FLASHBACK: 1975 World Cup

Guy,
With WC 2003 right at the corner.Lets have a look at each worldcup one by one.
Here is 1975 Prudential cup in England.

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The first ever World Cup of cricket was a far cry from the hoopla of the World cups of recent times.

There were only eight teams competing, out of which only six were Test
playing teams. TV coverage was not as extensive as it is today, and
one-day cricket itself was in its early incipient stages. There are
however, certain performances that come to mind, and certain trends
that were already beginning to take shape during the course of this competition.

Already a dominant force in the Test arena, the West Indians adapted to
the smaller version of the game with relative ease. The performances
that immediately come to mind are the century by Clive Lloyd, the five
run-outs, or that near photo finish in the final versus Australia. And of
course, the famous hit-wicket incident involving Roy Fredricks.

But there is a stronger backbone of equally notable achievements by
the Caribbean Islanders in this tournament. In the preliminary rounds,
for example, the West Indians scrambled home against Pakistan with
two balls to spare and one wicket in hand. This would not have been
possible if not for a frantic 64-run last-wicket stand between Andy
Roberts and Deryck Murray.
Solid batting by Gordon Greenidge and
Alvin Kallicharan in the semi-final against New Zealand is another much
overlooked fact. The much-feared West Indian bowling attack of the
seventies was in full force in matches against Sri Lanka (who had not
received Test playing status at the time), who were bowled out for only
86.

The strong line up that the West Indians boasted of in the Test matches
was instrumental in the this form of the game as well. Clearly, there
was not yet a need for one day specialists as there is today. With a
team such as this one, it is little wonder that the West Indians were
champions without many problems. There were challenged by a
tenacious last wicket stand between Lillee and Thomson in the final but
they managed to emerged as deserving victors.

The inaugural World Cup was sponsored by Prudential Assurance (as
were the next two World Cups) and was based on a simple format of
two groups of four teams each. India were placed in the group including
England, New Zealand and East Africa(the non test-playing team). The
other group was comprised of Australia, West Indies, Pakistan and Sri
Lanka. The teams in each group played each other once and then the
best two teams of each group proceeded to the quarter-final.
**
India’s unique contribution to the World Cup was that Madan Lal bowled
the first ball of this first World Cup to England’s Dennis Amiss. It was
the same match that Sunil Gavaskar scored his much talked about 36
not out, which took all of sixty overs to make. ** :wink: Apparently, neither the
team manager (G.S.Ramchand) nor the captain (S.Venkataraghvan)
agreed with the way he batted. India lost that match by 202 runs, which
is incidentally the heaviest defeat by runs in that World Cup. One
performance from the Indians is noteworthy even outside the context of
the World Cup – Bishen Bedi’s economical bowling figures of 12-8-6-1
are by now historic.

There are few other things of note from this World Cup. **Not many
people know that the highest score in any one-day international at that
time was registered by Glenn Turner of New Zealand, who scored 171
not out against East Africa. **Glenn Turner was also one of three brothers
who represented in New Zealand in that same tournament. Also, Vivian
Richards, arguably one of the best one-day batsmen ever, made less of
an impact with the bat. He scored only 38 runs in five matches with an
average of 12.66 and a top score of 15 not out.
Despite his hand in two
run outs in the final, Richards made less of an impact in this World Cup.

Predictably, the bigger guns of Test cricket were adept at this first World
Cup and some of the lesser-experienced sides found the going tough.
England dominated their group and East Africa struggled with scores of
95,120 and 128 in their three appearances. Despite the one-wicket
victory that the West Indians registered against the Pakistanis. there
was little indication of the exciting cricket this form of the game had to
offer.

But it was in the semi-final between Australia and England at Headingley
that things really heated up. Gary Gilmour, a left arm fast bowler, had
not played a single match for Australia when he was called up to play in
the game against the English. Often in the shadows of fast bowlers like
Lillee and Thomson, Gilmour came out on his own with an unplayable
spell of six for 14 off 12 overs. England’s innings was wrapped up for 93
in 36.2 overs by his devastating spell. Australia, however found the
going tough themselves and were floundering at 39 for six. Then in
walked Gilmour again and along with Doug Walters, won the match for
Australia with a cool yet firm 28. **Quite rightly, the match has been
called ‘Gilmour’s Match’. Surprisingly, however, Gilmour played only five
one-day internationals in his entire career. **

In the final at Lord’s, the Australians were faced with the West Indians
who had previously overcome the New Zealanders in the semi-final at
the Oval. Clive Lloyd lightning quick century (102 of 82 balls) helped
them post a stiff target of 291. The Australians could not match up to
their strength and fell 17 runs short. Lillee and Thomson were batting
with nine wickets down when Thomson was caught by Fredricks off a no-
ball. Fredricks shied at the stumps and the ball went for overthrows. The
crowd raided the field unsuspectingly, while the two batsmen kept
running the overthrows. Order was restored and a few balls later, the
last wicket fell, leaving Clive Lloyd standing with the first World Cup
presented to him by Prince Philip.

It is clear that one-day cricket had not yet reached a level of strategic
thinking that marks the game these days. The sixty over format was
suited to the Test playing teams as it spread out the action over a
longer time. There weren’t any surprise packages in the World Cup;
future champions Sri Lanka were still learning the ropes.

Therefore, the strong Test teams at the time were the stronger ones in
the one day format as well. Australia, England and the West Indies lived
up to their reputation as favorites. But as in the Test arena, the mighty
West Indians were irresistible in one-dayers as well and began their
overwhelming domination of limited overs cricket that lasted for at least
the next eight years.

The Rediff Team adds: While the 1975 Cup was pretty much Test cricket
in microcosm, it is notable for two real trends: people, and money.

