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MITCHELL STARC NAMED AS PLAYER OF THE ICC CRICKET WORLD CUP 2015

MITCHELL STARC NAMED AS PLAYER OF THE ICC CRICKET WORLD CUP 2015


Mitchell Starc named as player of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 - Cricket News

Australia fast bowler Mitchell Starc was today named as the player of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015.


Starc was the unanimous choice of a select group of experts* following his sensational form that helped guide his side to its fifth title in 11 tournaments. The 25-year-old left-armer took 22 wickets at 10.18 runs per wicket with an economy rate of 3.50 runs per over. His best performance came against New Zealand in Auckland when he finished with six for 28.

During their deliberations, the members of the panel discussed several names, highlighting such players as New Zealand’s inspirational captain Brendon McCullum and his team-mates Trent Boult and Martin Guptill, as well as Kumar Sangakkara of Sri Lanka for his four consecutive centuries.


*The selection panel that chose the player of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 consisted of:

Geoff Allardice (ICC General Manager – Cricket)

Andrew Alderson (Journalist, New Zealand Herald)

Harsha Bhogle (Broadcaster)

Richard Kettleborough (Member of Emirates Elite Panel of ICC Umpires and ICC Umpire of the Year 2014)

Chloe Saltau (Journalist, The Age)

Michael Vaughan (Former England captain and broadcaster)

DOMINANT AUSTRALIA LIFTS WORLD CUP FOR FIFTH TIME

DOMINANT AUSTRALIA LIFTS WORLD CUP FOR FIFTH TIME


Dominant Australia lifts World Cup for fifth time - Cricket News

There is nothing Australia loves more than to strut its stuff in front of its fans. There was no shortage of support as the MCG, bursting at the seams with a record 93,013 fans in attendance, buzzed with electricity well before the toss. Decked up in their yellow tees and wearing their yellow caps with pride, Australia’s supporters prepared for a capital show from their heroes. They were not to be disappointed.

In Michael Clarke’s final appearance as a One-Day International player, Australia showed its class, romping to a big win in the final of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015. New Zealand arrived in Australia hopeful of becoming the newest first-time champion. But in the space of seven hours on Sunday (March 29), it was emphatically denied.
Clarke led with the astuteness and assurance of a general who knows his troops are used to overwhelming success. Brendon McCullum, inspirational and enterprising thus far, had a bad day with the bat and, momentarily, perhaps decisively, was defensive as captain. With only 183 to defend, New Zealand’s only option was to bowl Australia out. But when McCullum took second slip out as early as the fifth over and saw David Warner edge Tim Southee exactly through where that fielder had been, the moment had passed.

Australia would have been 23 for 2 at that stage; instead, Warner celebrated the let-off with a succession of boundaries to negate the Trent Boult-Southee threat before ceding centre stage to Clarke.

Clarke’s farewell fifty, a free-flowing innings full of sumptuous strokes, was the icing on the cake asAustralia clattered to 186 for 3 and a seven-wicket romp with 101 deliveries to spare. Steven Smith, imperceptibly, brought up a half-century of his own in perhaps his most important but least celebrated knock to date, their 112-run stand a wonderful amalgam of the present and the future. Clarke fell with victory imminent, walking off to his second standing ovation of the night.
It was not just Australia’s fifth World Cup title, it also meant it had won a World Cup in each of the continents where cricket is played. Now, beat that.

Australia’s three left-arm quicks had used different tactics in the afternoon to share eight wickets. Mitchell Starc swung the ball at express pace, Mitchell Johnson was fast and nasty and smart and cunning, and James Faulkner set the cat among the pigeons with cunning changes of pace, especially in the batting Power Play where he picked up two wickets in the very first over. For good measure, Josh Hazlewoodextracted appreciable bounce and kept pushing the batsmen back with his nagging length, and there was a bonus wicket in Glenn Maxwell’s first over too as everything Clarke touched turned instantly to gold.
New Zealand had no such riches. Boult did evict Aaron Finch in his first over with customary inswing, but Southee was disappointing in his first spell, allowing Warner to latch on to him. Matt Henry bowled his heart out without much luck, and even as McCullum set innovative, well thought-out fields to Smith and Clarke at the start of their innings, you could sense that a lot of the fight had gone out of him and his side when Warner’s outside edge flew past the vacant second slip.

