World Cup Final: AUSTRALIA WORLD CHAMPIONS

I think batting against Aussies is a different ballgame. At one end you have the Consistent line of Mcgrath which will first tempt you to slash at off stump and then frustrate you to fish outside it and at the other end You have the PACE of Brett Lee is who is having a great Tournament and has been a very improved bowler after he has learnt the virtue of bowling fast with good line & length. Plus this Aussie bowling is supported by some excellent fielding and they wont let any chance go unlike many teams.

Bowling to the Aussie is a good challenge too - First you have Gilchrist attacking from the first ball, then the sheer powerful batting of Hayden who has been very successful against India, then they have punters, martyn, Bevan. They have this unique way of keeping the scoreboard ticking by stealing singles even when they are 4-5 wickets down. Their batting certainly has depth - Gilly, Hayden, Punter, Martyn, Lehman, Bevan, Symonds, Bichel.

So to win India needs to put up a perfect performance in the finals. Anything less than perfect will not be enough for them to win the Cup.

Go India, Go Saurav.

If there is one bowler in the world who can frustrate Tendulkar than it is Glenn McGrath. Like someone mentioned before Tendulkar is playing a little to the right to the viewer's screen in this tournament, mainly front of the leg stump, so when bowlers like McGrath bowl to him, he would have enough space on the offside to hit the ball but McGrath bowled even more wider to Tendulkar in Centurion which troubled the little master quite a bit.
I agree with others, the Indian batsman need to get off Lee and McGrath earlier, not let them take any wickets and not try to score alot of runs. Because after them you have the likes of Hogg and Lehman, who can be easily taken care of.
So instead of blasting out in the first 15 overs, they need to play smart cricket, specially Sehwag, who seems to get carried away with his shot selection.
And reshuffling the batting order would be the last thing the Indian captain would want to do. The first 6 players in the batting lineup are playing good cricket at this moment and they seem to be happy with their position.
Promoting Dravid won't do any good, if India were to play Australia in a lesser important match, than Dravid opening would be great but since this is the WC final, the captain can not take any risk.

I am a little worried about the Aussie batsman's form, specially hayden and Ponting, they have been very inconsistent in this tourney. And with Martyn coming back from the injury, their batting lineup looks very fragile, but thank god for the likes of Andy Symonds and Bevan in the team, they have won Australia almost all their matches.

PS- Brett Lee needs to watch what he says, the last time a Xpress bowler bad mouthed Sachin, he was last seen being beaten up by county kids.

I wish and hope Tendulkar will get a hundred against the Aussies and along with him atleast one more Indian.

The following article is written by Rashid Latif of Pakistan.
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**India destined for World Cup glory
Rashid Latif - 20 March 2003 **

The count down to the final of ICC World Cup 2003 has started after six weeks of hectic cricket. With only the final left to be played, India are strongly fancied to take the World Cup home.

The general perception is that Australia deserve to win the final. Yes, Australia have played some excellent cricket in this World Cup, but one cannot forget the way India have fought back after their dismal performance against the Aussies at Centurion five weeks ago. Their transformation has been remarkable, and purely on the basis of springing back from that debacle, I think the Indians deserve to win the World Cup. Not too many teams in the world have the ability to comeback from such a situation.

The remarkable comeback was made possible thanks to the leadership on and off field of Sourav Ganguly. Indian fans were really down after the defeat at Aussie hands and their reaction back home could have completely demoralised any team. The way Ganguly handled the situation with complete confidence and determination speaks volumes for his faith in his team. The players too responded by backing their captain, and they were cool and calm in their approach. The millions of fans back home and worldwide, who were disappointed after the defeat against the Aussies, were made to realise that it was too early to have written their team off after only the second game.

At the fall of each wicket, the idea of all the eleven players huddling in the middle with hands on the shoulders of each other is more evident proof of the positive body language of the captain and team. Because of this each and every fielder is motivated to perform well and this attitude has improved the fielding remarkably. They have saved many runs and have turned half-chances into dismissals of important batsmen. The result is eight consecutive wins, including victories against top one-day cricket teams like Pakistan, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and England.

