Friday, February 18, 2011 | By: Unknown

UMPIRES FOR THE WORLD CUP 2011

UMPIRES FOR THE WORLD CUP 2011

The Umpire selection panel selected 18 umpires excluding a reserve umpire, Enamul Haque to officiate at the World Cup: 5 from Australia, 6 from Asia, 3 from England, 2 from New Zealand and 1 each from South Africa and West Indies.

UMPIRES:

AUSTRALIA:
Ø       Simon Taufel
Ø       Steve Davis
Ø       Rod Tucker
Ø       Daryl Harper
Ø       Bruce Oxenford
NEW ZEALAND:
Ø      Billy Bowden
Ø      Tony Hill
SOUTH AFRICA:
Ø     Marais Erasmus
PAKISTAN:
Ø     Asad Rauf
Ø     Aleem dar
INDIA:
Ø     Shavir Tarapore
Ø     Amish Saheba
ENGLAND:
Ø     Ian Gould
Ø     Richard Kettleborough
Ø     Nigel Llong
SRI LANKA:
Ø     Asoka de Silva
Ø     Kumar Dharmasena
WEST INDIES:
Ø    Billy Doctrove
Thursday, February 17, 2011 | By: Unknown

VENUES FOR WC 2011


VENUES FOR THE WORLD CUP 2011

All the Indian stadiums for the 2011 World Cup had been finalized  earlier, and the venues of Bangladesh and Sri Lanka were finalized in late October 2009. All the venues of the 2011 Cricket World Cup were announced on 2 November 2009 in Mumbai by the International Cricket Council. Two new stadiums in Sri Lanka are being constructed exclusively for the 2011 World Cup. They are located in Kandy and Hambantota.

GROUNDS:
IN INDIA:

ü      Eden gardens(Kolkata)
ü      M. A. Chidambaram Stadium(Chennai)
ü      Feroz Shah Kotla(Delhi)
ü      Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium(Nagpur)
ü      Sardar Patel Stadium(Ahmedabad)
ü      Wankhede Stadium(Mumbai)
ü      Punjab Cricket Association Stadium(Mohali)
ü      M. Chinnaswamy Stadium(Bangalore)

IN SRILANKA:

ü      R. Premadasa Stadium(Colombo)
ü      Muttiah Muralitharan International Cricket Stadium(Kandy)
ü      Mahinda Rajapaksa International Stadium(Hambantota)

IN BANGLADESH:

ü      Chittagong Divisional Stadium (Chittagong)
ü      Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium (Dhaka)

2011 WORLD CUP


2011 WORLD CUP


Details:

·       Will be the tenth Cricket World Cup and will be hosted by India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
·       Bangladesh's first time co-hosting a Cricket World Cup.
·       The World Cup will take place between February and early April 2011, with the first match to be played on 19 February 2011 with co-hosts India and Bangladesh facing off at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur,
·       The opening ceremony will be held on 17 February 2011, two days before the start of the tournament, with the final on 2 April 2011 at Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai.
·       The World Cup was also supposed to be co-hosted by Pakistan, but in the wake of the 2009 attack on the Sri Lanka national cricket team in Lahore, the International Cricket Council (ICC) decided to strip Pakistan of its hosting rights.
·       The headquarters of the organizing committee were originally situated in Lahore, but have now been shifted to Mumbai. Pakistan was supposed to hold 14 matches, including one semi-final.
·       Eight of Pakistan's matches have been awarded to India, four to Sri Lanka and two to Bangladesh.

Format:

v    Late in 2007, the four host nations agreed upon a revised format for the 2011 World Cup identical to the 1996 World Cup, the only change being the no. of teams as it was 12 in 1996 and 14 in 2011. The first round of the tournament will be a round-robin in which the 14 teams are divided into 2 groups of 7 teams each. The 7 teams play each other once with the top 4 from each group qualifying for the quarter-finals.
v    The format ensures that each team gets to play a minimum of 6 matches even if they are ruled out of the tournament due to early defeats.