Warner was eventually caught on the pull but had done enough damage, with a bruising 46-ball 45 in a low-scoring game. With his stand of 61 with the fluent Smith, he had calmed early nerves. Then, Clarke took over. Having walked out to a standing ovation, Clarke bided his time before leaving his imprint with the bat too. A couple of streaky early boundaries gave way to silken smooth drives through the covers and effortless caresses over the straight field. Smith was happy to sit back and watch his captain.
The New Zealand innings lost momentum after the early loss of the tone-setting McCullum. All tournament, the skipper has got the side off to blistering starts, but on Sunday, he didn’t even lay bat to ball. Starc produced an outstanding first over. After Martin Guptill escaped with a single, Starc gave McCullum a terrific working over. The battle lasted only three deliveries, but it was gripping and intense. It was also to be the first defining phase of the final.

Only when Ross Taylor and Grant Elliott, the only batsman that showed fluency, were involved in a 111-run stand for the fourth wicket did the famed New Zealand resolve make its appearance. New Zealand, however, had little to show either side of that 97-minute, 137-ball alliance as its last seven wickets tumbled for 33 in 60 deliveries to a combination of skill and intelligence from the home side. Australia used the short delivery liberally, but the follow-up balls were the one that did the damage. Eight of the ten wickets fell to full balls, testimony to Australia’s game plan that took emotion completely out of the equation.

McCullum could have been out first-ball, an inswinger cutting him in half and narrowly missing both inside edge and off stump. He could have been out second ball, charging the bowler and seeing the ball slide between leg stump and himself on its way to Brad Haddin. He was out third ball, well beaten and bowled by a full ball that screamed past the inside of the bat and pegged off pole back.

It was a dramatic start. Starc went on a celebratory run that finished up at square-leg, his teammates converging on him to show how much that strike, that wicket of McCullum, meant to the team. Already pumped up, that scalp energised the Australians even more. The ball was fizzing around – this was no flat deck – as Haddin repeatedly took it well above his head. Starc mixed his lengths up, Hazlewood got exceptional bounce. Guptill and Kane Williamson had nowhere to go.

Clarke’s captaincy throughout was immaculate. He was always on the lookout for wickets, even when he was cramming the ten overs from Maxwell and Shane Watson before the batting Power Play. Guptill was bowled playing inside the line to Maxwell and Williamson’s innings ended with a return catch to Johnson, once again lifting himself on the big stage.
Faulkner then dug the dagger deeper as the Power Play began, evicting a thoroughly unconvincing Taylor with his first ball, and sending Corey Anderson packing with his third. Taylor’s struggles were ended by a slower delivery that he went reaching for and only managed a nick through to the keeper; as if to showcase his versatility, Faulkner produced a fast yorker two deliveries later to get under Anderson’s bat during a game-turning double-wicket maiden just when New Zealand was bracing for a final assault.

Luke Ronchi’s optimistic, fatal waft in the next over from Starc was further illustration that New Zealand had fluffed the lines in its biggest match. All Elliott needed at that stage was some support. Instead, by the end of the batting Power Play, New Zealand had added just 15 in losing three wickets and whatever momentum that might have been accrued by the Taylor-Elliott duet.

There was no sting in the tail. Maxwell’s wonderful presence of mind and accuracy from midwicket to catch Southee napping and end the innings summed up the difference between the two teams.

ICC Cricket World Cup, Final: Australia v New Zealand at Melbourne, Mar 29, 2015

ICC Cricket World Cup, Final: Australia v New Zealand at Melbourne, Mar 29, 2015

New Zealand 183 (45.0 ov)
Australia 186/3 (33.1 ov)
Australia won by 7 wickets (with 101 balls remaining)

New Zealand innings (50 overs maximum)RMB4s6sSR
View dismissalMJ Guptillb Maxwell1548341144.11
View dismissalBB McCullum*b Starc033000.00
View dismissalKS Williamsonc & b Johnson1252331036.36
View dismissalLRPL Taylorc †Haddin b Faulkner40104722055.55
View dismissalGD Elliottc †Haddin b Faulkner831338271101.21
View dismissalCJ Andersonb Faulkner032000.00
View dismissalL Ronchi†c Clarke b Starc064000.00
View dismissalDL Vettorib Johnson923211042.85
View dismissalTG Southeerun out (Maxwell)11211101100.00
View dismissalMJ Henryc Starc b Johnson0147000.00
TA Boultnot out031000.00
Extras(lb 7, w 6)13
Total(all out; 45 overs; 204 mins)183(4.06 runs per over)