After the Centurion defeat, without wasting much time, the Indian team management made the necessary adjustment in the opening department of the batting line-up. The strategy they came up with was to open with Sehwag and Tendulkar through this World Cup, while the middle order was left flexible to be adjusted according to the situation in the game.

Ganguly has almost perfectly applied the important principle of consistency in the use of team resources. The way he has combined the efforts of the three able frontline pace bowlers, the one leading spinner, with the other part-time bowlers has been virtually faultless.

It will be quite unfair if the efforts and sound analysis of coach John Wright are not mentioned. Wright has been the backbone of this outstanding resurgence of Indian team. The recent match against Kiwis was very important to keep the Indian winning streak going and also to boost the self-esteem of players, since Indians recently lost five-two to New Zealand. The strategy of fielding first against New Zealand was an excellent example of the coach and captain putting their heads together and working things out.

Wright’s recent interview just before the semi-final sums up what a coach needs to say, especially before important games. “We still have a long way to go and, as is the case against any opposition and in any circumstance, we have to achieve our game plans and play well,” he said. “If we do that the result will take care of itself.”

Wright has played a key role in the transformation of Tendulkar’s form in this World Cup. After scoring just 36 against Australia, Tendulkar has gone on to play the most crucial and memorable cricket of his career. His 98 against Pakistan and 97 against Sri Lanka can be rated better than any century he has scored before. Sachin totally surprised Pakistan with the onslaught against Shoaib Akhtar and the two Ws. He is on course to be the Best Player of the Tournament and definitely deserves this distinction. It is his positive approach and almost six hundred runs in just nine games, which has helped India to achieve all these superb wins.

Sachin’s positive approach will be the key to negate the efforts of McGrath, Lee and Bichel. India will have to rely on their other batsmen too – Sourav, Dravid, Yuvraj, Kaif and Sehwag have all chipped in with useful scores. Especially Dravid’s fifties against Pakistan and New Zealand helped the slightly turbulent ship to reach a safe haven. His innings reminded me of the fighting abilities shown by Javed Miandad in the 1992 World Cup for Pakistan.

Merely batsmen and fielders cannot win cricket matches; one needs good bowlers as well. There has been criticism about the Indians not playing one extra bowler, either Agarkar or Kumble. The superlative performance of the three pacers Srinath, Zaheer Khan and Nehra have made up for all such criticism. They have stuck to an excellent line and length, and have made batsmen earn the runs. Bowling of Srinath and Zaheer Khan was one of the reasons for Pakistan’s defeat, and Nehra single-handedly destroyed the English batting line-up at Durban. Harbhajan Singh too has been effective and efficient.

I can clearly hear the “Go India Go” slogans of Indian fans at the New Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg, back home and worldwide. What has still to be written into the history books is a win against Australia. Yes, India deserve to achieve that win and lift the prestigious ICC World Cup of 2003.

Rashid Latif is the captain of Pakistan cricket team
http://www-usa.cricket.org/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2003/MAR/159946_CI_20MAR2003.html

I think India is playing the role of Australia played in 99, they had a bad start but came back very strongly. And the current Aussie team is playing like the way Pakistanis played in 99.

gosh man..u can go to any extent :hehe:
:rotfl: :rotfl:

Aussies all the way:dhimpak:…

indians cannot face mcgrath, brett lee, hogg, bichel, harvey…

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by UMAIR316: *
I think India is playing the role of Australia played in 99, they had a bad start but came back very strongly. And the current Aussie team is playing like the way Pakistanis played in 99.
[/QUOTE]

Aussies playing like Pakistan? Nah! I think Aussies are playing like Windies in 1983 and Indians are playing like Aussies of 1999. Go figure :)

… cat ,dog , X , Y , Z :hehe:

Should be a tight game and Victory for India finally :slight_smile:

Martyn unlikely to play final
Will Swanton - 21 March 2003

JOHANNESBURG, March 20 AAP - Damien Martyn is unlikely to play in the World Cup final against India because pain-killing injections will numb his right hand, making him ineffective as a batsman and a passenger in the field.