Teams:

List of qualified teams

The following 14 teams qualified for the final tournament. Their ODI rankings are shown in brackets (as of January, 2011). Countries with an asterisk* are Associate Members. 
Ø      Australia (1)
Ø      India (2) (Hosts)
Ø      Sri Lanka (3) (Hosts)
Ø      South Africa (4)
Ø      England (5)
Ø      Pakistan (6)
Ø      New Zealand (7)
Ø      West Indies (8)
Ø      Bangladesh (9) (Hosts) 
Ø      Ireland* (10)  
Ø      Zimbabwe (11)
Ø      Netherlands* (12)
Ø      Kenya* (13)  
Ø      Canada* (16)

Prize:

Trophy

Trophy
The ICC Cricket World Cup Trophy is a running trophy, presented to the winning team since 1999. It was designed by Garrard & Co within 2 months. The original trophy is kept with the ICC at headquarters in Dubai. The winning team is given a replica. The only difference between the two is that the original has the names of all the previous winners inscribed on it.

Prize money

The 2011 Cricket World Cup winning team would be taking home prize money of US$ 3 million and US$ 1.5 million for runner-up, with the International Cricket Council deciding to double the total allocation for the coveted tournament to US$ 10 million. The decision was taken at the ICC Board meeting which was held in Dubai on April 20, 2010.


Symbols

Mascot


Stumpy
     

Stumpy is the official mascot for the 2011 Cricket World Cup. He was unveiled at a function in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Friday, 2 April 2010. He is a ten year old elephant who is very young, enthusiastic and is determined. Cricket-followers based all over the world were able to participate in a contest to name the mascot. The official name of the mascot was released on Monday, 2 August 2010 after an online competition conducted by the International Cricket Council in the last week of July, 2010. It was unveiled by players like Sachin Tendulkar, Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Kumar Sangakara with 200 days to go for the world cup.

Official song

Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy
The official song of the 2010 World Cup "De Ghuma Ke" is composed by the trio of Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, and is sung in Hindi, Bangla and Sinhala.It has been sung by Shankar Mahadevan and Divya Kumar and has been marketed by Ogilvy and Mather. It incorporates an array of Indian rhythms, as well as elements of rock and hip-hop. The song will be performed in the opening ceremony of the tournament to be held in Bangladesh on February 17, 2011.

Ambassador

Sachin
The official event ambassador for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 is Sachin Tendulkar.In his role as ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 ambassador he will be called upon to promote and support a variety of ICC initiatives for the tournament, which is the third biggest sporting event in the world and will take place in Bangladesh, India and Sri Lanka from 19 February to 2 April 2011.


Media coverage
The World Cup has grown as a media event with each tournament. International Cricket Council has sold the rights for broadcasting of 2011 Cricket World Cup to ESPN Star Sports and Star Cricket. The tournament would be broadcast all around the world in about 220 countries.


WORLD CUP RECORDS


WORLD CUP RECORDS


PERFORMANCES OF TEAMS IN WORLD CUPS

Team
Appearances
Best result
Statistics
Total
First
Latest
Played
Won
Lost
Tie
NR
9
Champions (1987,99,2003, 2007)
69
51
17
1
0
9
1975
2007
Champions (1975,79)
57
35
21
0
1
9
1975
2007
Champions (1983)
58
32
25
0
1
9
1975
2007
Champions (1992)
56
30
24
0
2
9
1975
2007
Champions (1996)
57
25
30
1
1
9
1975
2007
Runners-up (1979,87,92)
59
36
22
0
1
9
1975
2007
Semifinals (1975,79,92,99,2007)
62
35
26
0
1
5
2007
Semifinals (1992,99,2007)
40
26
12
2
0
4
2007
Semifinals (2003)
23
6
16
0
1
7
2007
Super Six (1999,2003)
45
8
33
1
3
3
2007
Super 8 (2007)
20
5
14
0
1
1
2007
2007
Super 8 (2007)
9
2
6
1
0
3
2007
Round 1
12
1
11
0
0
3
1996
2007
Round 1
14
2
12
0
0
2
2007
Round 1
8
0
8
0
0
1
2007
2007
Round 1
3
0
3
0
0
1
2003
2003
Round 1
6
0
6
0
0
1
1996
1996
Round 1
5
1
4
0
0
1
1975
1975
Round 1
3
0
3
0
0


