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1987 Cricket World Cup final

The 1987 Cricket World Cup Final (known as the Reliance Cricket World Cup Final for sponsorship reasons) was a One Day International (ODI) cricket match played at Eden Gardens in Calcutta, India, on 8 November 1987 to determine the winner of the 1987 Cricket World Cup. It was contested by Australia and England, both of whom had yet to win the trophy. The 1987 World Cup was the first World Cup to be hosted outside of England; it was also the first World Cup to feature a 50-over per side match format and the first time the final had been hosted at a venue other than Lord's. It is reported [citation needed] that 95,342 spectators attended the match.[1][2][3][4]

1987 ICC Cricket World Cup Final
Event1987 ICC Cricket World Cup
Australia England
253/5 246/8
50 overs 50 overs
Date8 November 1987
VenueEden Gardens, Calcutta, India
Player of the matchDavid Boon (Aus)
UmpiresRam Gupta (Ind) and Mahboob Shah (Pak)
Attendance95,342
1983
1992

Background edit

Australia went into the 1987 World Cup having lost a home Ashes series and their five previous ODI matches leading up to the tournament.[5] Steve Waugh, who was competing in his first World Cup and would become one of the players of the tournament, said that Australia were considered, both at home and abroad, to be "rank outsiders".[5] Under coach Bob Simpson, the Australians undertook extra fielding sessions upon arriving in India, and an alcohol ban between games was also imposed.[5] While these somewhat revolutionary measures were ridiculed by other teams, Simpson's approach would pay off as Australia progressed through the tournament.
Placed in Group A along with India, New Zealand and Zimbabwe, the Australians finished second in the group behind India on run rate, which meant they would face Pakistan, who topped Group B, in the semi-final. Australia's success had been built on various factors: the opening pair of David Boon and Geoff Marsh (who ended the tournament as the second- and third-highest individual run-scorers respectively) consistently gave the Australian innings a firm foundation on which to build substantial scores; opening bowler Craig McDermott (who ended the tournament as the leading wicket-taker with 18) excelled in conditions traditionally unfavourable to pace bowlers; and all-rounders Simon O'Donnell and Steve Waugh chipped in at critical moments with bat and ball.
All these factors came to the fore when Australia upset the Pakistanis at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore; Batting first, Marsh and Boon put on 73 for the first wicket as the Australians finished with 267 for eight off their 50 overs, with Waugh scoring 18 runs off the final over. In reply, Pakistan fell to 38 for three before Imran Khan and Javed Miandad set about resurrecting the innings. But after they were removed, McDermott proceeded to clean up the tail and send Australia into its first World Cup final since 1975.

In Group B along with Pakistan, Sri Lanka and West Indies, England finished second behind Pakistan with wins over West Indies (considered the best cricket team in the world at the time) and Sri Lanka, and would face India in semi-final at the Wankhede Stadium in Bombay. After being sent in by the home side, England posted 254 for six from its 50 overs, led by 115 from Graham Gooch (who ended the tournament as the leading run-scorer) and 56 from captain Mike Gatting. India's innings started badly when home-town hero Sunil Gavaskar was bowled by Philip DeFreitas for 4. The middle order, led by Mohammad Azharuddin, revived the home crowd's hopes, but after off-spinner Eddie Hemmings struck with four wickets, the chase collapsed, with the last five wickets falling for only 15 runs. Like Australia, England had qualified for its second shot at glory, having previously lost to West Indies in 1979.

Details edit

8 November in Calcutta was a fine and hot day, but with less humidity than Bombay, where the England–India semi-final had been staged.[6] Preparation of the Eden Gardens wicket had been overseen by the renowned Adelaide Oval curator Les Burdett, who had been invited by the Bengal Cricket Association.[6]

Allan Border won the toss and chose to bat. As they had done for much of the tournament, openers Geoff Marsh and David Boon gave Australia a fantastic start, benefiting from the unusually wayward and undisciplined bowling of Philip DeFreitas and Gladstone Small (who conceded six no-balls)[7] to post 52 off the first ten overs. Waugh joined Veletta for the final over of the innings, to be bowled by DeFreitas. The pair combined to score 11 runs off it to push Australia's score to 253, becoming the first team all tournament to score more than 250 against England.