Besides, Australia might be better off without him.

There’s no guarantee Martyn will be chosen even if he passes a fitness test on Saturday.

His absence gives Australia an extra bowler in the form of all-rounder Ian Harvey in a side already overflowing with run-raiders.

Andy Bichel has a Cup average of 117 but he’ll come in at No.9.

“I’ll be honest and see how it goes,” said Martyn.

"I’ve got to be selected as well. If I’m fit I’ll make myself available to selectors and team management to see whether they pick me on the day.

"I can pick up a bat, it’s just another thing swinging and hitting the ball.

"I’ve had cricket balls in my hands, throwing them up and down and squeezing.

“In that sense, I’ve had my hands around balls and bats but it’s a different story catching and batting in the game.”

Pain-killers seem Martyn’s only hope of playing his first World Cup final but they come at a cost, according to team physiotherapist Errol Alcott.

“They’re always an option but the trouble with injections is that you obliterate all the sensations so he mightn’t know where the ball is in his hand,” said Alcott.

“You take away all that feeling. It’s an option but we don’t generally go down that track all that often.”

Martyn and Alcott, who has engineered miracle recoveries before, like Steve Waugh’s comeback from a torn calf to play the final Ashes Test in England in 2001, have been working around the clock to ease the pain of the fractured right index finger Martyn suffered while fielding against Kenya last Saturday.

“It’s one of those things you’ve got to take on the chin,” Martyn said.

"It probably hit home at the end of the semifinal when you realise you’re in the final, and seeing the boys out there playing so well.

"I’ve been a part of it for the last four years since the last World Cup final, so I’m disappointed but I’m still a part of it and I’m lucky to still be here.

“There are a lot of guys at home sitting there watching - Jason Gillespie, Shane Warne, Shane Watson. I’m here at the moment. If I don’t play, I don’t play but I’m still a part of it on Sunday.”

Alcott said: "I can’t do anything about fractures but all the soft tissue stuff we can deal with.

“It’s only been a week so he will have some sort of pain, but I’ve known lots of players to play with fractures.”

Martyn probably won’t be one of them.

http://www-usa.cricket.org/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2003/MAR/160138_AAP_21MAR2003.html

A big loss for aussies.he is man in form.

ICC confirms Umpires and Referee for World Cup Final
ICC Media Release - 21 March 2003

The ICC today confirmed the umpiring and match refereeing appointments for the Final of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2003. Officials for the match at The Wanderers on Sunday, 23 March will be:
**
Australia v India

Standing umpires: David Shepherd, England and Steve Bucknor, West Indies
Third umpire: Rudi Koertzen, South Africa
Fourth umpire: Billy Bowden, New Zealand
Match referee: Ranjan Madugalle, Sri Lanka
**

This is the third successive World Cup final appointment for umpires Shepherd and Bucknor. ICC General Manager-Cricket, David Richardson said the pair had fully justified their selection, based on the extremely high standards they had shown throughout the World Cup: “David and Steve have both had outstanding tournaments, confirming their standing as two of the best and most experienced umpires in the game. Together with Rudi Koertzen, Billy Bowden and Ranjan Madugalle as Referee, they will form an excellent team for the final. A special mention should be made of Billy Bowden, who came to the World Cup as a member of the International panel and has ended it as one of the best performers of the entire tournament.”

ICC Media Contacts:

Brendan McClements: 083 417 5492
Mark Harrison: 083 417 5494

http://www-usa.cricket.org/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2003/MAR/160127_ICC_21MAR2003.html

I was expecting Rudi Koertzen to be one of the standing umpires instead of Bucknor.Rudi had great tournament so far.

yeah well said..but but u left out zaheer and mcgrath:k:
btw ..Kashur r u Indian or Paki ?

