Trott 3 105 v South Africa The Oval 19 Jun 2013

 

HIGHEST PARTNERSHIPS FOR EACH WICKET
Wkt Runs Partners Opposition Ground Match Date
1st 83 AJ Strauss, IR Bell v Australia Jaipur 21 Oct 2006
2nd 175 AJ Stewart, N Hussain v Bangladesh Nairobi (Gym) 05 Oct 2000
3rd 163 OA Shah, PD Collingwood v South Africa Centurion 27 Sep 2009
4th 76 OA Shah, EJG Morgan v Sri Lanka Johannesburg 25 Sep 2009
5th 94 A Flintoff, PD Collingwood v Sri Lanka Southampton 17 Sep 2004
6th 112 NH Fairbrother, AJ Hollioake v South Africa Dhaka 25 Oct 1998
7th 107 LJ Wright, TT Bresnan v Australia Centurion 02 Oct 2009
8th 44* KP Pietersen, SI Mahmood v West Indies Ahmedabad 28 Oct 2006
9th 11* AJ Stewart, AR Caddick v Zimbabwe Colombo (RPS) 18 Sep 2002
9th 11* SCJ Broad, JC Tredwell v India Birmingham 23 Jun 2013
10th 29 RJ Sidebottom, JM Anderson v New Zealand Johannesburg 29 Sep 2009