The Australians took to the field with some confidence that their total was defendable; no team batting second at this World Cup had successfully chased 254.[1] England's innings started badly when McDermott trapped Tim Robinson in front for a golden duck midway through the first over. Bill Athey (58 from 103 balls, 2 fours) top-scored, and England were almost on target, when captain Mike Gatting (41 from 45 balls, 3 fours, 1 six) handed back the initiative with the loss of his wicket to an attempted reverse sweep off the occasional off-spin bowling of Allan Border, which ended a growing partnership of 69 runs in 13 overs between him and Athey. Allan Lamb (45 from 55 balls, 4 fours) also posted a great innings, but it was in vain as the required run-rate for England began to rise. When England failed to score the last 17 runs from the final over, the cup went to Australia.

Match details edit

8 November 1987
Scorecard
Australia  
253/5 (50 overs)
v
  England
246/8 (50 overs)
David Boon 75 (125)
Eddie Hemmings 2/48 (10 overs)
Bill Athey 58 (103)
Steve Waugh 2/37 (9 overs)
Australia won by 7 runs
Eden Gardens, Calcutta
Umpires: Ram Gupta (Ind) and Mahboob Shah (Pak)
Player of the match: David Boon (Aus)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
Final scorecard
1st innings
Australia innings[8][9]
Player Status Runs Balls 4s 6s Strike rate
David Boon c Downton b Hemmings 75 125 7 0 60.00
Geoff Marsh b Foster 24 49 3 0 48.97
Dean Jones c Athey b Hemmings 33 57 1 1 57.89
Craig McDermott b Gooch 14 8 2 0 175.00
Allan Border run out (Robinson/Downton) 31 31 3 0 100.00
Mike Veletta not out 45 31 6 0 145.16
Steve Waugh not out 5 4 0 0 125.00
Simon O'Donnell did not bat
Greg Dyer did not bat
Tim May did not bat
Bruce Reid did not bat
Extras (b 1, lb 13, w 7, nb 5) 26
Total (5 wickets; 50 overs) 253 22 1

Fall of wickets: 1/75 (Marsh, 18 ov), 2/151 (Jones), 3/166 (McDermott), 4/168 (Boon), 5/241 (Border)

  England bowling[9][8]
Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Econ Wides NBs
Philip DeFreitas 6 1 34 0 5.66 1 1
Gladstone Small 6 0 33 0 5.50 0 6
Neil Foster 10 0 38 1 3.80 1 0
Eddie Hemmings 10 1 48 2 4.80 0 0
John Emburey 10 0 44 0 4.40 0 0
Graham Gooch 8 1 42 1 5.25 1 0
2nd innings
England innings[9]
Player Status Runs Balls 4s 6s Strike rate
Graham Gooch lbw b O'Donnell 35 57 4 0 61.40
Tim Robinson lbw b McDermott 0 1 0 0 0.00
Bill Athey run out (Waugh/Reid) 58 103 2 0 56.31
Mike Gatting c Dyer b Border 41 45 3 1 91.11
Allan Lamb b Waugh 45 55 4 0 81.81
Paul Downton c O'Donnell b Border 9 8 1 0 112.50
John Emburey run out (Boon/McDermott) 10 16 0 0 62.50
Philip DeFreitas c Reid b Waugh 17 10 2 1 170.00
Neil Foster not out 7 6 0 0 116.66
Gladstone Small not out 3 3 0 0 100.00
Eddie Hemmings did not bat
Extras (b 1, lb 14, nb 4, w 2) 21
Total (8 wickets; 50 overs) 246 16 2