Re: World Cup Final: IND vs AUS

[QUOTE]
Originally posted by allah_ka_banda: *
*

World Cup 2003 Final
India vs Australia
Wanderes,Johansberg
Sunday March 23
0230 AM Eastern
**

**
My perosonal Opinion: Indian can win only if Sachin plays a knock of his life.Else its Aussies all the way.
I would put aussies chances as 70:30

**

What do you all say?
[/QUOTE]

better make the chances at 69:31.

http://

:slight_smile: yeah right.
tell me are you kidding.
you wish though, right.

INDIA 4 SURE ..... SACHIN n GANGULY ..... WATCH OUT 4 THEM AUSSIES .... INDIA THE NEXT CHAMP .... WC CUMIN BACK 2 THE SUB CONTINENT (Y)

:sleepy2:..
we will c..
how gilchrist, hayden, ponting, lehmann and bevan will hit those boundaries:k:…

**Ganguly looks for a special century **](Yahoo is part of the Yahoo family of brands.)

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Saurav Ganguly, who captains India’s one-day side for the 100th time in Sunday’s World Cup final, has been described as arrogant, aloof and impulsive.

One former player also argued last month that he was not good enough to play for the team.

But even his fiercest critics would grudgingly recognise Ganguly’s contribution if he leads India to their second World Cup title after all rounder Kapil Dev in 1983.

The 30-year-old is used to criticism, be it centred on his character or his technique.

On Thursday, having scored 111 not out against Kenya to guide his team to Sunday’s final at The Wanderers against Australia, he was given only a few moments to savour his achievement before being asked about his lack of attacking off-side shots.

“At times I have played below potential,” he conceded. “Lots of bowlers don’t give me much room. They started bowling a bit on my body. Initially I struggled, but I am a better player now off my pads.”

Ganguly, at his best, is a fine, fluent driver of the ball.

His 8,696 one-day runs and 22 centuries suggest he can play. His test average of 40.59, some three runs less than his one-day average, also puts him in the top bracket.

Yet there is always a rider, as former India test player Krishnamachari Srikkanth underlined when questioning Ganguly’s right to make the final eleven.

His problems with short-pitched bowling are well documented.

Those wanting to question Ganguly’s test credentials can also point to just four centuries in four years. He has never reached three figures against Australia, South Africa, Pakistan or West Indies.

Those wanting to doubt his World Cup success, meanwhile, stress that his three centuries at the 2003 World Cup have come against Namibia and Kenya, while his average against test-nation opponents is 17.16.

WEALTHY

The articulate son of a wealthy Calcutta printer, Ganguly was criticised at the start of his international career for lack of humility.

He was banished from the side after playing one one-day game as a teenager in Australia 11 years ago.

Ganguly had to wait for another four years before returning for the test tour of England in 1996 and scoring centuries in his first two tests.

He was promoted to open in one-dayers later that year by then captain Sachin Tendulkar, the pair forming an enduring one-day partnership.

Ganguly took over as captain in October 2000, after Tendulkar quit following a 3-0 test series rout in Australia.

Critics predicted he would fail because he was a loner lacking in team spirit, a view strengthened after a difficult stint with English county Lancashire. He was dubbed “Lord Snooty” and reportedly once asked former England captain Michael Atherton to look after his sweater.

Australia captain Steve Waugh is not a fan either. He was furious when Ganguly repeatedly and provocatively turned up late for the toss during the 2001 Indian test series.

But Ganguly has won other friends, particularly among his team mates.

He has often pleaded with the selectors to show faith in such youngsters as off-spinner Harbhajan Singh, Yuvraj Singh, Mohammad Kaif and left-arm pacemen Zaheer Khan and Ashish Nehra, all at some point criticised for poor attitude.

Sanjay Manjrekar, another former India player turned pundit, feels Ganguly has not been fully understood.

“It has taken everyone a while to get used to the personality of Saurav Ganguly,” he said. "He is like no one before him.

"Indians in particular have found it hard to accept someone who does not mind speaking his mind all the time.

“But he has picked and backed talent in the last two years which is paying dividends now.”.

