Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

World Championship of Cricket

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Cricket format
  
One Day International

Champions
  
India

Host(s)
  
Australia

Dates
  
17 February 1985 (1985-02-17) – 10 March 1985 (1985-03-10)

Administrator(s)
  
Australian Cricket Board

Tournament format(s)
  
Group stage and Knockout

The Benson & Hedges World Championship of Cricket was a One Day International tournament held from 17 February to 10 March 1985 in Australia and won by India.

Contents

The tournament was part of the celebrations commemorating the 150th anniversary of European settlement in Victoria. All of the then Test match playing teams participated with matches played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and the Sydney Cricket Ground. The tournament saw the first matches played under lights at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

India were the reigning World Cup holders, having defeated West Indies in the 1983 World Cup final, but the bookmakers installed West Indies as favourites.

Tournament format

Each team was required to name a 14-player squad for the tournament. Matches were played with coloured clothing, white balls, fielding restrictions and innings limited to 50 overs.

The seven teams were split into two qualifying groups. Each played a round-robin with two points awarded for a win and one point for a draw or tie. Teams on equal points were separated by run rate.

Cross-over semi finals were then played with the winner from each group playing the runner-up from the other group. The losers played in the Plate Winners Final while the winners contested the Final.

Australia

Allan Border (captain), Terry Alderman, Peter Faulkner, Rodney Hogg, Kim Hughes, Dean Jones, Robbie Kerr, Geoff Lawson, Rod McCurdy, Craig McDermott, Simon O'Donnell, Wayne B. Phillips, Kepler Wessels, Graeme Wood.

England

David Gower (captain), Jonathan Agnew, Norman Cowans, Chris Cowdrey, Paul Downton, Phil Edmonds, Richard Ellison, Neil Foster, Graeme Fowler, Mike Gatting, Allan Lamb, Vic Marks, Martyn Moxon, Tim Robinson .

India

Sunil Gavaskar (captain), Mohinder Amarnath, Mohammad Azharuddin, Roger Binny, Kapil Dev, Madan Lal, Chetan Sharma, Ravi Shastri, Laxman Sivaramakrishnan, Krishnamachari Srikkanth, Dilip Vengsarkar, Sadanand Viswanath, Manoj Prabhakar, Ashok Malhotra.

New Zealand

Geoff Howarth (captain), John Bracewell, Lance Cairns, Ewen Chatfield, Jeremy Coney, Jeff Crowe, Martin Crowe, Richard Hadlee, Paul McEwan, John Reid, Ian Smith, Martin Snedden, John Wright

Pakistan

Javed Miandad (captain), Anil Dalpat, Azeem Hafeez, Imran Khan, Mohsin Khan, Mudassar Nazar, Qasim Omar, Rameez Raja, Rashid Khan, Saleem Malik, Tahir Naqqash, Wasim Akram, Wasim Raja, Zaheer Abbas.

Sri Lanka

Duleep Mendis (captain), Ashantha de Mel, Somachandra de Silva, Roy Dias, Vinothen John, Uvais Karnain, Ranjan Madugalle, Arjuna Ranatunga, Rumesh Ratnayake, Ravi Ratnayeke, Amal Silva.

West Indies

Clive Lloyd (captain), Winston Davis, Jeff Dujon, Joel Garner, Larry Gomes, Roger Harper, Desmond Haynes, Michael Holding, Gus Logie, Malcolm Marshall, Thelston Payne, Viv Richards, Richie Richardson.

Group A

The tournament began with Australia and England playing the first ever match under lights at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, in front of a crowd of 82,494. Australia won the match by seven wickets, however neither of them would make the semi finals.

India quickly showed that it was on track to repeat its World Cup success with comfortable wins in each of its group matches, while Pakistan found a new hero in 18-year-old left-arm fast bowler Wasim Akram who took 5 for 21 against Australia.

  • Australia v England in Melbourne (day/night) – Sunday 17 February 1985
  • England 8–214 (Allan Lamb 53, Geoff Lawson 3–31, Craig McDermott 3–39)
  • Australia 3–215 (45.2 ov) (Robbie Kerr 87*, Dean Jones 78*, Vic Marks 1–33)
  • Australia won by 7 wickets
  • India v Pakistan in Melbourne (day/night) – Wednesday 20 February 1985
  • Pakistan 183 (Qasim Omar 57, Roger Binny 4–35)
  • India 4–184 (45.5 ov) (Mohammad Azharuddin 93*, Sunil Gavaskar 54, Imran Khan 3–27)
  • India won by 6 wickets
  • Australia v Pakistan in Melbourne (day) – Sunday 24 February 1985
  • Pakistan 6–262 (Mohsin Khan 81, Mudassar Nazar 69, Simon O'Donnell 2–42)
  • Australia 200 (Simon O'Donnell 74*, Wasim Akram 5–21)
  • Pakistan won by 62 runs
  • England v India in Sydney (day/night) – Tuesday 26 February 1985
  • India 9–235 (Krishnamachari Srikkanth 57, Norman Cowans 3–59)
  • England 149 (Martyn Moxon 48, Ravi Shastri 3–30, Laxman Sivaramakrishnan 3–39)
  • India won by 86 runs
  • England v Pakistan in Melbourne (day/night) – Saturday 2 March 1985
  • Pakistan 8–213 (Mudassar Nazar 77, Richard Ellison 3–42)
  • England 146 (Allan Lamb 81 (69), Tahir Naqqash 3–24)
  • Pakistan won by 67 runs
  • Australia v India in Melbourne (day) – Sunday 3 March 1985
  • Australia 163 (Wayne B. Phillips 60, Roger Binny 3–27)
  • India 2–165 (36.1 ov) (Krishnamachari Srikkanth 93*, Ravi Shastri 51)
  • India won by 8 wickets
  • Group B

