Who will won India Sri Lanka Test series

14.7.08

2002 ICC Champions Trophy

Day history
September 12
Pakistan v Sri Lanka
R Premadasa Stadium, Khettarama, Sri Lanka
Pakistan 200 all out (49.4 overs) / Saeed Anwar 52 (82) Muttiah Muralitharan 3/29
Sri Lanka 201/2 (36.1 overs) / Sanath Jayasuriya 102* (120) Wasim Akram 1/42
Sri Lanka won by 8 wickets
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Daryl Harper
Man of the match: Sanath Jayasuriya

September 13
West Indies v South Africa
Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo, Sri Lanka
West Indies 238/8 / Chris Gayle 49 (55) Jacqes Kallis 2/41
South Africa 242/8 (49 overs) / Jonty Rhodes 61 (70) Mervyn Dillon 4/60
South Africa won by 2 wickets
Umpires: David Shepherd and Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan
Man of the Match: Jonty Rhodes

September 14
India v Zimbabwe
R Premadasa Stadium, Khettarama, Sri Lanka
India 288/6 / Muhammad Kaif 111 (112) Douglad Hondo 4/62
Zimbabwe 274/8 / Andy Flower 145 (164) Zaheer Khan 4/45
India won by 14 runs
Umpires: Asoka de Silva and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Mohammad Kaif

September 15
Australia v New Zealand
Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo, Sri Lanka
Australia 296/7 / Damien Martyn 73 (87) Jacob Oram 2/60
New Zealand 132 all out (26.2 overs) / Shane Bond 26 (22) Glenn McGrath 5/37
Australia won by 164 runs
Umpires: Dave Orchard and Russell Tiffin
Man of the Match: Glenn McGrath

2002 ICC Champions Trophy

The 2002 ICC Champions Trophy was held in Sri Lanka in 2002. It was the third edition of the ICC Champions Trophy. The tournament was due to be held in India, but was switched to Sri Lanka when an exemption from tax in India was not granted.


Twelve teams competed in the tournament - 10 Test-playing nations with Netherlands and Kenya. The teams were split into four pools of three teams each.


Group A: Australia / Bangladesh/ New Zealand

Group B: England / India / Zimbabwe

Group C: Kenya / South Africa / West Indies

Group D: Netherlands / Pakistan / Sri Lanka


Each team played the other two teams in its pool once, and the four teams that lead in each pool proceeded to the Semi Finals. The Final between India and Sri Lanka was washed out twice, to leave no result.


Squads

Australia

Ricky Ponting (Captain)

Adam Gilchrist (Vice-captain)

Michael Bevan

Andrew Bichel

Jason Gillespie

Nathan Hauritz

Matthew Hayden

Brett Lee

Darren Lehmann

Jimmy Maher

Damien Martyn

Glenn McGrath

Shane Warne

Shane Watson

Stephen Bernard (Team Manager)

John Buchanan (Coach)

Errol Alcott (Physiotherapist)

Jock Campbell (Physical Performance Manager)

Mike Walsh (Assistant Team Manager/Cricket Analyst)

Bangladesh

Khaled Mashud (Captain)

Al Sahariar

Alok Kapali

Fahim Muntasir

Habibul Bashar

Javed Omar

Khaled Mahmud

Manjural Islam

Mazharul Haque

Mohammad Ashraful

Mohammad Rafique

Talha Jubair

Tapash Baisya

Tushar Imran

England

Nasser Hussain (Captain)

Ian Blackwell

Andrew Caddick

Rikki Clarke

Dominic Cork

Ashley Giles

Matthew Hoggard

Ronnie Irani

James Kirtley

Nick Knight

Owais Shah

Jeremy Snape

Alec Stewart (Wicketkeeper)

Marcus Trescothick

India

Sourav Ganguly (Captain)

Rahul Dravid

SR Tendulkar

Virender Sehwag

Dinesh Mongia

Mohammad Kaif

Anil Kumble

Harbhajan Singh

Zaheer Khan

Ajit Agarkar

Yuvraj Singh

Jai Prakash Yadav

Ashish Nehra

VVS Laxman

Javagal Srinath

Kenya

Steve Tikolo (Captain)

Thomas Odoyo (Vice-captain)

Joseph Angara

Jimmy Kamande

Brijal Patel

Collins Obuya

David Obuya

Maurice Odumbe

Peter Ongondo

Lameck Onyango

Kennedy Otieno

Ravindu Shah

Tony Suji

Martin Suji

Team Manager - Mehmood Quraishy

Coach - Sandeep Patil

Asst. Coach - A Kirsten

Physiotherapist - Bernard Onden'g Choi

Netherlands

Roland Lefebvre (Captain)

Luuk van Troost

Daan van Bunge

Jacob-Jan Esmeijer

Victor Grandia

Feiko Kloppenburg

Tim de Leede

Hendrik-Jan Mol

Robert van Oosterom

Adeel Raja

Edgar Schiferli

Reinout Scholte

Nick Statham

Bas Zuiderent

New Zealand

Stephen Fleming (Captain)