MAN OF THE SERIES

Year
Player
Performance details
456 runs
221 runs and 7 wickets
281 runs and 17 wickets
673 runs and 2 wickets
26 wickets


MAN OF THE MATCH (FINAL MATCH)

Year
Player
Performance details
102 runs
138*
3/12 and 26
75 runs
33 and 3/49
107* and 3/42
4/33
140*
149


IMPORTANT MAIN & INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

World Cup records
Batting
Most runs
1796 (19922007)
Highest average (min. 20 inns.)
63.31 (19751987)
Highest score
188* (1996)
Highest partnership
Rahul Dravid& Sourav Ganguly(IND) (2nd wicket) v SL
318 (1999)
Most runs in a tournament
673 (2003)
Bowling
Most wickets
71 (19962007)
Lowest average (min. 1000 balls bowled)
19.21 (19962007)
Best bowling figures
7/15 (2003)
Most wickets in a tournament
26 (2007)
Fielding
Most dismissals (wicket-keeper)
39 (19992007)
Most catches (fielder)
24 (19962007)
Team
Highest score
 IND v BER
413/5 (2007)
Lowest score
CAN v SL
36 (2003)
Highest win %
Australia
75% (Played 69, Won 51)
Most consecutive wins
Australia
23 (19992007)
Most consecutive tournament wins
Australia
3 (19992007)


TEAM RECORDS

Record
First
Second
Highest score
413-5
398-5
Lowest score
36
45
Highest successful run chase
313-7
301-9
Highest winning margin (runs)
257
256
Lowest winning margin (runs)
1
1
Highest win %
74.63%
65.00%
Most wins
51
36
Most losses
33
30

Both of the closest margins of victory occurred in matches featuring Australia and India. However, there have also been three tied matches in World Cup history.
·        The first was in the 1999 Cricket World Cup semi-final, in which a run out in the final over with only one run required prevented South Africa advancing to the final instead of Australia, who progressed on head-to-head record against South Africa.
·        The second tied match, in the 2003 Cricket World Cup in South Africa, was a case in which the Duckworth-Lewis method caused a South African loss against Sri Lanka. With the onset of rain, the South African batsmen achieved the score they believed was required to win the match and then blocked out the last ball of the over to avoid losing wickets, however, the score they believed indicated a win actually indicated the score required to tie the match. This tie meant South Africa could not advance to the Super Sixes stage.
·        The third tie happened in a group match between Ireland and Zimbabwe at Kingston in the 2007 Cricket World Cup.
·        In 2007, South Africa scored 353/3 in a rain-shortened match against the Netherlands. Their effort came from a shortened game of 40 overs, a run rate of 8.83 runs per over.
·        The highest team total in a World Cup took place in the 19th match of the 2007 World Cup, when India scored 413 runs against Bermuda (a run rate of 8.26). Having lost to Bangladesh in their first match, India needed to win and their batsmen responded, also equaling the record for most sixes (18) in a match.


