2010 ICC World Twenty20
| 2010 ICC World Twenty20 | |
|---|---|
| Dates | 30 April – 16 May |
| Administrator(s) | International Cricket Council |
| Cricket format | Twenty20 International |
| Tournament format(s) | Group stage and Knockout |
| Host(s) | |
| Champions | |
| Participants | 12 |
| Matches played | 27 |
| Man of the Series | |
| Most runs | |
| Most wickets | |
| Official website | Official website |
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← 2009
2012 →
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The 2010 ICC World Twenty20 was the third ICC World Twenty20 competition, an international Twenty20 cricket tournament that was held in the West Indies between 30 April and 16 May 2010.[1] It was won by England, who defeated Australia in the final. Kevin Pietersen was named as player of the tournament.
Although the tournament was held every two years beginning in 2007, the scheduled ICC Champions Trophy One Day International tournament to be held in the West Indies in 2010 was revised to a Twenty20 format because the 2008 Champions Trophy tournament in Pakistan was postponed due to security concerns and there was a need to correct the international cricketing tournament calendar.[1] This ICC World Twenty20 took place only 10 months after the last one. As before, the tournament featured 12 teams – the Test-playing nations and two qualifiers. Matches were played at three grounds – Kensington Oval in Bridgetown, Barbados; Providence Stadium in Providence, Guyana; and Beausejour Stadium in Gros Islet, Saint Lucia. The tournament was organised in parallel with the women's tournament, with the men's semi-finals and final each being preceded by the semi-finals and final from the women's event.
Contents |
Qualification [edit]
Venues [edit]
All matches were played at the following three grounds:
| Gros Islet, St Lucia | Bridgetown, Barbados | Providence, Guyana |
|---|---|---|
| Beausejour Stadium Capacity:20,000 |
Kensington Oval Capacity: 28,000 |
Providence Stadium Capacity: 15,000 |
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Rules and regulations [edit]
During the group stage and Super Eight, points are awarded to the teams as follows:
| Results | Points |
|---|---|
| Win | 2 points |
| No result | 1-point |
| Loss | 0 points |
In case of a tie (i.e. both teams score exactly the same number of runs at the end of their respective innings), a Super Over decides the winner. This is applicable in all stages of the tournament.[2]
Within each group (of both group and Super Eight stages), teams are ranked against each other based on the following criteria:[3]
- Higher number of points
- If equal, higher number of wins
- If still equal, higher net run rate
- If still equal, lower bowling strike rate
- If still equal, result of head to head meeting.
Groups [edit]
The groups were announced on 4 July 2009. The initial four group format is the same as that used at the 2009 tournament. Team seed in brackets.
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- Notes
- Afghanistan and Ireland qualified via the 2010 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier.
- As Zimbabwe withdrew from the 2009 competition, they failed to achieve a seed for the 2010 competition.
- As Ireland reached the Super Eight stage of the 2009 competition, they would have been the eighth seed if they were a Test-playing nation. Therefore, an eighth seed is missing from the competition.
Squads [edit]
Fixtures [edit]
All times given are Eastern Caribbean Time (UTC−04:00)
Warm-up games [edit]
| 20 April 17:00 Scorecard |
Ireland 90 (17.1 overs) |
v | 96/1 (7.1 overs) |
Trinidad & Tobago won by 9 wickets Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad Umpires: Peter Nero and Rawle Richards |
| Gary Wilson 37 (42) Sherwin Ganga 3/12 (3 overs) |
Lendl Simmons 46* (20) George Dockrell 1/20 (2 overs) |
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| 23 April 17:00 Scorecard |
Trinidad and Tobago 104 (19.5 overs) |
v | 105/1 (15.1 overs) |
Ireland won by 9 wickets Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad Umpires: Danesh Ramdhanie and Anthony Sanawar |
| Samuel Badree 20 (19) George Dockrell 3/20 (4 overs) |
Paul Stirling 57 (41) Sherwin Ganga 1/20 (3 overs) |
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| 27 April 09:30 Scorecard |
Pakistan 160/7 (20 overs) |