Nathan Astle

Shane Bond

Chris Harris

Paul Hitchcock

Kyle Mills

Chris Nevin

Jacob Oram

Mathew Sinclair

Scott Styris

Glen Sulzberger

Daryl Tuffey

Daniel Vettori

Lou Vincent

Pakistan

Waqar Younis (Captain)

Inzamam-ul-Haq (Vice-Captain)

Abdur Razzaq

Imran Nazir

Misbah-ul-Haq

Mohammad Sami

Rashid Latif

Saeed Anwar

Shahid Afridi

Shoaib Akhtar

Shoaib Malik

Wasim Akram

Younis Khan

Yousuf Youhana

South Africa

Shaun Pollock (Captain)

Dale Benkenstein

Nicky Boje

Mark Boucher

Alan Dawson

Boeta Dippenaar

Allan Donald

Herschelle Gibbs

Jacques Kallis

Lance Klusener

Makhaya Ntini

Justin Ontong

Jonty Rhodes

Graeme Smith

Robin Peterson

Sri Lanka

Sanath Jayasuriya (Captain)

Russel Arnold

Marvan Atapattu

Mahela Jayawardene

Aravinda de Silva

Upul Chandana

Kumar Sangakkara

Kumar Dharmasena

Tillakaratne Dilshan

Chaminda Vaas

Hasantha Fernando

Dilhara Fernando

Muttiah Muralitharan

Pulasthi Gunaratne

Manager: Ajith Jayasekera

Cricket Advisor: Duleep Mendis

Coach: Dav Whatmore

Physiotherapist: Alex Kountouri

West Indies

Carl Hooper (Captain)

Shivnarine Chanderpaul

Pedro Collins

Corey Collymore

Cameron Cuffy - withdrawn 4th September

Mervyn Dillon

Vasbert Drakes

Chris Gayle

Ryan Hinds

Wavell Hinds

Ridley Jacobs

Brian Lara

Runako Morton

Mahendra Nagamootoo

Ramnaresh Sarwan

Zimbabwe

Heath Streak (Captain)

Alistair Campbell

Stuart Carlisle

Dion Ebrahim

Sean Ervine

Andy Flower

Grant Flower

Travis Friend

Douglas Hondo

Douglas Marillier

Mpumelelo Mbangwa

Raymond Price

Tatenda Taibu

Guy Whittall

Records

Batting

Most Runs: Virender Sehwag (India) (271)

Highest Score: Andy Flower (Zimbabwe) (145)

Bowling

Most wickets: Sri Lanka Muttiah Muralitharan (Sri Lanka) (10)

Best Economy Rate: Kumar Dharmasena (Sri Lanka) (1.55)

Best figures: Glenn McGrath (Australia) (5/37)

squads of 2000 ICC KnockOut Trophy

Australia
Steve Waugh (captain)
Adam Gilchrist (wicket keeper)
Michael Bevan
Jason Gillespie
Ian Harvey
Mark Higgs
Brett Lee
Shane Lee
Damien Martyn
Glenn McGrath
Ricky Ponting
Andrew Symonds
Mark Waugh
Bradley Young
John Buchanan (Coach)

England
Nasser Hussain (captain)
Mark Alleyne
Andy Caddick
Mark Ealham
Andrew Flintoff
Ashley Giles
Paul Grayson
Darren Gough
Matthew Hoggard
Graeme Hick
Vikram Solanki
Alec Stewart (wicket keeper)
Marcus Trescothick
Graham Thorpe
Duncan Fletcher (Coach)

India
Sourav Ganguly (captain)
Sachin Tendulkar
Ajit Agarkar
Hemang Badani
Rahul Dravid
Vinod Kambli
Anil Kumble
Sunil Joshi
Robin Singh
Yuvraj Singh
Sridharan Sriram
Venkatesh Prasad
Vijay Dahiya (wicket keeper)
Zaheer Khan
Anshuman Gaekwad (Coach)

New Zealand
Stephen Fleming (captain)
Geoff Allott
Nathan Astle
Chris Cairns
Chris Harris
Craig McMillan
Dion Nash
Chris Nevin
Adam Parore (wicket keeper)
Craig Spearman
Scott Styris
Glen Sulzberger
Roger Twose
Paul Wiseman
David Trist (coach)
Pakistan
Moin Khan (wicket keeper and captain)
Inzamam-ul-Haq
Abdul Razzaq
Arshad Khan
Azhar Mahmood
Faisal Iqbal
Ijaz Ahmed
Imran Nazir
Saeed Anwar
Saleem Elahi
Saqlain Mushtaq
Waqar Younis
Wasim Akram
Yousuf Youhana
Javed Miandad (coach)
South Africa
Shaun Pollock (captain)
Mark Boucher (wicket keeper)
Shafiek Abrahams
Nicky Boje
Allan Donald
Boeta Dippenaar
Andrew Hall
Jacques Kallis
Gary Kirsten
Lance Klusener
Neil McKenzie
Makhaya Ntini
Jonty Rhodes
Roger Telemachus
Graham Ford (Coach)