IN A ONE TOURNAMENT

Record
First
Second
Third
Highest win %
100%
100%
100%
VICTORY ON A LONG ROW (STREAKS)

Record
First
Second
Most consecutive wins
23#
9
Most consecutive defeats
18
10
Most consecutive games without defeat
29#
9
#-ON-GOING


BATTING RECORDS

Record
First
Second
Most runs
1796#
1537#
Highest average (min. 20 inns.)
63.31
61.42#
Strike rate (min. 20 inns.)
115.14
98.01
Fastest century
66 balls
John Davison(CAN) vs WI(2003)
67 balls
Fastest fifty
20 balls
21 balls
Most centuries
4
3
Most 50+ scores
17#
10#
Most ducks
5 out of 22
5 out of 26
Most sixes
30
28
Highest score
188*
183
Most runs through boundaries in an innings
110
106
Highest partnership
318
244
#-ON-GOING

IN ONE TOURNAMENT

Record
First
Second
Most centuries
3
2
Most 50+ scores
7
5
Most runs in a tournament
673 (11 innings)
659 (10 innings)



RECORD ON A LONG ROW

Record
Player
Most consecutive centuries
2
Most consecutive fifties
4
Most consecutive ducks
3


BOWLING RECORDS

Record
First
Second
Most wickets
71
55
Lowest average (min. 1000 balls bowled)
18.19
19.26
Economy rate (min. 1000 balls bowled)
3.24
3.43
Strike rate (min. 1000 balls bowled)
27.5
29.9
Best bowling figures
Glenn McGrath(AUS) v NAM (2003)
7-15
Andrew Bichel(AUS) v ENG (2003)
7-20
Most wickets in consecutive balls
4 v SA (2007)
3 v NZ(1987)
3 v ZIM (1999)
3 v BNG (2003)
3 v KEN (2003)

·        Glenn McGrath dominates the bowling records, and holds all but two of the records. Lasith Malinga became the first player to take four wickets in four balls at an international level in the 2007 World Cup, against South Africa.
·        Chaminda Vaas took four wickets in five balls against Bangladesh in 2003, including wickets with the first three balls of the match. There have also been hat tricks in Cricket World Cups by Chetan Sharma, Saqlain Mushtaq and Brett Lee.
·        Chetan Sharma (India) is the first bowler to take hat-trick in Cricket World Cup.

IN ONE TOURNAMENT

Record
First
Second
Most wickets in a tournament
Glenn McGrath(AUS) (26)

·        Chaminda Vaas, Brett Lee and Glenn McGrath all took more than 20 wickets in the 2003 Cricket World Cup.


FIELDING RECORDS

Record
First
Second
Most dismissals (wicketkeeper)
52
32#
Most catches (fielder)
25#
18#
#-ON-GOING


IN ONE TOURNAMENT

Record
First
Second
Most dismissals (wicketkeeper)
21
17
Most catches (fielder)
11
8


IN ONE MATCH

Record
Player
Most dismissals (wicketkeeper)
6
Most catches (fielder)
4



OTHER RECORDS

EXTRA RUNS (EXTRAS)

·        An extra is a run scored by a means other than a batsman hitting the ball.
·        Other than runs scored off the bat from a no ball, a batsman is not given credit for extras and the extras are tallied separately on the scorecard and count only towards the team's score.

Record
First
Second
Most extras conceded in one innings
SCO vs PAK (1999)
59 (5 b, 6 lb, 33 w, 15 nb)
IND vs ZIM (1999)
51 (0 b, 14 lb, 21 w, 16 nb)
b-BYES, lb-LEG BYES, w-WIDES, nb-NO BALL



GROUNDS

MOST MATCHES HELD

Record
First
Second
Most matches hosted by a ground
12
11

UMPIRES

MOST MATCHES

Record
First
Second
Most matches as umpire in World Cup
46
44

PLAYER’S RECORDS

MOST APPEARANCES 

Record
First
Second
Most appearances in World Cup
39
38

AGE FACTOR

Record
First
Second
Youngest player
17 years, 70 days
17 years, 186 days
Oldest player
47 years, 257 days
44 years, 306 days

CAPTAINCY

Record
First
Second
Most matches as captain
26
23
Best win % as captain
100% (22 matches)
88% (17 matches)
^-ON-GOING

Tit-Bits:

·        Anderson Cummins and Kepler Wessels are the only two players to have represented two different countries in Cricket World Cup.
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