v | Windward Islands 92/4 (20 overs) |
Pakistan won by 68 runs Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Marais Erasmus (SA) and Shavir Tarapore (Ind) |
| Mohammad Hafeez 57 (40) Mervin Matthew 2/22 (4 overs) |
Keddy Lesporis 24 (33) Shahid Afridi 1/11 (3 overs) |
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| 27 April 13:30 Scorecard |
Zimbabwe 173/7 (20 overs) |
v | 172/7 (20 overs) |
Zimbabwe won by 1 run Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Marais Erasmus (SA) |
| Elton Chigumbura 76 (35) Mitchell Johnson 4/23 (4 overs) |
David Warner 72 (49) Prosper Utseya 2/27 (4 overs) |
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| 27 April 13:30 Scorecard |
Bangladesh 166/5 (20 overs) |
v | 130/3 (20 overs) |
Bangladesh won by 36 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Tony Hill (NZ) |
| Imrul Kayes 57 (35) Martin Nurse 3/21 (3 overs) |
Ryan Hinds 50* (48) Abdur Razzak 1/7 (2 overs) |
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| 27 April 13:30 Scorecard |
New Zealand 187/5 (20 overs) |
v | 147/9 (20 overs) |
New Zealand won by 40 runs Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Asad Rauf (Pak) and Billy Doctrove (WI) |
| Jesse Ryder 64 (30) George Dockrell 3/24 (4 overs) |
William Porterfield 34 (27) Nathan McCullum 3/25 (4 overs) |
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| 28 April 09:30 Scorecard |
Sri Lanka 137/8 (20 overs) |
v | 141/5 (19.3 overs) |
South Africa won by 5 wickets Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Rod Tucker (Aus) |
| Chamara Kapugedera 61* (35) Rory Kleinveldt 2/13 (3 overs) |
Mark Boucher 33* (20) Sanath Jayasuriya 1/18 (4 overs) |
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| 28 April 13:30 Scorecard |
Ireland 133/9 (20 overs) |
v | 134/5 (19.3 overs) |
Afghanistan won by 5 wickets Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Steve Davis (Aus) and Billy Doctrove (WI) |
| John Mooney 42 (33) Dawlat Ahmadzai 4/15 (4 overs) |
Asghar Stanikzai 39* (27) Alex Cusack 2/12 (2 overs) |
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| 28 April 13:30 Scorecard |
Bangladesh 126/7 (20 overs) |
v | 127/3 (17.1 overs) |
England won by 7 wickets Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Tony Hill (NZ) |
| Mahmudullah 38 (31) Michael Yardy 3/20 (4 overs) |
Ravi Bopara 62 (49) Shakib Al Hasan 1/23 (4 overs) |
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| 28 April 17:00 Scorecard |
New Zealand 124/8 (20 overs) |
v | 117 (19.4 overs) |
New Zealand won by 7 runs Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Asad Rauf (Pak) and Billy Doctrove (WI) |
| Ross Taylor 50 (35) Sulieman Benn 2/12 (4 overs) |
Shivnarine Chanderpaul 53 (47) Scott Styris 4/18 (4 overs) |
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| 29 April 09:30 Scorecard |
Australia 189/8 (20 overs) |
v | Windward Islands 88/10 (20 overs) |
Australia won by 101 runs Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Marais Erasmus (SA) |
| David Warner 51 Mervin Matthew 3/34 (4 overs) |
Lyndon James 20* Michael Clarke 2/6 (2 overs) |
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| 29 April 13:30 Scorecard |
South Africa 125/5 (20 overs) |
v | 127/5 (19.3 overs) |
England won by 5 wickets Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Rod Tucker (Aus) |
| Albie Morkel 32* (21) Michael Yardy 2/25 (4 overs) |
Eoin Morgan 63 (62) Rory Kleinveldt 2/22 (4 overs) |
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| 29 April 13:30 Scorecard |
Zimbabwe 143/7 (20 overs) |
v | 131 (20 overs) |
Zimbabwe won by 12 runs Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Shavir Tarapore (Ind) and Simon Taufel (Aus) |
| Elton Chigumbura 49* (35) Shahid Afridi 4/24 (4 overs) |
Kamran Akmal 37 (27) Prosper Utseya 4/15 (4 overs) |
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Group stage [edit]
Group A [edit]
| Team | Seed | Pld | W | L | NR | NRR | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | +1.525 | 4 | |
| A1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | −0.325 | 2 | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | −1.200 | 0 |
| 1 May 13:30 Scorecard |
Pakistan 172/3 (20 overs) |
v | 151/7 (20 overs) |
Pakistan won by 21 runs Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Rod Tucker (Aus) Player of the match: Salman Butt (Pak) |
| Salman Butt 73 (46) Shakib Al Hasan 2/27 (4 overs) |