Sri Lanka
Sanath Jayasuriya (captain)
Marvan Atapattu
Russel Arnold
Upul Chandana
Kumar Dharmasena
Avishka Gunawardene
Mahela Jayawardene
R.Kaluwitharana (wicket keeper)
Muttiah Muralitharan
Kumar Sangakkara
Eric Upashantha
Chaminda Vaas
P.Wickramasinghe
Nuwan Zoysa
Dav Whatmore (Coach)

West Indies
Heath Streak (captain)
Guy Whittall
Alistair Campbell
Stuart Carlisle
Andrew Flower (wicket keeper)
Grant Flower
Pommie Mbangwa
Mluleki Nkala
Henry Olonga
Gavin Rennie
Paul Strang
Mark Vermeulen
Dirk Viljoen
Craig Wishart
Carl Rackemann (Coach)

Champions Trophy 1998 / Wills KnockOut Trophy

The ICC Champions Trophy was started in 1998. It was known as ICC Wills KnockOut Trophy. It was sponsored by Wills, a British Tobacco importer and cigarette manufacturer (W D & H O Wills). It was One Day International cricket tournament held in Bangladesh on October 21 to November 1.

The participated teams are India, New Zealand, South Africa, West Indies, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Australia. Also Zimbabwe and Bangladesh are participated in first round.

Day history

October 21

England v Zimbabwe

No toss made. England first bat. 45 0vers

England 197 all out (43.5 overs)

Zimbabwe 79 all out (33.3 overs)

Umpires: Mohammad Asghar and Showkatur Rahman

England won by 118 runs

October 22

Bangladesh v New Zealand

Bangladesh Krira Shikkha Protisthan Groung, Savar

Bangladesh won toss and decided to bat

Bangladesh 129 all out (42.1 overs)

New Zealand 130/4 (35.3 overs)

Umpires: Jahangir Alam, Mohammad Asghar

New Zealand won by 6 wickets

October 23

Bangladesh v England

Bangladesh Krira Shikkha Protisthan Groung, Savar

Bangladesh won toss and decided to field

England 229/9

Bangladesh 193/9

England won by 36 runs

October 24

New Zealand v Zimbabwe

Bangabandhu National Stadium Dhaka

Zimbabwe won toss and decided to bat

Zimbabwe 258/7

New Zealand 260/5

Umpires: SA Bucknor and P Willey

Third umpire: DR Shepherd

Man of the match: SP Fleming

New Zealand won by 5 wickets

October 25

England v South Africa

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka

England won the toss and decided to bat

England 281/7

South Africa 283/4 (46.4 overs)

Umpires: RS Dunne, S Venkataraghavan

Third umpire: SA Bucknor

Man of the match: DJ Cullinan

South Africa won by 6 wickets

October 26

New Zealand v Sri Lanka

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka
Sri Lanka won the toss and decided to field

New Zealand 188 all out (49.5 overs)

Sri Lanka 191/5 (41.3 overs)

Umpires: DR Shepherd, P Willey

Third umpire: S Venkataraghavan

Man of the match: A Ranatunga

Sri Lanka won by 5 wickets

October 28

India v Australia

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka

Australia won the toss and decided to field

India 307/8

Australia 263 all out (48.1 overs)

Umpires: SA Bucknor, RS Dunne

Third umpire: DL Orchard

Man of the match: SR Tendulkar

India won by 44 runs

October 29
Pakistan v West Indies

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka

West Indies won the toss and decided to bat

West Indies 289/9

Pakistan 259/9

Umpires: DL Orchard, DR Shepherd

Third umpire: P Willey

Man of the match: KLT Arthurton

West Indies won by 30 runs

October 30

Sri Lanka v South Africa

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka

Sri Lanka won the toss and decided to field

South Africa 240/7 (39 overs)

Sri Lanka 132 all out (23.4 overs)

Umpires: SA Bucknor and S Venkataraghavan

Third umpire: DR Shepherd

Man of the match: JH Kallis

South Africa won by 92 runs (Duckworth/Lewis method)

October 31

India v West Indies

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka

India won the toss and decided to bat

India 242/6

West Indies 245/4 (47 overs)

Umpires: DL Orchard and P Willey

Third umpire: RS Dunne

Referee: RS Madugalle

Man of the match: M Dillon

West Indies won by 6 wickets

November 1 / Final

South Africa v West Indies

Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka

South Africa won the toss and decided to field

West Indies 245 all out (49.3 overs)

South Africa 248/6 (47 overs)

Umpires: RS Dunne and DR Shepherd

Third umpire: P Willey

Referee: RS Madugalle

Man of the match: JH Kallis

South Africa won by 4 wickets

 
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