2013 ICC Champions Trophy explained

2013 ICC Champions Trophy
Fromdate:6 June
Todate:23 June 2013
Administrator:International Cricket Council
Cricket Format:One Day International
Tournament Format:Round-robin and knockout
Host:
Count:2
Participants:8
Matches:15
Player Of The Series: Shikhar Dhawan
Most Runs: Shikhar Dhawan (363)
Most Wickets: Ravindra Jadeja (12)
Previous Year:2009
Previous Tournament:2009 ICC Champions Trophy
Next Year:2017
Next Tournament:2017 ICC Champions Trophy

The 2013 ICC Champions Trophy was the seventh ICC Champions Trophy, a One Day International cricket tournament held in England and Wales between 6 and 23 June 2013.[1] [2] India won the tournament for the second time by defeating England in the final by 5 runs.[3]

India received $2 million as prize money for winning the tournament, the largest amount since the tournament's inception.[4] It was due to be the final ICC Champions Trophy, to be replaced by the ICC World Test Championship in 2017,[5] but in January 2014, it was instead confirmed by the ICC that a Champions Trophy tournament would take place in 2017, with the proposed Test Championship being cancelled.[6]

Qualification

As hosts, England qualified for the competition automatically; they were joined by the seven other highest-ranked teams in the ICC ODI Championship as of 21 August 2012.[7]

QualificationDateBerthsCountry
Host1 July 20101
ODI Championship21 August 20127

Rules and regulations

The 2013 ICC Champions Trophy[8] was contested by eight teams, which were seeded and divided into two groups. Each team played every other team in its group once. Following the group stage, the top two teams from each group progressed to the semi-finals, where the winner of Group A played the runner-up of Group B and the winner of Group B played the runner-up of Group A.

Points system

ResultsPoints
Win2 points
Tie/No result1 point
Loss0 points

Venues

Three cities hosted the tournament's matches: London (at The Oval), Birmingham (at Edgbaston) and Cardiff (at Sophia Gardens, known as Cardiff Wales Stadium for the tournament).

LondonBirminghamCardiff
The OvalEdgbaston Cricket GroundSophia Gardens
Capacity: 26,000Capacity: 23,500Capacity: 15,643

Match officials

Source:[9]

The match referees’ responsibilities throughout the men's tournament were shared between three members of the Elite Panel of ICC Referees :

The on-field responsibilities for officiating the men's tournament were shared between 12 members of the Elite Panel of ICC Umpires:

Squads

See main article: 2013 ICC Champions Trophy squads.

Warm-up matches

The warm-up matches had rules that were slightly different from normal ODI matches, so they are not recognised as ODIs. A team could use up to 15 players in a match, but only 11 could bat or field in each innings.[10]

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Group stage

Group A

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Group B

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Knock-out stage

Semi-finals

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Final

See main article: 2013 ICC Champions Trophy final.

Statistics

Batting

Most runs[11]
Player Runs
Shikhar Dhawan5536390.75114
Jonathan Trott5522957.2582
Kumar Sangakkara4422274.00134
Rohit Sharma5517735.4065
Virat Kohli5517658.6658

Bowling

Most wickets[12]
Player
Ravindra Jadeja551212.833.755/36
Mitchell McClenaghan331113.096.044/43
James Anderson551113.724.083/30
Ishant Sharma551021.805.733/33
Ryan McLaren44818.505.444/19

Controversy

Australian David Warner was suspended by Cricket Australia until the first Ashes Test after an altercation with English batsman Joe Root following Australia's loss to England.[13]

Former England captain Bob Willis accused one English cricketer of tampering with the ball in order to aid reverse swing during their match against Sri Lanka. Umpire Aleem Dar changed the ball midway through Sri Lanka's innings, but England coach Ashley Giles denied the accusations, saying that Dar changed the ball because it had gone out of shape.[14]

Pitch invasion incident

The semi-final between India and Sri Lanka at Sophia Gardens in Cardiff saw individuals, possibly Tamil Youth activists,[15] running onto the pitch with flags of Tamil Eelam and banners protesting against the Sri Lankan team playing in the United Kingdom. The first invasion occurred in the 50th over of the Sri Lanka innings, but the two interlopers were soon overpowered by the security staff. However, the second invasion saw at least six protesters run onto the field from various angles from the River Taff End of the ground.