Fall of wickets: 1/1 (Robinson, 0.4 ov), 2/66 (Gooch), 3/135 (Gatting, 31.1 ov), 4/170 (Athey), 5/188 (Downton), 6/218 (Emburey), 7/220 (Lamb), 8/235 (DeFreitas, 49 ov)

  Australia bowling[9][8]
Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Econ Wides NBs
Craig McDermott 10 1 51 1 5.10 0 0
Bruce Reid 10 0 43 0 4.30 1 2
Steve Waugh 9 0 37 2 4.11 1 1
Simon O'Donnell 10 1 35 1 3.50 0 1
Tim May 4 0 27 0 6.75 0 0
Allan Border 7 0 38 2 5.42 0 0

See also edit

External links edit

  • Australia beat England in thrilling final. CWC 1987 on YouTube
  • Cricket World Cup 1987 from ESPNcricinfo

Further reading edit

  • Browning, Mark (1999). A complete history of World Cup cricket, 1975-1999. Kangaroo Press. ISBN 0731808339.
  • Sexton, Michael (2019). Border's Battlers. Affirm Press. ISBN 9781925870527.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "1987-88 World Cup Final: AUSTRALIA v ENGLAND". Wisden Almanack 1989 edition. ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  2. ^ Telford, Ian (9 November 1987). "TIMES Sport Australians take the World Cup". The Canberra Times. Vol. 62, no. 19, 028. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. p. 24. Retrieved 27 January 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ Selvey, Mike (9 November 1987). "Down Under goes top of the world". The Guardian. p. 28.
  4. ^ "Cricket World Cup History 1987: Winners, Runners-up, Stats of World Cup 1987". NDTVSports.com.
  5. ^ a b c Giles, Shaun (2 July 2019). "How Australia's 1987 Cricket World Cup win was a turning point for the sport in the country". ABC News.
  6. ^ a b Browning (1999), p.155
  7. ^ Woodcock, John (9 November 1987). "Border takes one-day trip to the moon". The Times. p. 48.
  8. ^ a b c "Scorecard, Australia v England, Reliance World Cup, Final". Wisden.
  9. ^ a b c d "Final: Final, ICC Cricket World Cup at Eden Gardens, Nov 8 1987". Retrieved 27 January 2022.

