2009 Cricket World Cup Qualifier Explained

See also: ICC World Cricket League 2007-09.

2009 ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier
Administrator:International Cricket Council
Cricket Format:One Day International (six first round matches,
3rd/5th place play-offs and final)
List A cricket (all other matches)
Tournament Format:Round-robin and Knockout
Host: South Africa
Count:1
Participants:12
Matches:54
Player Of The Series: Edgar Schiferli
Most Runs: David Hemp (557)
Most Wickets: Edgar Schiferli (24)
Previous Year:2005
Previous Tournament:2005 ICC Trophy
Next Year:2014
Next Tournament:2014 Cricket World Cup Qualifier

The 2009 ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier was a cricket tournament that took place in April 2009 in South Africa. It was the final part of the Cricket World Cup qualification process for the 2011 Cricket World Cup.

The tournament was the renamed version of the ICC Trophy, and was the final event of the 2007–09 ICC World Cricket League.

Teams

The following teams, who attained One Day International status from the previous World Cup, and who made up Division One of the World Cricket League qualified automatically. Kenya did not play in the last 2 qualifying tournaments as they were the first associate team to gain ODI status and thus qualified for the last 2 World Cups automatically but were no longer guaranteed ODI status and once again needed to compete in the qualifying tournament.

The top four teams (previously 6) from this tournament qualified for the 2011 Cricket World Cup, while the top six teams gained or maintained One Day International status for the following four years and also automatically qualified for the ICC Intercontinental Cup. The bottom two teams were relegated to 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Three. The final and the play-offs for third and fifth place were official ODIs.

Ireland won the tournament after beating Netherlands.[1] Ireland, Netherlands, Canada and Kenya all qualified for the 2011 ICC World Cup. Despite not qualifying for the World Cup Afghanistan and Scotland secured ODI status and competed for 5th spot,[2] with Afghanistan winning the playoff.

As a result of the tournament, Afghanistan gained ODI status for the first time. Afghanistan had begun the ICC World Cricket League 2007-09 in the bottom division, but won the Division Five, Division Four and Division Three tournaments to qualify for this event, and ultimately win ODI status. Afghanistan replaced Bermuda as the sixth Associate Nation with ODI status. Afghanistan became the only affiliate member to gain ODI status.

Status of games

All matches played in this tournament have List A cricket status. Additionally, some matches have One Day International status; these matches are:

None of the Super Eight matches were considered ODIs, even if played between teams who started or finished with ODI status.

Significantly, this meant that Afghanistan's Group Stage matches were not considered ODIs, but its 5th place playoff match against Scotland was considered an ODI.