The protests continued after the match had finished, and a fight broke out outside the ground between protesters and supporters in a manner similar to the earlier protests at a group stage game at The Oval.[16] Later, hundreds of members of Britain's Tamil community held up the Sri Lankan team bus after the encounter and raised anti-Sri Lankan government slogans. No protests were shown to the Indian team and their bus left as scheduled.[17]

Team of the Tournament

The team of the tournament was announced by ICC on 28 June 2013. It was selected by a five-person selection panel that comprised Geoff Allardice (ICC General Manager – Cricket, and Chairman Event Technical Committee), Javagal Srinath (former India fast bowler and ICC Emirates Elite Panel match referee), Aleem Dar (ICC Emirates Elite Panel umpire), Scyld Berry (Wisden Editor from 2008 to 2011 and Sunday Telegraph correspondent) and Stephen Brenkley (correspondent of The Independent and Independent On Sunday).[18]

Team of the Tournament (in batting order):

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1 July 2010 . 1 July 2010 . England to host ICC Champions Trophy in 2013 . The Guardian.
  2. News: India to play Pakistan in Champions Trophy . ESPNcricinfo . ESPN EMEA . 21 August 2012 . 22 August 2012 .
  3. Web site: 23 June 2013 . 23 June 2013 . India seize Champions Trophy victory as England choke in final straight . The Guardian.
  4. Web site: 24 June 2013 . 24 June 2013 . 2013 ICC Champions Trophy: BCCI announces cash prize of Rs one crore to each player . Zee News.
  5. News: Tariq . Engineer . No Champions Trophy after 2013 . ESPNcricinfo . ESPN EMEA . 17 April 2012 . 5 October 2012 .
  6. Web site: Watered down ICC proposal significant for NZ Cricket - Cricket News TVNZ. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140203181530/http://tvnz.co.nz/cricket-news/watered-down-icc-proposal-significant-nz-5814010. 2014-02-03.
  7. Web site: India to play Pakistan in Champions Trophy . 2023-11-13 . ESPNcricinfo . en.
  8. News: ICC Champions Trophy: Last edition launched in London . NDTV Sports . 18 October 2012 . 18 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121018114147/http://sports.ndtv.com/cricket/news/item/198038-icc-champions-trophy-last-edition-launched-in-london . 18 October 2012 . dead . dmy-all .
  9. Web site: 16 May 2013 . 16 May 2013 . ICC announces umpires list for Champions Trophy . Business Standard.
  10. Web site: 13 May 2013 . 13 May 2013 . ICC announces schedule of warm-up matches ahead of Champions Trophy . NDTV Sports.
  11. Web site: ICC Champions Trophy, 2013 – Most runs . Cricinfo.com . ESPN . 23 June 2013 .
  12. Web site: ICC Champions Trophy, 2013 – Most wickets . Cricinfo.com . ESPN . 23 June 2013 .
  13. News: David Warner: Australia batsman suspended until first Ashes Test . BBC Sport . British Broadcasting Corporation . 13 June 2013 . 19 June 2013 .
  14. News: Ball-tampering: England's Ashley Giles denies allegations . BBC Sport . British Broadcasting Corporation . 15 June 2013 . 19 June 2013 .
  15. Web site: 20 June 2013 . UK Tamils gather at Cardiff protesting Sri Lankan cricket . 22 June 2013 . TamilNet.
  16. News: Security breaches disrupt semi-final . ESPNcricinfo . ESPN EMEA . 20 June 2013 . 21 June 2013 .
  17. Web site: Protesters hold up Sri Lankan team bus after supporters invade Cardiff pitch . . 22 June 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130624161805/http://sports.ndtv.com/icc-champions-trophy-2013/news/209561-protesters-hold-up-sri-lankan-team-bus-after-supporters-invade-cardiff-pitch . 24 June 2013 . dead .
  18. Web site: ICC announces Team of the Tournament. icc-cricket.com. 23 March 2018.