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England knock champions India out of World Cup

London: England knocked defending champions India out of the ICC World Twenty20 2009 with a three-run victory in their second-round match at Lord’s on Sunday. India needed 19 off the last over to stay in the tournament but, despite a one-handed six by Yusuf Pathan over long-off, the task was too much and they finished on 150 for five.

The England victory silenced the large contingent of noisy Indian fans packed into Lord’s and India failed to make the semi-finals after also losing their first Super Eight match against West Indies on Friday.

Off-spinner Graeme Swann captured the crucial wicket of Yuvraj Singh for 17, including two sixes, stumped neatly by James Foster.

Left-arm swing bowler Ryan Sidebottom, returning to the side in place of leg-spinner Adil Rashid, bowled the final over and was given the man-of-the-match award after capturing two for 31 from his four overs.

England lost Luke Wright for one in the second over after losing the toss and being asked to bat.

Ravi Bopara and Kevin Pietersen added 71 for the second wicket with Bopara hooking the first six of the match off Ishant Sharma.

Pietersen whipped Sharma through mid-wicket for four and moved down the pitch to left-arm paceman RP Singh as if he were playing a spinner to off-drive a four.

The introduction of Ravindra Jadeja’s left-arm spin seemed to turn the match India’s way. Jadeja bowled Bopara for 37 and dismissed Pietersen lbw for 46, trying to sweep a full delivery.

But five wides from Harbhajan Singh in the final over allowed to England to creep to 153 for seven, a defendable total on a pitch offering variable bounce.

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England bounce India out

Kevin Pietersen provided England the impetus early on with a quick knock of 46 from 27 deliveries, while Ravi Bopara hit run-a-ball 37. The famed batting failed for the second game in a row as India lost to England by three runs and crashed out of the ICC World Twenty20 at Lord’s, on Sunday.

England bounce India out

England bounce India out

All-rounder Ravindra Jadeja (2nd from left) celebrates with Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Suresh Raina after claiming the wicket of Ravi Bopara. Playing his first match in the World Twenty20, he bagged two for 26 in four overs as India restricted England to 153 for 7 . Pietersen continued his free-flowing approach as he dismissed a full toss from Jadeja for a six into the stands over midwicket. But the 20-year-old Jadeja had his revenge the very next delivery when he trapped Pietersen leg before wicket. Ishant Sharma failed to learn from the mistakes of his previous matches and continued bowling short. He was promptly despatched for two boundaries in the 16th over by Dimitri Mascarenhas and Owais Shah. He had disappointing returns of 36 runs from his four overs. Mascarenhas was unbeaten on 25 from 26 deliveries.

The defending champions were once again found wanting against short deliveries and scored just 150 for five in their 20 overs. It turned out to be a disappointing campaign for the Indians, who apart from beating minnows Bangladesh and Ireland, looked completely at sea against tougher opponents like the West Indies and England in the Super Eights. India’s hopes were all but dashed off when wicketkeeper James Foster came up with a sharp piece of glove work to stump Yuvraj Singh for 17 runs off Graeme Swann in the 14th over.

No Indian batsmen came to terms with the English attack, which rarely let the batsmen off the hook. Yusuf Pathan made a valiant attempt at the end with a quick 33 from 17 deliveries and Mahendra Singh Dhoni made 30 from 20 deliveries. The two batsmen were involved in a 63-run partnership in six overs for the sixth wicket. A mediocre showing by the top order played a big part in India’s downfall.

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Dhoni confident India can win title again

Team India is at the crossroads again. Mahendra Singh Dhoni and his boys crossed it the last time, bouncing back after losing their first game in the Super Eights to win the Twenty20 World Cup. Now, it remains to be seen whether they can repeat the feat.

On Friday, at the ICC  World Twenty20, they came up short by a mile, Outclassed by the West Indies  in every department of the game, including fielding, in the first encounter between the two sides at Lord’s in nearly 26 years.

After two easy outings, against minnows Bangladesh and Ireland in the group stages, India’s first real challenge in defence of their crown came up against a formidable opponent, and, needless to say, they were found wanting.

Dwayne Bravo  came to the party with a cracking innings of 66 from 36 deliveries to single-handedly take the Windies to a well-deserved seven-wicket victory. Not surprising, even India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni  was effusive in praise of his batting.

“Bravo played a brilliant innings to take the team through, because we were able to apply some pressure on them, but in the middle overs he batted really well and scored some runs off the spinners,” Dhoni said after Friday’s match.

He, however, was quick to rue the fact that the team did not put up enough runs, being restricted to 153 for seven in their 20 overs.

“It was not enough. We have seen in this format, especially on these tracks, if you are looking to put some score on the board it should be at least 165-odd runs, because the wickets are nice. But we really fancied our chances even with 153 on the board,” he said.

He is now looking to draw inspiration from the last tournament, played in South Africa  two years ago, where they were in a similar situation but went on to win every game thereafter en route to the title.