1987, cricket, world, final, 1987, cricket, world, final, known, reliance, cricket, world, final, sponsorship, reasons, international, cricket, match, played, eden, gardens, calcutta, india, november, 1987, determine, winner, 1987, cricket, world, contested, a. The 1987 Cricket World Cup Final known as the Reliance Cricket World Cup Final for sponsorship reasons was a One Day International ODI cricket match played at Eden Gardens in Calcutta India on 8 November 1987 to determine the winner of the 1987 Cricket World Cup It was contested by Australia and England both of whom had yet to win the trophy The 1987 World Cup was the first World Cup to be hosted outside of England it was also the first World Cup to feature a 50 over per side match format and the first time the final had been hosted at a venue other than Lord s It is reported citation needed that 95 342 spectators attended the match 1 2 3 4 1987 ICC Cricket World Cup FinalEvent1987 ICC Cricket World CupAustralia England253 5 246 850 overs 50 oversDate8 November 1987VenueEden Gardens Calcutta IndiaPlayer of the matchDavid Boon Aus UmpiresRam Gupta Ind and Mahboob Shah Pak Attendance95 342 19831992 Contents 1 Background 2 Details 2 1 Match details 3 See also 4 External links 5 Further reading 6 ReferencesBackground editMain articles 1987 Cricket World Cup Group A 1987 Cricket World Cup Group B and 1987 Cricket World Cup knockout stage Australia went into the 1987 World Cup having lost a home Ashes series and their five previous ODI matches leading up to the tournament 5 Steve Waugh who was competing in his first World Cup and would become one of the players of the tournament said that Australia were considered both at home and abroad to be rank outsiders 5 Under coach Bob Simpson the Australians undertook extra fielding sessions upon arriving in India and an alcohol ban between games was also imposed 5 While these somewhat revolutionary measures were ridiculed by other teams Simpson s approach would pay off as Australia progressed through the tournament Placed in Group A along with India New Zealand and Zimbabwe the Australians finished second in the group behind India on run rate which meant they would face Pakistan who topped Group B in the semi final Australia s success had been built on various factors the opening pair of David Boon and Geoff Marsh who ended the tournament as the second and third highest individual run scorers respectively consistently gave the Australian innings a firm foundation on which to build substantial scores opening bowler Craig McDermott who ended the tournament as the leading wicket taker with 18 excelled in conditions traditionally unfavourable to pace bowlers and all rounders Simon O Donnell and Steve Waugh chipped in at critical moments with bat and ball All these factors came to the fore when Australia upset the Pakistanis at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore Batting first Marsh and Boon put on 73 for the first wicket as the Australians finished with 267 for eight off their 50 overs with Waugh scoring 18 runs off the final over In reply Pakistan fell to 38 for three before Imran Khan and Javed Miandad set about resurrecting the innings But after they were removed McDermott proceeded to clean up the tail and send Australia into its first World Cup final since 1975 In Group B along with Pakistan Sri Lanka and West Indies England finished second behind Pakistan with wins over West Indies considered the best cricket team in the world at the time and Sri Lanka and would face India in semi final at the Wankhede Stadium in Bombay After being sent in by the home side England posted 254 for six from its 50 overs led by 115 from Graham Gooch who ended the tournament as the leading run scorer and 56 from captain Mike Gatting India s innings started badly when home town hero Sunil Gavaskar was bowled by Philip DeFreitas for 4 The middle order led by Mohammad Azharuddin revived the home crowd s hopes but after off spinner Eddie Hemmings struck with four wickets the chase collapsed with the last five wickets falling for only 15 runs Like Australia England had qualified for its second shot at glory having previously lost to West Indies in 1979 Details edit8 November in Calcutta was a fine and hot day but with less humidity than Bombay where the England India semi final had been staged 6 Preparation of the Eden Gardens wicket had been overseen by the renowned Adelaide Oval curator Les Burdett who had been invited by the Bengal Cricket Association 6 Allan Border won the toss and chose to bat As they had done for much of the tournament openers Geoff Marsh and David Boon gave Australia a fantastic start benefiting from the unusually wayward and undisciplined bowling of Philip DeFreitas and Gladstone Small who conceded six no balls 7 to post 52 off the first ten overs Waugh joined