    Group B was slightly farcical with West Indies being comfortably the number one team in world cricket at the time and Sri Lanka being comfortably at the bottom of the list of Test nations.

    The match between West Indies and New Zealand was rained off which meant that whoever was more successful in beating up on Sri Lanka would top the group. While West Indies easily accounted for Sri Lanka on the scoreboard, fast bowler Rumesh Ratnayake forced both Richie Richardson and Larry Gomes to retire with searing bouncers.

  • New Zealand v West Indies in Sydney (day/night) – Tuesday 19, Thursday 21 February 1985
  • New Zealand 2–57 (18.4 ov)
  • No result (no play possible on 19 Feb, only 18.4 overs possible on reserve day)
  • New Zealand v Sri Lanka in Melbourne (day/night) – Saturday 23 February 1985
  • New Zealand 223 (John Reid 62, Vinothen John 3–29, Rumesh Ratnayake 3–40)
  • Sri Lanka 172 (Arjuna Ranatunga 34, Jeremy Coney 4–46)
  • New Zealand won by 51 runs
  • Sri Lanka v West Indies in Melbourne (day/night) – Wednesday 27 February 1985
  • Sri Lanka 7–135 (Ravi Ratnayeke 50, Viv Richards 3–27)
  • West Indies 2–136 (Desmond Haynes 36, Rumesh Ratnayake 1–29)
  • West Indies won by 8 wickets
  • Semi Finals

    After the group stages, the expected outcome was that 1983 World Cup finalists India and West Indies would meet again in the final of the World Championship. India held up their end of the bargain by beating New Zealand in the first semi final, however Pakistan produced the one major upset of the tournament to beat West Indies.

  • India v New Zealand in Sydney (day/night) – Tuesday 5 March 1985
  • New Zealand 206 (John Reid 55, Madan Lal 4–37, Ravi Shastri 3–31)
  • India 3–207 (43.3 ov) (Dilip Vengsarkar 63*, Kapil Dev 54*, Ravi Shastri 53, Lance Cairns 1–35)
  • India won by 7 wickets
  • This was the only instance in the tournament when the opposition was allowed to cross 200 runs by India
  • West Indies v Pakistan in Melbourne (day/night) – Wednesday 6 March 1985
  • West Indies 159 (Roger Harper 25*, Mudassar Nazar 5–28, Tahir Naqqash 3–23)
  • Pakistan 3–160 (46 ov) (Rameez Raja 60, Joel Garner 1–19)
  • Pakistan won by 7 wickets
  • Plate Winners Final

    The third place play-off in this tournament was known as the Plate Winners Final and West Indies were indeed awarded a plate for winning the match. Geoff Howarth was nearing the end of his time as New Zealand captain and New Zealand's upcoming test and ODI tour to West Indies, which commenced later that month, would be his last series for the country. Richard Hadlee began with a spell of 2 for 8 in 6 overs. Viv Richards then hit 51 off 61 deliveries.

  • New Zealand v West Indies in Sydney (day) – Saturday 9 March 1985
  • New Zealand 9–138 (Jeremy Coney 35, Joel Garner 3–29)
  • West Indies 4–139 (37.2 ov) (Viv Richards 51, Richard Hadlee 3–23)
  • West Indies won by 6 wickets
  • Final

    India got on top early in the final with Kapil Dev reducing Pakistan to 4 for 33 before Javed Miandad and Imran Khan began a rescue act after both Imran Khan and Javed Miandad were controversially given not out after edging two balls to the wicketkeeper. 17-year-old leg spinner Laxman Sivaramakrishnan had been a revelation during the tournament and produced another superb spell in the final. Pakistan's eventual total of 9 for 176 constituted a good recovery. It was the first time, in the tournament, that India had failed to bowl out the opposition. India bagged 49 out of a maximum possible 50 wickets in the tournament.

    Indian openers Ravi Shastri and Krishnamachari Srikkanth each had wonderful tournaments and their century opening stand did most of the work for their strong batting line-up. Each were rewarded at the end of the match with Srikkanth winning the Player of the Match award and Shastri being named the player of the tournament, or as it was known, the Champion of Champions. He was awarded his prize of an Audi 100 motor car, valued at A$35,000 and immediately drove it around the MCG with his entire team sitting either in or on the car. The attendance of 35,296 in the match was the highest in Australia at a match in which the home side was not involved.

    This was the only instance of the World Championship of Cricket. The Indian team that won the cup was adjudged by Wisden as the 'Team of the Century'.

    References

    World Championship of Cricket Wikipedia