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2003 ICC Cricket World Cup Final The Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg Event 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup Australia India 359/2 234 50 overs 39.2 overs Australia won by 125 runs Date 23 March 2003 Venue Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg Player of the match Ricky Ponting (Aus) Umpires Steve Bucknor (WI) and David Shepherd (Eng) Attendance 34,000 [a] ← 1999 2007 → Cricket final The 2003 Cricket ...
Fourteen teams played in the 2003 World Cup, the largest number of teams to play in a Cricket World Cup at the time. The 10 Test playing nations automatically qualified for the tournament including the recently appointed member Bangladesh, while Kenya also qualified automatically due to their full One Day International status.
The ICC Men's Cricket World Cup is the quadrennial international championship of One Day International cricket. [3] The event is organised by the sport's governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC), every four years, with preliminary qualification rounds leading up to a finals tournament.
Lord's has hosted the final five times. The inaugural ICC Cricket World Cup final was held on 21 June 1975 at Lord's, contested by Australia and the West Indies.A man of the match performance, [11] including a century, from West Indian captain Clive Lloyd, coming in to bat at number five with his team at 50/3, [12] formed the basis of a 149-run fourth-wicket partnership with Rohan Kanhai. [13]
This is a list of squads named for the seventh edition of Cricket World Cup (2003 Cricket World Cup), held in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Kenya between 9 February and 23 March 2003. The tournament saw 14 teams selected and placed in two groups. Each country was required to submit a final list of 15 players by 31 December 2002.
Two decades on from their triumph in Sydney, many of Clive Woodward’s World Cup-winning squad are struggling
With his time representing Australia, Lee won multiple ICC titles with the team: the 2003 Cricket World Cup, the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy, and the 2009 ICC Champions Trophy. Lee was the first bowler to take a hat-trick in the T20 format of the game which he did in 2007 ICC World Twenty20 in the inaugural tournament against Bangladesh ...
Semi-finals No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result ODI 1991: 18 March Australia: Ricky Ponting] Sri Lanka: Sanath Jayasuriya: St George's Oval, Port Elizabeth Australia by 48 runs (D/L) ODI 1992: 20 March India: Saurav Ganguly Kenya: Steve Tikolo: Sahara Stadium Kingsmead, Durban India by 91 runs Final No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 ...