Mohammad Ashraful 65 (49) Mohammad Sami 3/29 (4 overs) |
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| 2 May 13:30 Scorecard |
Australia 191 (20 overs) |
v | 157 (20 overs) |
Australia won by 34 runs Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Shavir Tarapore (Ind) Player of the match: Shane Watson (Aus) |
| Shane Watson 81 (49) Mohammad Aamer 3/23 (4 overs) |
Misbah-ul-Haq 41 (31) Shaun Tait 3/20 (4 overs) |
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| 5 May 13:00 Scorecard |
Australia 141/7 (20 overs) |
v | 114 (18.4 overs) |
Australia won by 27 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Billy Doctrove (WI) Player of the match: Michael Hussey (Aus) |
| Michael Hussey 47* (29) Shakib Al Hasan 2/24 (4 overs) |
Shakib Al Hasan 28 (28) Dirk Nannes 4/18 (4 overs) |
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Group B [edit]
| Team | Seed | Pld | W | L | NR | NRR | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | +0.428 | 4 | |
| B1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | +0.355 | 2 | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | −1.595 | 0 |
| 30 April 13:00 Scorecard |
Sri Lanka 135/6 (20 overs) |
v | 139/8 (19.5 overs) |
New Zealand won by 2 wickets Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Steve Davis (Aus) and Rudi Koertzen (SA) Player of the match: Nathan McCullum (NZ) |
| Mahela Jayawardene 81 (51) Shane Bond 2/35 (4 overs) |
Jesse Ryder 42 (27) Muttiah Muralitharan 2/25 (4 overs) |
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| 3 May 09:30 Scorecard |
Sri Lanka 173/7 (20 overs) |
v | 29/1 (5 overs) |
Sri Lanka won by 14 runs (D/L) Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Billy Doctrove (WI) and Ian Gould (Eng) Player of the match: Mahela Jayawardene (SL) |
| Mahela Jayawardene 100 (64) Ray Price 2/31 (4 overs) |
Tatenda Taibu 12* (13) | |||
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| 4 May 09:30 Scorecard |
Zimbabwe 84 (15.1 overs) |
v | 36/1 (8.1 overs) |
New Zealand won by 7 runs (D/L) Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Asad Rauf (Pak) and Steve Davis (Aus) Player of the match: Nathan McCullum (NZ) |
| Tatenda Taibu 21 (14) Scott Styris 3/5 (2 overs) |
Brendon McCullum 22* (26) Prosper Utseya 1/21 (4 overs) |
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Group C [edit]
| Team | Seed | Pld | W | L | NR | NRR | Pts |
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| C2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | +1.495 | 4 | |
| C1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | +1.125 | 2 | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | −2.446 | 0 |
| 1 May 09:30 Scorecard |
Afghanistan 115/8 (20 overs) |
v | 116/3 (14.5 overs) |
India won by 7 wickets Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Marais Erasmus (SA) Player of the match: Ashish Nehra (Ind) |
| Noor Ali 50 (48) Ashish Nehra 3/19 (4 overs) |
Murali Vijay 48 (46) Hamid Hassan 1/8 (3 overs) |
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| 2 May 09:30 Scorecard |
India 186/5 (20 overs) |
v | 172/5 (20 overs) |
India won by 14 runs Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Simon Taufel (Aus) Player of the match: Suresh Raina (Ind) |
| Suresh Raina 101 (60) Rory Kleinveldt 2/48 (4 overs) |
Jacques Kallis 73 (54) Yusuf Pathan 2/42 (4 overs) |
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| 5 May 17:00 (D/N) Scorecard |
South Africa 139/7 (20 overs) |
v | 80 (16 overs) |
South Africa won by 59 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Ian Gould (Eng) and Simon Taufel (Aus) Player of the match: Morné Morkel (SA) |
| Jacques Kallis 34 (33) Hamid Hassan 3/21 (4 overs) |
Mirwais Ashraf 23 (25) Morné Morkel 4/20 (3 overs) |
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Group D [edit]
| Team | Seed | Pld | W | L | NR | NRR | Pts |
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| D1 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | +2.780 | 4 | |
| D2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | −0.452 | 1 | |
| 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | −3.500 | 1 |
| 30 April 17:00 (D/N) Scorecard |
West Indies 138/9 (20 overs) |
v | 68 (16.4 overs) |
West Indies won by 70 runs Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Asad Rauf (Pak) and Billy Bowden (NZ) Player of the match: Darren Sammy (WI) |
