Series Name: | England cricket team in Ireland in 2006 |
Team1 Image: | Flag of England.svg |
Team1 Name: | England |
Team2 Image: | Cricket Ireland flag.svg |
Team2 Name: | Ireland |
Team1 Captain: | Andrew Strauss |
Team2 Captain: | Trent Johnston |
No Of Odis: | 1 |
Team1 Odis Won: | 1 |
Team2 Odis Won: | 0 |
Team1 Odis Most Runs: | Marcus Trescothick (113) |
Team2 Odis Most Runs: | Andre Botha (52) |
Team1 Odis Most Wickets: | Steve Harmison (3) |
Team2 Odis Most Wickets: | Dave Langford-Smith (3) John Mooney (3) |
Player Of Odi Series: | Marcus Trescothick |
Dates: | 13 June 2006 |
The England cricket team toured Ireland for a one-off One Day International match on 13 June 2006.
This was Ireland's first ever One Day International.
After finishing in second place in the 2005 ICC Trophy Ireland were awarded temporary ODI status and qualification to the 2007 Cricket World Cup.
In November 2005 the Irish Cricket Union (now Cricket Ireland) announced that England would be the team's first opponent in an official ODI. Chief Executive of the Union, Peter Thompson, said that "A match against England, our nearest Test Nation has long been the desire of everyone associated with cricket in Ireland...".[1]
England named a 15-man squad for both the game against Ireland and the upcoming five match ODI series against Sri Lanka.[2] [3]
Ed Joyce had been a crucial member of Ireland's 2005 team that secured them World Cup qualification, finishing as their top scorer in the ICC Trophy campaign.[4] However he had decided that the tournament would be his last for Ireland as he attempted to qualify to play Test cricket for England.[5] Joyce was ultimately successful in receiving an England call-up, although his debut would now be against the country of his birth.[6]
England relied on a century from Marcus Trescothick to set an imposing target of 302 for Ireland to chase. Trescothick dominated the early partnerships with Joyce, Strauss and Collingwood failing to make significant scores. With England on 92/3 after 14 overs Trescothick was joined at the crease by Ian Bell, the two would combine for a match winning fourth-wicket stand of 142. Both would fall to John Mooney as England lost 4 wickets in the last ten overs but Geraint Jones and Glen Chapple upped the scoring rate enough to take England past the 300 mark.
Having lost Dom Joyce in the first over of their reply, Ireland had positioned themselves well at 60/1 after ten overs thanks to a half-century partnership between Andre Botha and Jeremy Bray. Scoring slowed down following Bray's dismissal, but Botha put together another half-century partnership with Kyle McCallan to keep Ireland in the match. The loss of 4 wickets in 4 overs to Paul Collingwood and Steve Harmison took the game away from Ireland who, despite some late-order hitting, would fall short of their target.[10] [11]