Fall of wickets 1-1 (McCullum, 0.5 ov)2-33 (Guptill, 11.2 ov)3-39 (Williamson, 12.2 ov)4-150 (Taylor, 35.1 ov)5-150 (Anderson, 35.3 ov)6-151 (Ronchi, 36.2 ov)7-167 (Vettori, 40.6 ov)8-171 (Elliott, 41.5 ov)9-182 (Henry, 44.5 ov)10-183 (Southee, 44.6 ov)
BowlingOMRWEcon0s4s6s
View wicketsMA Starc802022.504011(1w)
JR Hazlewood823003.753321
View wicketsMG Johnson903033.333401(2w)
View wicketGJ Maxwell703715.281620(1w)
View wicketsJP Faulkner913634.003650
SR Watson402305.751320(2w)
Australia innings (target: 184 runs from 50 overs)RMB4s6sSR
View dismissalDA Warnerc Elliott b Henry4551467097.82
View dismissalAJ Finchc & b Boult075000.00
SPD Smithnot out56137713078.87
View dismissalMJ Clarke*b Henry748472101102.77
SR Watsonnot out21050040.00
Extras(lb 3, w 6)9
Total(3 wickets; 33.1 overs; 144 mins)186(5.60 runs per over)
Did not batGJ MaxwellJP FaulknerBJ Haddin†MG JohnsonMA StarcJR Hazlewood

Fall of wickets 1-2 (Finch, 1.4 ov)2-63 (Warner, 12.2 ov)3-175 (Clarke, 31.1 ov)
BowlingOMRWEcon0s4s6s
TG Southee806508.122090(3w)
View wicketTA Boult1004014.004050
DL Vettori502505.001401
View wicketsMJ Henry9.104625.013560(2w)
CJ Anderson10707.00300(1w)

MATCH DETAILS


Toss - New Zealand, who chose to bat
Series - Australia won the 2014/15 ICC Cricket World Cup 
Player of the match - tba
Umpires - HDPK Dharmasena (Sri Lanka) and RA Kettleborough (England)TV umpire - M Erasmus (South Africa)Match referee - RS Madugalle (Sri Lanka)Reserve umpire - IJ Gould (England)

MATCH NOTES


    • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 - 10.0 (Mandatory - 31 runs, 1 wicket)
    • New Zealand: 50 runs in 15.3 overs (93 balls), Extras 6
    • Drinks: New Zealand - 51/3 in 16.0 overs (LRPL Taylor 13, GD Elliott 5)
    • Over 19.6: Review by New Zealand (Batting), Umpire - HDPK Dharmasena, Batsman - GD Elliott (Upheld)
    • 4th Wicket: 50 runs in 69 balls (LRPL Taylor 14, GD Elliott 35, Ex 1)
    • New Zealand: 100 runs in 26.2 overs (158 balls), Extras 7
    • GD Elliott: 50 off 51 balls (3 x 4, 1 x 6)
    • Drinks: New Zealand - 134/3 in 33.0 overs (LRPL Taylor 35, GD Elliott 62)
    • 4th Wicket: 100 runs in 126 balls (LRPL Taylor 29, GD Elliott 67, Ex 4)
    • New Zealand: 150 runs in 34.5 overs (209 balls), Extras 11
    • Powerplay 2: Overs 35.1 - 40.0 (Batting side - 15 runs, 3 wickets)
    • Over 39.1: Review by Australia (Bowling), Umpire - HDPK Dharmasena, Batsman - GD Elliott (Struck down)
    • Innings Break: New Zealand - 183/10 in 45.0 overs (TA Boult 0)
    • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 - 10.0 (Mandatory - 56 runs, 1 wicket)
    • Australia: 50 runs in 9.2 overs (56 balls), Extras 4
    • 2nd Wicket: 50 runs in 47 balls (DA Warner 35, SPD Smith 13, Ex 4)
    • Drinks: Australia - 74/2 in 16.0 overs (SPD Smith 19, MJ Clarke 4)
    • Australia: 100 runs in 20.5 overs (125 balls), Extras 7
    • 3rd Wicket: 50 runs in 64 balls (SPD Smith 16, MJ Clarke 30, Ex 4)
    • MJ Clarke: 50 off 56 balls (5 x 4, 1 x 6)
    • Australia: 150 runs in 28.6 overs (174 balls), Extras 8
    • Attendance: 93,013
    • 3rd Wicket: 100 runs in 108 balls (SPD Smith 33, MJ Clarke 65, Ex 4)
    • SPD Smith: 50 off 66 balls (2 x 4)
Australia RR 5.60
Last 5 ovs 44/1 RR 8.80
New Zealand RR 4.06


 
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