Victory on Sunday would go some way to silencing the doubters. A century from the “Prince of Calcutta” might shut them up completely.

as a pakistan fan, i wish india all the best. in reality, these are the two most complete teams in the tournament though australia's batting is deeper but india's batsmen are better. this is probably the best indian team of all time (i say this as someone who has seen cricket for almost 20 years), the opening is electric and the best in the world, the middle order is solid and dependable and the bowling is highly serviceable. if the match comes down to batting then india will win but i would say the aussies have the better bowling attack. tendulkar has a fearless attitude in this world cup and his attitude permeates throughout the whole team.

may the best team win, i don't think the aussies will take them lightly because they know what India is capable of. India is more dependent on individual brilliance whereas australia plays as a team. this is evident from the fact that none of the aussies are even close in the Man of the Tournament selection.

i predict india will be the world cup champions on March 23.

and another thing, and i know i'm being biased, but i hope either mohammed kaif or zaheer khan get man of the match so people of india will realize that the muslims there are just as indian as they are.

A 'Kaif' for cricket

A 'Kaif' for cricket

Mohammad Kaif’s must be a rare case where the career of every male member of the family has been made and guided by cricket.


Sharat Pradhan spends some time with Mohammad Kaif's
family in Allahabad


What's in a name? Try directing that question to Mohammed Tarif and Qaiser Jehan of Kydganj, Allahabad.
"We simply wanted the name of the youngest of our three sons to end with an 'F' so that it matched with the names of his elder brothers, Asif and Saif. So we ended up with Kaif," says Qaiser.

End of story. Beginning of story.

As the same Kaif carves out a niche on the cricket field, his mother adds: "Little did we realise that his ‘kaif’ (which stands for 'junoon' or passion) would one day have him soaring beyond our dreams. We had never thought that it would fit so well with his passion for the game."

For Kaif's father, Mohammad Tarif, though, it all fits.

Perched on a wooden deewan beside his wife in their humble tenement in Kydganj, an obscure by-lane in Allahabad, Tarif says matter-of-factly, "I had always nurtured dreams of my sons making their mark in cricket."

For Tarif, who represented Uttar Pradesh in the Ranji Trophy for 17 years, that dream was realised when Asif and Saif made it to the state Ranji Trophy squad. But it is Kaif -- born in 1981, the same year Tarif made his last Ranji appearance -- who has managed to overtake his father and elder siblings on the emerald turf.

Kaif’s must be a rare case where the career of every male member of the family has been made and guided by cricket. "Not just me, each of my three sons owe their jobs to cricket," admits Tarif, who is a Chief Inspector of Tickets in the Allahabad division of the newly carved out North Central Railway.

'For Kaif, cricket is a junoon that goes well with his name'

Frequent travellers on the Allahabad-New Delhi Prayagraj Express could not have missed Tarif, a fair-complexioned, well-built 56-year-old man performing ticket-checking duty until a few months back. And, of course, if you were interested in cricket, he would have, perhaps, updated you with the very latest.

While Asif has followed his father into the Railways, Saif and, now, Kaif are on the rolls of the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC), "all thanks to the sports quota".

"As a little kid, Kaif was a reluctant starter, but I would insist on giving him some practice with a tennis-ball on the brick-paved lane outside this house. Soon he developed interest and got others of his age-group to join him," recalls Tarif.

But it was the Asif and Saif who felt that their little brother had it in him to scale greater heights.

"Soon my elder sons and I started taking Kaif to the Madan Mohan Malviya stadium, where we pushed him into a coaching camp for children under-12, and it was here that he began to display his talent," says Tarif.

"The following year, after he finished his Class VIII and proved his mettle at the coaching camp, Kaif was moved to the Green Park stadium Sports Hostel in Kanpur, where he stayed till he got his first call-up for India in March 2000, against South Africa, in a Test match at Bangalore.

For Kaif, a member of India's under-15 side and later captain of the team that won the under-19 cricket World Cup in Sri Lanka in 1999, the selection was a natural progression.