The inaugural Cup saw vibrant crowds, with an estimated 117,900
watching the 15 games – which when you consider this was being
played in England, was a huge turnout.

It also saw, for the first time, the game earn big bucks in a small period
of time. Prudential weighed in with 100,000 pounds (and got much more
than their money’s worth in terms of visibility); the gates brought in
double that figure, and even after meeting the expenses and paying the
stipulated prize money – 4000 pounds to the winners, 2000 pounds to
the runners up and 1000 pounds apiece to the two losing semifinalists –
the ICC made a sizeable profit and, in doing so, affirmed for itself that
the World Cup was an idea that had come to stay.

The profits were shared as follows: 10 per cent to the host country,
England; 7 1/2 per cent to the other seven participating countries, and
37 per cent to the ICC coffers.

As far as the cricket itself was concerned, the greatest talking point was
the Gavaskar crawl, before an estimated 17,000 spectators, at Lord’s.
The then team vice captain was pulled up by his captain and manager,
and a report submitted to the Board – which, in typical fashion, closed
the case after an inquiry that was synonymous with ‘eyewash’.
**
In his book Sunny Days, Gavaskar recalls that incident this: "After one
cross batted swipe, I found I was unable to connect my shots… At tea,
which was taken after 25 overs, I was asked by the manager to look for
singles and twos, since I was finding it difficult to score. This was
inresponse to my question whether I should drop anchor at one end
while others scored at the other end… **

"The awful noise made by the crowd did not help my thinking, but only
made me confused as hell. From the start, we knew that the chase was
out of the question…

“There was a complete mental block as far as I was concerned.”

** Statistics **

  1. A historic year for cricket -- for that year produced the first ever World Championship tournament in the game's history, albeit in the one day, and not the traditional, version.

What follows, is the statistical history of the first ever World Cup --
and within those figures, lies a tale of superlative cricketing
performances, of highs and lows, of agonies and ecstasies
that culminated with the West Indies climbing the pinnacle.
**
SUMMARY OF MATCHES **




Countries Matches Played Won Lost No Result Semi Final Runner Up Winner 
West Indies 5 5 - - - - 1 
Australia 5 3 2 - - 1 - 
England 4 3 1 - 1 - - 
New Zealand 4 2 2 - 1 - - 
Pakistan 3 1 2 - - - - 
India 3 1 2 - - - - 
Sri Lanka 3 - 3 - - - - 
East Africa 3 - 3 - - - - 


**

HIGHEST TEAM TOTALS **



Score Overs Match Venue Date 
334-4 (60 overs) England v India Lord's 07-06-75 
330-6 (60 overs) Pakistan v Sri Lanka Nottingham 14-06-75 
328-5 (60 overs) Australia v Sri Lanka The Oval 11-06-75 


**

HIGHEST TEAM AGGREGATES **



Score Overs Match Venue Date 
604-9 (120 overs) Aust (328-5) vs S Lanka (276-4) The Oval 11-06-75 



**
LOWEST COMPLETED TEAM TOTALS **



Score Overs Match Venue Date 
86 (37.2 overs) Sri Lanka v West Indies Manchester 07-06-75 
93 (36.2overs) England v Australia Leeds 18-09-75 
94 (52.3 overs) East Africa v England Birmingham 14-06-75 


**

LOWEST MATCH AGGREGATES **




Score Overs Match Venue Date 
173-11 (58 overs) S Lanka (86) v W Indies (87-1) Manchester 07-06-75 
187-16 (65 overs) Eng (93) v Aus (94-6) Leeds 18-09-75 



**
INDIVIDUAL HUNDREDS (6) **




Batsmen Match Venue Date Score 
GM Turner New Zealand v East Africa Birmingham 07-06-75 171* 
DL Amiss England v India Lord's 07-06-75 137 
KWR Fletcher England v New Zealand Nottingham 11-06-75 131 
GM Turner New Zealand v India Manchester 14-06-75 114* 
CH Lloyd West Indies v Australia Lord's 14-06-75 102 
A Turner Australia v Sri Lanka The Oval 11-06-75 101 



**
HIGHEST RUN AGGREGATES **




Player Matches Ins No Runs HS Avg 100 50 
GM Turner 4 4 2 333 171* 166.50 2 - 
DL Amiss 4 4 - 243 137 60.75 1 1 
Majid Khan 3 3 - 209 84 69.67 - 3 
KWR Fletcher 4 3 - 207 131 69.00 1 1 
A Turner 5 5 - 201 101 40.20 1 - 


**

FOUR OR MORE WICKETS IN A MATCH (9) **




Analysis Bowler Match Venue Date 
6-14 GJ Gilmour (1) Australia v England Leeds 18-06-75 
5-34 DK Lillee Australia v Pakistan Leeds 07-06-75 
5-48 GJ Gilmour (2) Australia v West Indies Lord's 21-06-75 
4-11 JA Snow England v East Africa Birmingham 14-06-75 
4-20 BD Julien (1) West Indies v Sri Lanka Manchester 07-06-75 
4-27 BD Julien (2) West Indies v New Zealand The Oval 18-06-75 
4-44 Sarfraz Nawaz Pakistan v West Indies Bimingham 11-06-75 
4-45 AW Greig England v New Zealand Nottingham 11-06-75 
4-50 KD Boyce West Indies v Australia Lord's 21-06-75 


**
HIGHEST WICKET AGGREGATES **




Player Country Matches Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Average 4 wickets Best 
GJ Gilmour Aus 2 24 8 62 11 5.64 2 6-14 
BD Julien WI 5 60 11 177 10 17.70 2 4-20 
KD Boyce WI 5 52 3 185 10 18.50 1 4-50