| Darren Sammy 30 (17) George Dockrell 3/16 (4 overs) |
Gary Wilson 17 (34) Darren Sammy 3/8 (3.4 overs) |
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| 3 May 13:30 Scorecard |
England 191/5 (20 overs) |
v | 60/2 (5.5 overs) |
West Indies won by 8 wickets (D/L) Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Tony Hill (NZ) and Rudi Koertzen (SA) Player of the match: Darren Sammy (WI) |
| Eoin Morgan 55 (35) Darren Sammy 2/22 (4 overs) |
Chris Gayle 25 (12) Graeme Swann 2/24 (2 overs) |
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| 4 May 13:30 Scorecard |
England 120/8 (20 overs) |
v | 14/1 (3.3 overs) |
No result Providence Stadium, Providence, Guyana Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Tony Hill (NZ) |
| Eoin Morgan 45 (37) Kevin O'Brien 2/22 (3 overs) |
Niall O'Brien 9* (5) Ryan Sidebottom 1/9 (1.3 overs) |
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Super 8s [edit]
The Super 8s stage consists of the top two teams from each group of the group stage. The teams are split into two groups, Groups E and F. Group E will consist of the top seed from Groups A and C, and the second seed of groups B and D. Group F will consist of the top seed from Groups B and D, and the second seed of groups A and C. The seedings used are those allocated at the start of the tournament and are not affected by group stage results, with the exception of if a non-seeded team knocks out a seeded team, the non-seeded team inherits the seed of the knocked-out team.[5]
Group E [edit]
| Team | Pld | W | L | NR | NRR | Pts |
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| 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | +0.962 | 6 | |
| 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | +0.041 | 2 | |
| 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | −0.373 | 2 | |
| 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | −0.617 | 2 |
| 6 May 09:30 Scorecard |
Pakistan 147/9 (20 overs) |
v | 151/4 (19.3 overs) |
England won by 6 wickets Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Rudi Koertzen (SA) Player of the match: Kevin Pietersen (Eng) |
| Salman Butt 34 (26) Michael Yardy 2/19 (4 overs) |
Kevin Pietersen 73* (52) Saeed Ajmal 2/18 (3.3 overs) |
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| 6 May 13:30 Scorecard |
South Africa 170/4 (20 overs) |
v | 157/7 (20 overs) |
South Africa won by 13 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Steve Davis (Aus) Player of the match: Albie Morkel (SA) |
| AB de Villiers 47* (39) Jacob Oram 1/22 (3 overs) |
Jesse Ryder 33 (28) Johan Botha 2/23 (3 overs) |
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| 8 May 09:30 Scorecard |
New Zealand 133/7 (20 overs) |
v | 132/7 (20 overs) |
New Zealand won by 1 run Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Billy Doctrove (WI) and Ian Gould (Eng) Player of the match: Ian Butler (NZ) |
| Daniel Vettori 38 (34) Abdur Rehman 2/19 (3 overs) |
Salman Butt 67* (54) Ian Butler 3/19 (4 overs) |
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| 8 May 13:30 Scorecard |
England 168/7 (20 overs) |
v | 129 (19 overs) |
England won by 39 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Steve Davis (Aus) Player of the match: Kevin Pietersen (Eng) |
| Kevin Pietersen 53 (33) Johan Botha 2/15 (4 overs) |
JP Duminy 39 (25) Ryan Sidebottom 3/23 (4 overs) |
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| 10 May 09:30 Scorecard |
Pakistan 148/7 (20 overs) |
v | 137/7 (20 overs) |
Pakistan won by 11 runs Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Billy Doctrove (WI) and Ian Gould (Eng) Player of the match: Umar Akmal (Pak) |
| Umar Akmal 51 (33) Charl Langeveldt 4/19 (4 overs) |
AB de Villiers 53 (41) Saeed Ajmal 4/26 (4 overs) |
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| 10 May 13:30 Scorecard |
New Zealand 149/6 (20 overs) |
v | 153/7 (19.1 overs) |
England won by 3 wickets Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Steve Davis (Aus) and Simon Taufel (Aus) Player of the match: Tim Bresnan (Eng) |
| Ross Taylor 44 (33) Graeme Swann 2/31 (4 overs) |
Eoin Morgan 40 (34) Scott Styris 2/16 (3 overs) |
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Group F [edit]
| Team | Pld | W | L | NR | NRR | Pts |
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| 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | +2.733 | 6 | |
