2010 ICC World Twenty20 explained

2010 ICC World Twenty20
Fromdate:30 April
Todate:16 May 2010[1]
Administrator:International Cricket Council
Cricket Format:Twenty20 International
Tournament Format:Group stage and Knockout
Host:Subregion :

Countries :
Barbados
Guyana
Saint Lucia
Count:1
Participants:12
Matches:27
Player Of The Series: Kevin Pietersen
Most Runs: Mahela Jayawardene (302)
Most Wickets: Dirk Nannes (14)
Website:www.icc-cricket.com
Previous Year:2009 England
Previous Tournament:2009 ICC World Twenty20
Next Year:Sri Lanka 2012
Next Tournament:2012 ICC World Twenty20

The 2010 ICC World Twenty20 was the third edition of the ICC Men's T20 World Cup, formerly known as the ICC World Twenty20, an international Twenty20 cricket tournament that was held in the West Indies between 30 April and 16 May 2010.[2] It was won by England, who defeated Australia in the final. Kevin Pietersen was named as player of the tournament.

Although the tournament was held every two years beginning in 2007, the scheduled ICC Champions Trophy, One Day International tournament to be held in the West Indies in 2010 was revised to a Twenty20 format because the 2008 Champions Trophy tournament in Pakistan was postponed due to security concerns and there was a need to correct the international cricketing tournament calendar.

This ICC World Twenty20 took place only 10 months after the last one. As before, the tournament featured 12 teams – the Test-playing nations and two qualifiers. Matches were played at three grounds – Kensington Oval in Bridgetown, Barbados; Providence Stadium in Providence, Guyana; and Beausejour Stadium in Gros Islet, Saint Lucia. The tournament was organised in parallel with the women's tournament, with the men's semi-finals and final each being preceded by the semi-finals and final from the women's event.

This competition also saw Afghanistan make their first ever appearance in a major ICC international cricket tournament, and was made even more remarkable as at the time they only held Affiliate Membership and subsequently became the only Affiliate member ever to compete in a major ICC international cricket tournament.

Qualification

See main article: 2010 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. Teams from every ICC Region : (host nation)The ICC World Twenty20 qualifier was won by Afghanistan who defeated Ireland by 8 wickets in the final with both sides qualifying for the 2010 ICC World Twenty20. This was the first major tournament Afghanistan qualified for, while leading associates the Netherlands and Scotland failed to qualify this time.

Venues

All matches were played at the following three grounds:

Rules and regulations

During the group stage and Super Eight, points are awarded to the teams as follows:

ResultsPoints
Win2 points
No result1 point
Loss0 points
In case of a tie (i.e. both teams score exactly the same number of runs at the end of their respective innings), a Super Over decides the winner. This is applicable in all stages of the tournament.[3]

Within each group (of both group and Super Eight stages), teams are ranked against each other based on the following criteria:[4]

  1. Higher number of points
  2. If equal, higher number of wins
  3. If still equal, higher net run rate
  4. If still equal, lower bowling strike rate
  5. If still equal, result of head-to-head meeting.

Groups

The groups were announced on 4 July 2009. The initial four group format is the same as that used at the 2009 tournament. Team seed in brackets.

Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
Notes

Match officials

Umpires

width 5%Umpirewidth 5%Countrywidth 5%Panel
Billy Bowden New ZealandElite
Aleem Dar PakistanElite
Steve Davis AustraliaElite
Billy DoctroveElite
Ian GouldElite
Tony Hill New ZealandElite
Rudi Koertzen South AfricaElite
Asad Rauf PakistanElite
Asoka de Silva Sri LankaElite
Simon Taufel AustraliaElite
Marais Erasmus South AfricaInternational
Shavir Tarapore IndiaInternational
Rod Tucker AustraliaInternational

Referees

width 5%Refereewidth 5%Country
Alan Hurst Australia
Ranjan Madugalle Sri Lanka

Squads

See main article: 2010 ICC World Twenty20 squads.

Warm-up matches

------------------------------------------------

Group stage

Group A

--------

Group B

--------

Group C

--------

Group D

--------

Super 8s

The Super 8s stage consists of the top two teams from each group of the group stage. The teams are split into two groups, Groups E and F. Group E will consist of the top seed from Groups A and C, and the second seed of groups B and D. Group F will consist of the top seed from Groups B and D, and the second seed of groups A and C. The seedings used are those allocated at the start of the tournament and are not affected by group stage results, with the exception of if a non-seeded team knocks out a seeded team, the non-seeded team inherits the seed of the knocked-out team.[5]