Veletta for the final over of the innings to be bowled by DeFreitas The pair combined to score 11 runs off it to push Australia s score to 253 becoming the first team all tournament to score more than 250 against England The Australians took to the field with some confidence that their total was defendable no team batting second at this World Cup had successfully chased 254 1 England s innings started badly when McDermott trapped Tim Robinson in front for a golden duck midway through the first over Bill Athey 58 from 103 balls 2 fours top scored and England were almost on target when captain Mike Gatting 41 from 45 balls 3 fours 1 six handed back the initiative with the loss of his wicket to an attempted reverse sweep off the occasional off spin bowling of Allan Border which ended a growing partnership of 69 runs in 13 overs between him and Athey Allan Lamb 45 from 55 balls 4 fours also posted a great innings but it was in vain as the required run rate for England began to rise When England failed to score the last 17 runs from the final over the cup went to Australia Match details edit 8 November 1987 ScorecardAustralia nbsp 253 5 50 overs v nbsp England246 8 50 overs David Boon 75 125 Eddie Hemmings 2 48 10 overs Bill Athey 58 103 Steve Waugh 2 37 9 overs Australia won by 7 runsEden Gardens Calcutta Umpires Ram Gupta Ind and Mahboob Shah Pak Player of the match David Boon Aus Australia won the toss and elected to bat Final scorecard1st inningsAustralia innings 8 9 Player Status Runs Balls 4s 6s Strike rateDavid Boon c Downton b Hemmings 75 125 7 0 60 00Geoff Marsh b Foster 24 49 3 0 48 97Dean Jones c Athey b Hemmings 33 57 1 1 57 89Craig McDermott b Gooch 14 8 2 0 175 00Allan Border run out Robinson Downton 31 31 3 0 100 00Mike Veletta not out 45 31 6 0 145 16Steve Waugh not out 5 4 0 0 125 00Simon O Donnell did not batGreg Dyer did not batTim May did not batBruce Reid did not batExtras b 1 lb 13 w 7 nb 5 26Total 5 wickets 50 overs 253 22 1Fall of wickets 1 75 Marsh 18 ov 2 151 Jones 3 166 McDermott 4 168 Boon 5 241 Border nbsp England bowling 9 8 Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Econ Wides NBsPhilip DeFreitas 6 1 34 0 5 66 1 1Gladstone Small 6 0 33 0 5 50 0 6Neil Foster 10 0 38 1 3 80 1 0Eddie Hemmings 10 1 48 2 4 80 0 0John Emburey 10 0 44 0 4 40 0 0Graham Gooch 8 1 42 1 5 25 1 02nd inningsEngland innings 9 Player Status Runs Balls 4s 6s Strike rateGraham Gooch lbw b O Donnell 35 57 4 0 61 40Tim Robinson lbw b McDermott 0 1 0 0 0 00Bill Athey run out Waugh Reid 58 103 2 0 56 31Mike Gatting c Dyer b Border 41 45 3 1 91 11Allan Lamb b Waugh 45 55 4 0 81 81Paul Downton c O Donnell b Border 9 8 1 0 112 50John Emburey run out Boon McDermott 10 16 0 0 62 50Philip DeFreitas c Reid b Waugh 17 10 2 1 170 00Neil Foster not out 7 6 0 0 116 66Gladstone Small not out 3 3 0 0 100 00Eddie Hemmings did not batExtras b 1 lb 14 nb 4 w 2 21Total 8 wickets 50 overs 246 16 2Fall of wickets 1 1 Robinson 0 4 ov 2 66 Gooch 3 135 Gatting 31 1 ov 4 170 Athey 5 188 Downton 6 218 Emburey 7 220 Lamb 8 235 DeFreitas 49 ov nbsp Australia bowling 9 8 Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Econ Wides NBsCraig McDermott 10 1 51 1 5 10 0 0Bruce Reid 10 0 43 0 4 30 1 2Steve Waugh 9 0 37 2 4 11 1 1Simon O Donnell 10 1 35 1 3 50 0 1Tim May 4 0 27 0 6 75 0 0Allan Border 7 0 38 2 5 42 0 0See also edit nbsp Cricket portal1987 Cricket World Cup squadsExternal links editAustralia beat England in thrilling final CWC 1987 on YouTube Cricket World Cup 1987 from ESPNcricinfoFurther reading editBrowning Mark 1999 A complete history of World Cup cricket 1975 1999 Kangaroo Press ISBN 0731808339 Sexton Michael 2019 Border s Battlers Affirm Press ISBN 9781925870527 References edit a b 1987 88 World Cup Final AUSTRALIA v ENGLAND Wisden Almanack 1989 edition ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 27 January 2022 Telford Ian 9 November 1987 TIMES Sport Australians take the World Cup The Canberra Times Vol 62 no 19 028 Australian Capital Territory Australia p 24 Retrieved 27 January 2022 via National Library of Australia Selvey Mike 9 November 1987 Down Under goes top of the world The Guardian p 28 Cricket World Cup History 1987 Winners Runners up Stats of World Cup 1987 NDTVSports com a b c Giles Shaun 2 July 2019 How Australia s 1987 Cricket World Cup win was a turning point for the sport in the country ABC News a b Browning 1999 p 155 Woodcock John 9 November 1987 Border takes one day trip to the moon The Times p 48 a b c Scorecard Australia v England Reliance World Cup Final Wisden a b c d Final Final ICC Cricket World Cup at Eden Gardens Nov 8 1987 Retrieved 27 January 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1987 Cricket World Cup final amp oldid 1218028838, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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