Players

Ashish Bagai (c)
Harvir Baidwan
Balaji Rao
Geoff Barnett
Umar Bhatti
Ian Billcliff
John Davison
Sunil Dhaniram
Sandeep Jyoti
Arvind Kandappah
Eion Katchay
Khurram Chohan
Henry Osinde
Qaiser Ali
Rizwan Cheema
William Porterfield (c)
Andre Botha
Peter Connell
Alex Cusack
Trent Johnston
Kyle McCallan
John Mooney
Eoin Morgan
Kevin O'Brien
Niall O'Brien (wk)
Andrew Poynter
Boyd Rankin
Regan West
Andrew White
Gary Wilson
Louis Burger (c)
Jan-Berrie Burger
Sarel Burger
Louis Klazinga
Bjorn Kotze
Deon Kotze
Hendrik Marx
Bernard Scholtz
Nicolaas Scholtz
Gerrie Snyman
Louis van der Westhuizen
Raymond van Schoor
Ian van Zyl
Tobias Verwey (wk)
Craig Williams
Hemal Mehta (c)
Adnan Ilyas
Aamer Ali
Awal Khan
Hemin Desai
Farhan Khan
Haider Ali
Khalid Rasheed
Maqsood Hussain (wk)
Nilesh Parmar
Rafeeq Al Balushi
Ameet Sampat
Sultan Ahmed
Tariq Hussain
Zeeshan Siddiqui
Ryan Watson (c)
John Blain
Kyle Coetzer
Gordon Goudie
Gavin Hamilton
Majid Haq
Moneeb Iqbal
Neil McCallum
Calum MacLeod
Dewald Nel
Navdeep Poonia
Qasim Sheikh
Colin Smith (wk)
Jan Stander
Craig Wright
Junior Kwebiha (c)
Davis Arinaitwe (wk)
Asadu Seiga
Akbar Baig
Nehal Bibodi
Kenneth Kamyuka
Arthur Kyobe
Roger Mukasa
Benjamin Musoke
Frank Nsubuga
Joel Olwenyi
Nand Kishore
Laurence Sematimba
Ronald Ssemanda
Charles Waiswa
Nowroz Mangal (c)
Asghar Afghan
Dawlat Ahmadzai
Hameed Hasan
Hasti Gul
Karim Khan (wk)
Khaleqdaad Noori
Mohammad Nabi
Mohammad Shahzad
Nasratullah Nasrat
Noor Ali
Raees Ahmadzai
Samiullah Shenwari
Shafiqullah Shafaq
Shapoor Zadran
Irving Romaine (c)
David Hemp
Glenn Blakeney
Lionel Cann
Fiqre Crockwell (wk)
Jekon Edness (wk)
Kyle Hodsoll
Stefan Kelly
Dwayne Leverock
George O'Brien
Steven Outerbridge
Jacobi Robinson
Rodney Trott
Janeiro Tucker
Tamauri Tucker
Frederik Klokker (c, wk)
Morten Hedegaard
Bashir Shah
David Borchersen
Bobby Chawla
Henrik Hansen
Thomas Hansen
Rohit Kanaiya
Mickey Lund
Max Overgaard
Carsten Pedersen
Michael Pedersen
Rizwan Mahmood
Soren Vestergaard
Jacob Larsen
Steve Tikolo (c)
Rajesh Bhudia
Jimmy Kamande
Alex Obanda
Collins Obuya
Nehemiah Odhiambo
Thomas Odoyo
Peter Ongondo
Lameck Onyango
Elijah Otieno
Kennedy Otieno (wk)
Morris Ouma (wk)
Rakep Patel
Hiren Varaiya
Seren Waters
Jeroen Smits (c, wk)
Peter Borren
Mudassar Bukhari
Daan van Bunge
Ryan ten Doeschate
Tom de Grooth
Maurits Jonkman
Alexei Kervezee
Mohammad Kashif
Ruud Nijman
Darron Reekers
Edgar Schiferli
Pieter Seelaar
Eric Szwarczynski
Bas Zuiderent
Khurram Khan (c)
Saqib Ali
Aman Ali
Amjad Ali (wk)
Amjad Javed
Arshad Ali
Fayyaz Ahmed
Nithin Gopal
Ravi Kumar
Naeemuddin Aslam
Sameer Nayak
Owais Hameed
Qasim Zubair
Zahid Shah

Group stage

Group A

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Group B

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Super Eights

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Playoffs

9th and 11th Place Playoffs

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3rd place playoff

Final standings

Position Team Status
1stQualified for the 2011 World Cup, the 2009–10 Intercontinental Cup and gained
ODI status until 2014
2nd
3rd
4th
5thQualified for the 2009–10 Intercontinental Cup and gained ODI status until 2014
6th
7thRelegated to Division Two and the 2009–10 Intercontinental Shield
8th
9th
10th
11thRelegated to 2011 Division Three.
12th

Statistics

Most RunsMost Wickets
width=160 width=40 align=center 557width=160 width=40 align=center 24
align=center 515align=center 18
align=center 461align=center 17
align=center 452align=center 17
align=center 424align=center 16

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Irish qualify for 2011 World Cup. 15 April 2009. BBC News.
  2. Web site: Kenya and Netherlands book World Cup places. ESPNcricinfo.