Though he was dropped for a year after that match, there was no looking back since he got drafted back into the side for a three-Test series in Sri Lanka in July-August 2001.

"Now he has played four Tests and 46 one-dayers without a break and I pray it continues," hopes Tarif. Strangely, the parents have not watched a single one of Kaif's international matches. "We will go see him only after he earns a permanent spot in the side. So far we regard him as only 'temporary'," quips the salwar-suit clad father, in his typical sarkari lingo.

"What gave me an inkling that this boy had a natural flair for cricket was when he once pointed out where I had gone wrong and why I had got bowled early in a match," says Tarif. "While initially I chose to take his observation lightly, on second thoughts later in the evening I realised that he was absolutely right."

Mohammad Kaif

Kaif's father made it a point to thereafter pay more heed to the little son's advice and observations. "I must confess today that I could never prove him wrong," he says, adding, "and you know what, now when I try to find fault with his batting, I am unable to do so."

Absolutely media-shy, Kaif's parents were virtually in the hiding when this scribe knocked at their doors. Literally swarmed by media persons after their lad took India to victory against New Zealand, both Qaiser Jahan and Tarif had slipped out to a relative's place to avoid interviews.

It was only after much chase and with the intervention of Kaif's brother, Saif , who was contacted in New Delhi, that the simple and unassuming couple, opened up.

Every minute the phone rings and while the young callers ask for 'Kaif bhaiya', the older fans shower their congratulatory messages. "Sure enough, it is a pleasure to hear praises and sweet words. But for how long is it humanly possible to go on answering such calls," they ask, frankly.

The parents have nothing against miscreants who threw dirt at their house after India was defeated by Australia last month. "We Indians are emotional people. So such outbursts are natural," says Qaiser Jahan.

"The day Kaif scored 87 against England in the NatWest final, as also when we defeated Pakistan and New Zealand in the World Cup the other day, we were literally carried by people in their arms as everyone danced with joy and burst crackers to enliven another Diwali," points out Tarif.

While Kaif's parents remain glued to the newly acquired 29-inch flat screen television, father Tarif avoids watching the match when his dear Kaif arrives on the pitch.

When Kaif is turning tables in favour of India, his parents choose to divert their attention to something else.

"When we were playing England, I turned off the TV soon after Sachin Tendulkar was out. I gave up all hope and decided to go to a place where there was no TV. So both my wife and I went over to a nearby cinema hall to watch 'Devdaas', only to be told about India's victory after enthusiastic rejoicing crowds mobbed the hall and carried us away," he recalls.

"Ditto the New Zealand match. I was very apprehensive. So I went over to a friend's place where I knew they would not be watching the match. It was only after my elder son rang me up to say that Kaif had scored 45 that I decided to hastily return home and watch him play the rest of the game," he adds.

Being a cricketer himself, Tarif is very apprehensive about seeing his son tumble. "He plays well, but what pains me is when I see him failing to fulfil his ultimate objective -- to contribute towards the team's victory. I know how committed he is towards the team and I too would not mind even if he were to score a paltry 20 runs, as long as he can do his bit to bag the World Cup."

While Kaif's little sister, Asma, is busy promising all her Class IX friends to fulfil all their demands for autographs when "Kaif bhaiya" returns, mother Qaiser Jahan has been observing roza (fast) ever since the World Cup began last month.

"Well, I do not wish to make any public announcement about this roza, but yes, I am only praying that my Honey (Kaif's nickname) does his bit to ensure that the World Cup comes back to India; and let me tell you I have a gut feeling that these boys will win the Cup this time."

Significantly, the Kydganj lad will have more in store when he comes home this time -- a brand new house in Allahabad's up-market Civil Lines. "I want to get this house finished before he comes here next; it will be our gift to him," adds a visibly excited Tarif.

In one of the news articles, the "wicket keeper" of The Wanderers, where the final is to be played, said that he is planning to make a "batting" wicket. If it is going to be a batting wicket, then chances for India winning the cup become higher.