Group E

--------------------

Group F

--------------------

Knockout stage

Semi-finals

----

Final

See main article: 2010 ICC World Twenty20 Final. The final, played in Barbados on 16 May 2010, featured the game's oldest rivalry less than six months before the Ashes in Australia.[6] England won by seven wickets with three overs to spare to seal its first International Cricket Council world championship after losses in three World Cup finals – 1979 against the West Indies at Lord's, 1987 against Australia and 1992 against Pakistan – and a loss in the 2004 Champions Trophy final to the West Indies on home soil.[7] [8] Australia batted first and scored 147 runs for the loss of six wickets, with David Hussey's top score of 59 proving crucial after England had reduced the Aussies to 8/3 after 2.1 overs and then removed captain Michael Clarke. England bettered Australia's total with 18 balls to spare, reaching 148 runs for the loss of three wickets, with Craig Kieswetter (63 runs) and Kevin Pietersen (47 runs) combining for a 111-run partnership for the second wicket before captain Paul Collingwood hit the winning run.[9] Pietersen was subsequently named Man of the Tournament having scored 248 runs, while Kieswetter was named Man of the Match having scored his first T20 international half-century in the final.[10]

Media coverage

Television

TerritoryBroadcaster(s)[11]
AfghanistanAriana Television Network
Lemar TV
AustraliaFox Sports[12]
Supersport
BangladeshBangladesh Television
SingaporeStar Cricket
Caribbean Media Corporation
CanadaAsian Television Network
(Except UK & Ireland)Eurosport2
ChinaESPN Star Sports
IndiaESPN
Star Cricket
DD National mostly India matches
JamaicaTelevision Jamaica
JapanHum Tum TV
CricOne
NepalESPN
Star Cricket
FijiFiji TV
New ZealandSky Sport
Sky Pacific
PakistanGEO Super
Pakistan Television Corporation
South AfricaSupersport
SABC 3 Sport
Sri LankaSri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation
United KingdomSky Sports
Ireland
United StatesDirecTV CricketTicket

Radio

TerritoryBroadcaster
AustraliaABC Local Radio
IndiaAll India Radio
Caribbean Media Corporation
BangladeshBangladesh Betar
CanadaEchoStar
United KingdomBBC Radio
Ireland
PakistanHum FM
United Arab EmiratesHum FM

Internet

RegionBroadcaster(s)
United KingdomBSkyB
IrelandBSkyB
Caribbean Media Corporation
United StatesDirecTV
IndiaESPN STAR Sports
PakistanESPN STAR Sports
BangladeshESPN STAR Sports
NepalESPN STAR Sports
BhutanESPN STAR Sports
Sri LankaESPN STAR Sports
MaldivesESPN STAR Sports
(rest)Eurosport
AustraliaFox Sports
New ZealandSky Sport
SuperSport
Other countriesESPN Star Sports

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: T20 World Cup 2010. 2015-12-22. cricketwa. https://web.archive.org/web/20151223014600/http://www.cricketwa.com/10108/series/t20-world-cup-2010-schedule-fixtures.aspx. 23 December 2015. dead.
  2. News: Third World Twenty20 set for 2010. 4 May 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100110045835/http://icc-cricket.yahoo.net/newsdetails.php?newsId=359. 10 January 2010. dead.
  3. http://worldtwenty20.yahoo.com/abouttwenty20/playing-conditions.html Playing conditions
  4. http://worldtwenty20.yahoo.com/abouttwenty20/icc_world_twenty20_playing_conditions_final.pdf Final WorldTwenty20 Playing conditions
  5. Web site: ICC World Twenty20 / Groups. ESPNcricinfo. 3 May 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100502062345/http://www.cricinfo.com/world-twenty20-2010/content/page/412884.html . 2 May 2010 . live .
  6. News: England cruise to World Twenty20 title . ninemsn . 17 May 2010 . 16 May 2010 . https://archive.today/20120715220742/http://wwos.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=1053184 . 15 July 2012 . dead.
  7. News: Harry . Reekie . England beat Australia to win World Twenty20 title . BBC Sport. 16 May 2010 . 16 May 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100518141245/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/cricket/england/8684847.stm . 18 May 2010. live .
  8. News: Collingwood – We are ready . Sky Sports . BSkyB . 16 May 2010 . 16 May 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100518120248/http://www.skysports.com/cricket/match_preview/0%2C19822%2C11066_85912%2C00.html . 18 May 2010 . dead .
  9. News: England clinches World Twenty20 title . ABC News . . 17 May 2010 . 16 May 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100519132753/http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/05/17/2900876.htm . 19 May 2010. live .
  10. News: KP lauds 'hungry' England . Sky Sports . BSkyB . 16 May 2010 . 16 May 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100520041640/http://www.skysports.com/twenty20/story/0%2C26252%2C12173_6158392%2C00.html . 20 May 2010 . dead .
  11. Web site: ICC World T20 2010 Broadcasters list.
  12. News: Every game of ICC World Twenty20 LIVE and exclusive on Fox Sports . Fox Sports . 4 May 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2010