“We will be under pressure to perform in the next game, but that has been the story in the last World Cup too, because after the first game every game was a do-or-die situation for us. We beat some of the toughest teams and we went to the finals and won the Cup. It is not like that we cannot do it again,” Dhoni said.

Dhoni also pointed out that the 51 dot balls India had in their innings was a major drawback.

“Our conscious effort — when we sit to analyze — we try to minimize dot balls. If we could have reduced 51 dot balls to, maybe, 35 dot balls, then we would have had another 10 or 15 runs, but this was one of those off-days where nothing worked.

“We place a lot of importance on boundaries and sixes, but you must remember that lesser the dots balls, the bigger chance of posting a big score.”

Asked why he did not come in at number three like in the previous matches, he replied: “Gautam [Gambhir] was doing the job so we thought we needed one of the guys to be in the middle. When Gautam is there he just plays his game, and if he gets out, I can look to get in.

“But the normal strategy was to get in after the fourth or the sixth overs. Fortunately, in the last few games we never really lost wickets before that, so that was the plan.”

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West Indies beat India in T20 WorldCup Super 8

ICC World Twenty20, 2009
India vs West Indies, 16th Match, Group E
Lords, London, June 12, 2009

Match Information
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Rudi Koertzen (RSA)
Third Umpire: Mark Benson (Eng)
Match Referee: Chris Broad (Eng)
Toss: India (Elected to bat)
Match Status: West Indies won by 7 wkts
Man of the Match: Dwayne Bravo

Batting: India Innings

Batsmen India (153/7 in 20 ovs) Runs Balls 4’s 6’s SR
Gautam Gambhir c L Simmons b D Bravo 14 13 2 0 107.69
Rohit Sharma c L Simmons b F Edwards 5 3 1 0 166.67
Suresh Raina c D Ramdin b F Edwards 5 8 0 0 62.50
Yuvraj Singh c & b F Edwards 67 43 6 2 155.81
Mahendra Singh Dhoni (c) (wk) c A Fletcher b D Bravo 11 23 0 0 47.83
Yusuf Pathan b D Bravo 31 23 3 1 134.78
Irfan Pathan c L Simmons b D Bravo 2 3 0 0 66.67
Harbhajan Singh not out 13 4 3 0 325.00
Zaheer Khan not out 0 0 0 0 0.00
Pragyan Ojha
Ishant Sharma
Extras: b – 0, w – 4, nb – 0, lb – 1 5
Total:(153 for 7 in 20 overs) 153 Run Rate: 7.65

Fall Of Wickets

1/12 (Rohit Sharma, 1.2 ov.), 2/27 (Suresh Raina, 3.5 ov.), 3/29 (Gautam Gambhir, 4.2 ov.), 4/66 (Mahendra Singh Dhoni, 12.1 ov.), 5/130 (Yuvraj Singh, 17.4 ov.), 6/140 (Yusuf Pathan, 19.1 ov.), 7/141 (Irfan Pathan, 19.3 ov.)

Bowling: West Indies

Bowler O M R W Nb Wd ER
Jerome Taylor 4 0 44 0 0 1 11.0
Fidel Edwards 4 0 24 3 0 2 6.0
Dwayne Bravo 4 0 38 4 0 0 9.5
Chris Gayle 3 0 13 0 0 0 4.3
Keiron Pollard 2 0 7 0 0 0 3.5
Sulieman Benn 3 0 26 0 0 1 8.7

Batting: West Indies Innings

Batsmen West Indies (156/3 in 18.4 ovs) Runs Balls 4’s 6’s SR
Chris Gayle (c) c Z Khan b Y Pathan 22 28 4 0 78.57
Andre Fletcher c Y Singh b I Pathan 0 2 0 0 0.00
Lendl Simmons c I Pathan b P Ojha 44 37 5 0 118.92
Dwayne Bravo not out 66 36 4 3 183.33
Shivnarine Chanderpaul not out 18 9 3 0 200.00
Ramnaresh Sarwan
Keiron Pollard
Denesh Ramdin (wk)
Jerome Taylor
Sulieman Benn
Fidel Edwards
Extras: b – 0, w – 3, nb – 0, lb – 3 6
Total:(156 for 3 in 18.4 overs) 156 Run Rate: 8.36

Fall Of Wickets

1/9 (Andre Fletcher, 1.2 ov.), 2/42 (Chris Gayle, 7.4 ov.), 3/100 (Lendl Simmons, 14.3 ov.)

Bowling: India

Bowler O M R W Nb Wd ER
Zaheer Khan 2.4 0 26 0 0 1 9.8
Irfan Pathan 2 0 9 1 0 1 4.5
Yusuf Pathan 4 0 27 1 0 0 6.8
Harbhajan Singh 4 1 31 0 0 0 7.8
Ishant Sharma 3 0 31 0 0 1 10.3
Pragyan Ojha 3 0 29 1 0 0 9.7
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