| 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | −0.333 | 4 | |
| 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | −1.281 | 2 | |
| 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | −1.117 | 0 |
| 7 May 09:30 Scorecard |
Australia 184/5 (20 overs) |
v | 135 (17.4 overs) |
Australia won by 49 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Billy Doctrove (WI) Player of the match: David Warner (Aus) |
| David Warner 72 (42) Yuvraj Singh 2/20 (2 overs) |
Rohit Sharma 79* (46) Shaun Tait 3/21 (3.4 overs) |
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| 7 May 13:30 Scorecard |
Sri Lanka 195/3 (20 overs) |
v | 138/8 (20 overs) |
Sri Lanka won by 57 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Rudi Koertzen (SA) and Simon Taufel (Aus) Player of the match: Mahela Jayawardene (SL) |
| Mahela Jayawardene 98* (56) Kemar Roach 2/27 (4 overs) |
Ramnaresh Sarwan 28 (33) Ajantha Mendis 3/24 (4 overs) |
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| 9 May 09:30 Scorecard |
West Indies 169/6 (20 overs) |
v | 155/9 (20 overs) |
West Indies won by 14 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Simon Taufel (Aus) Player of the match: Chris Gayle (WI) |
| Chris Gayle 98 (66) Ashish Nehra 3/35 (4 overs) |
Suresh Raina 32 (25) Kemar Roach 2/38 (4 overs) |
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| 9 May 14:00 Scorecard |
Australia 168/5 (20 overs) |
v | 87 (16.2 overs) |
Australia won by 81 runs Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Ian Gould (Eng) and Rudi Koertzen (SA) Player of the match: Cameron White (Aus) |
| Cameron White 85* (49) Suraj Randiv 3/20 (4 overs) |
Tillakaratne Dilshan 20 (12) Mitchell Johnson 3/15 (3.2 overs) |
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| 11 May 13:00 Scorecard |
India 163/5 (20 overs) |
v | 167/5 (20 overs) |
Sri Lanka won by 5 wickets Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Steve Davis (Aus) Player of the match: Angelo Mathews (SL) |
| Suresh Raina 63 (47) Lasith Malinga 2/25 (4 overs) |
Kumar Sangakkara 46 (33) Vinay Kumar 2/30 (4 overs) |
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| 11 May 17:00 (D/N) Scorecard |
West Indies 105 (19 overs) |
v | 109/4 (16.2 overs) |
Australia won by 6 wickets Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Rudi Koertzen (SA) Player of the match: Steve Smith (Aus) |
| Ramnaresh Sarwan 26 (31) Steve Smith 3/20 (4 overs) |
Brad Haddin 42 (46) Chris Gayle 1/5 (0.2 overs) |
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Knockout stage [edit]
| Semi-finals | Final | ||||||
| 13 May – St Lucia | |||||||
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132/3 | ||||||
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128/6 | ||||||
| 16 May – Barbados | |||||||
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148/3 | ||||||
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147/6
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| 14 May – St Lucia | |||||||
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197/7 | ||||||
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191/6 | ||||||
Semi-finals [edit]
| 13 May 11:30 Scorecard |
Sri Lanka 128/6 (20 overs) |
v | 132/3 (16 overs) |
England won by 7 wickets Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Simon Taufel (Aus) Player of the match: Stuart Broad (Eng) |
| Angelo Mathews 58 (45) Stuart Broad 2/21 (4 overs) |
Kevin Pietersen 42* (26) Thissara Perera 2/19 (2 overs) |
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| 14 May 11:30 Scorecard |
Pakistan 191/6 (20 overs) |
v | 197/7 (19.5 overs) |
Australia won by 3 wickets Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia Umpires: Billy Doctrove (WI) and Ian Gould (Eng) Player of the match: Michael Hussey (Aus) |
| Umar Akmal 56* (35) Steve Smith 1/23 (2 overs) |
Michael Hussey 60* (24) Mohammad Aamer 3/35 (4 overs) |
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Final [edit]
The Final was held in Barbados on 16 May 2010.[6] The match was won by England, delivering the team its first ever victory in a worldwide limited overs tournament,[7] and its first International Cricket Council trophy.[8] Australia batted first and scored 147 runs for the loss of six wickets. England bettered Australia's total with 18 balls to spare. Craig Kieswetter was England's top scorer with 63 runs from 49 balls while Kevin Pietersen scored 47 from 31. David Hussey of Australia scored 59.[9] Pietersen was subsequently named Man of the Tournament having scored 248 runs, while Kieswetter was Man of the Match.[10]
| 16 May 11:30 Scorecard |
Australia 147/6 (20 overs) |
v | 148/3 (17 overs) |
England won by 7 wickets Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Billy Doctrove (WI) Player of the match: Craig Kieswetter (Eng) |
| David Hussey 59 (54) Ryan Sidebottom 2/26 (4 overs) |
Craig Kieswetter 63 (49) Steve Smith 1/21 (3 overs) |
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Records and statistics [edit]
Match officials [edit]
Media coverage [edit]
Television [edit]
| Country/Continent | Broadcaster(s)[11] |
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| Ariana Television Network shows only Afghan matches Lemar TV |
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| Fox Sports[12] | |
| Africa | Supersport |
| Bangladesh Television | |
| Star Cricket | |
| Caribbean | Caribbean Media Corporation |
| Asian Television Network | |
| Eurosport2 | |
| ESPN Star Sports | |
| ESPN Star Cricket DD National mostly India matches |
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| Television Jamaica | |
| Hum Tum TV | |
| Middle East | CricOne |
| ESPN Star Cricket |
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| Fiji TV | |
| Sky Sport | |
| Pacific Islands | Sky Pacific |
| GEO Super Pakistan Television Corporation |
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| Supersport Sabc3 Sport |
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| Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation | |
| Sky Sports | |
| DirecTV CricketTicket |
Radio [edit]
| Country | Broadcaster[11] |
|---|---|
| ABC Local Radio | |
| All India Radio | |
| West Indies | Caribbean Media Corporation |
| Bangladesh Betar | |
| EchoStar | |
| Central America | |
| BBC Radio | |
| Hum FM | |
| Hum FM |
Internet [edit]
| Country/Continent | Broadcaster(s)[11] |
|---|---|
| BSkyB (skysports.com) | |
| BSkyB (skysports.com) | |
| Caribbean Media Corporation (Cananews.com) | |
| DirecTV (Willow.tv) | |
| ESPN STAR Sports (Espnstar.com) | |
| ESPN STAR Sports (Espnstar.com) | |
| ESPN STAR Sports (Espnstar.com) | |
| ESPN STAR Sports (Espnstar.com) | |
| ESPN STAR Sports (Espnstar.com) | |
| ESPN STAR Sports (Espnstar.com) | |
| ESPN STAR Sports (Espnstar.com) | |
| Eurosport (Eurosport Player) | |
| Fox Sports (Foxsports.com.au) | |
| Sky Sport (skysport.co.nz) | |
| Africa | SuperSport (supersport.com) |
| Other countries | ESPN Star Sports (espnstar.com) |
See also [edit]
References [edit]
- ^ a b "Third World Twenty20 set for 2010". Retrieved 4 May 2010.
- ^ Playing conditions, from ICC World Twenty20 homepage, Retrieved 12 September 2007
- ^ Final WorldTwenty20 Playing conditions, from ICC World Twenty20 homepage, retrieved 12 September 2007
- ^ Bull, Andy (2 May 2010). "Pakistan's five-wicket maiden is too late to prevent Australia win". guardian.co.uk (Guardian News and Media). Archived from the original on 6 May 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
- ^ "ICC World Twenty20 / Groups". Cricinfo. Archived from the original on 2 May 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
- ^ "England cruise to World Twenty20 title". ninemsn. 17 May 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ^ Reekie, Harry (16 May 2010). "England beat Australia to win World Twenty20 title". BBC Sport. Archived from the original on 18 May 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ^ "Collingwood – We are ready". Sky Sports (BSkyB). 16 May 2010. Archived from the original on 18 May 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ^ "England clinches World Twenty20 title". ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). 17 May 2010. Archived from the original on 19 May 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ^ "KP lauds 'hungry' England". Sky Sports (BSkyB). 16 May 2010. Archived from the original on 20 May 2010. Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ^ a b c ICC World T20 2010 Broadcasters list
- ^ "Every game of ICC World Twenty20 LIVE and exclusive on Fox Sports". Fox Sports. Retrieved 4 May 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2010
External links [edit]
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