Last World Cup Cricket – STUMPS FIRST TEST Galle SL(3.4 ov) 312 & 14/0 PAK 461 Day 3 – Route 135 for Sri Lanka. Series Reporting Schedule
Live • 3rd ODI • Taunton ENG-W 285/9 AUS-W (13.3/50 ov, T:286) 68/3 AUS WMN 218 needs to start from 36.3 overs. Schedule Video Series
Last World Cup Cricket

Results • Game 9 Group A • ACC Opener • Group A • Colombo (PSS) BAN-A 308/7 AFG A(50 ov, T:309) 287/8 Bangladesh A win by 21 runs Schedule Series
How many times has India won the ICC World Cup?
Results • 10th Match Group A • ACC Opener • A List • Colombo (RPS) SL-A 259/8 OMA-A(17.1/50 ov, T:260) 42 Sri Lanka A’s win by 217 runs
Scoring • Game 7 • MLC • Dallas TSK 154/7 MI NY(20 ov, T:155) 137/8 Texas wins by 17 Forms fixtures video series
Game 8 MLC Dallas Los Angeles Knight Riders San Francisco Unicorns Tomorrow 00:30 Schedule Video Series
Scores • 35th match • RHF Trophy • Nettleworth BLZ(46.2/48 ov) 159 SES(34.3/48 ov, T:159) 161/8 SE Stars win by 2 wickets (81 balls remaining) (Method D/L) Schedule A Series Form Report
ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 Final: England Are World Champions, Beat New Zealand By Minimum Margin Possible
1 England; 2 New Zealand; 3=Australia, India At 7:30 pm on July 14th, a strange scene appeared. As the golden summer sun illuminates the Lord with allegorical radiance, a man in blue beats his fists on the emerald green grass. He is delirious, and flailing his limbs is the only outlet for his ecstasy. The craziest day yet another craziest hour. Geoffrey Archer had just endured a stress most people would never experience in their lifetime, and the tension had found an outlet. He limited New Zealand to 15 after England’s super was 15. Tie after 100 rounds, tie after two more rounds. But the next dividing line is clear, with New Zealand at 17 and England at 27. Team Lord is ready. On the 12th try, England did what many thought would never happen. They won the World Cup. A few minutes earlier, the stage had been filled with other characters. England have scored 242 points against him with 227 from eight games. Four years of inoculation resulted in six pitches and 15 runs. Luckily for them, Ben Stokes is on strike. But he couldn’t trust his new partner to break the line, the only path to glory, and when Trent Bolt called an offside Yorke, he gave up two singles: 15 from four. On this stage, in this arena, facing this player, the task is huge. But Bolt shortened the length of the ball and Stokes caught it. The task is still daunting, but on a six-fold smaller scale. Then comes the happiest and cruelest moment. Martin Guptill lobbed the ball from deep in the center post and Stokes looked to finish a shaky but crucial second ball straight to safety. The ball bounced off the bat to the third-man boundary and was called a “miracle of a deflected coup” by The Times. After negotiation, the judge determined that there were six injuries. It turned out to be more of a mistake than a miracle: under the literal meaning of Article 19.8, there should be five; Adil Rashid will attack and need two for four. But this takes place in a parallel universe. In our case, while it doesn’t seem like reality at all, they only needed three: Stokes dialed up two singles, losing his partner twice as he tried to set up super with the second single Extraordinary drama at the end – and if Archer’s last episode’s climax lived up to all the high marks, the previous exchange was all the more delightful. The final day of competition, then, is the 2019 World Miniature World Championships. In terms of combatant numbers, this is the lowest figure since 1992, when there were just nine. There are now ten games, four fewer than in 2014-15 to allow for a full-time format. As a result, full members Ireland and Zimbabwe withdrew, along with Scotland and the United Arab Emirates. It shows the ICC for what it is: it’s more interested in making money for a big beast like India than in promoting the 50-plus game. This structure guarantees everyone, regardless of performance, a minimum of nine games. The first was at the end of May and it confirmed why England are the favourites. They fired South Africa with familiar swagger, including a Stokes catch so ludicrous it made the front pages. This game also gave birth to a pair of hares. The second ball of the match was played when Jonny Bairstow was dropped by Imran Tahir’s leg spin. The second was England’s fifth consecutive ODI over 300. It’s easy to read too much into both. For the next six weeks, the effects of the Spin are weak. When the ICC announced its tournament team, the only slow bowler was Shakib Al Hasan, who was fifth in batting and scored 86 runs for 606, his 11 The same goes for a wicket. Of the 29 bowlers, at least 10 had to be accepted and only 5 were spinners. Indian spinner Yuzvendra Chahal had the most runs with 12; 17 wickets confiscated 13 or more. While there are many innings with a little error, it is rarely a game-determining game. The other rabbit had a decent total and was able to run and run – even if not as far as some predicted. Before the game, outspoken India captain Virat Kohli weighed in on the idea that England were targeting 500 men, an idea rooted more in mind games than reality. Even more astute, he predicted that scores would drop as stress increased. Then there’s the pitch. The 2015 tournament was criticized for its 300-plus innings total and one-sided performance in the first inning. Despite mixed performance across all 11 courses used in 2019, overall progress has been slow with the preparation of the venues under ICC supervision. England and fans have had to get used to lower totals. Even during games, the pitch often lost its rhythm. In the first three weeks, the right-marked captain usually plays; he broke that mark in just four of his first 21 full games. Bowling at 10.30 on a gray morning, batsmen who know how to chase size are tempting options. Winning the dice roll didn’t confer much advantage: 11 of 21 failed. However, the first three weeks have produced a striking spectacle. Apart from Pakistan’s loss to England, every time India, Australia, England or New Zealand have played against the other six, they have won, often by a narrow margin. The game had an ordinary feel to it, more about outstanding individual performances than memorable games. Australia’s match against West Indies saw Sheldon Cottrell sprint past Steve Smith’s boundary to equalize Stokes’ miracle. The weather didn’t help either. With no reserved days until the knockout stage – when New Zealand took advantage of their semi-final against India to go into the second day – heavy rain marred four group games, making this the wettest World Cup ever. Another talking point is Zing, the guarantor, who befriends the batsman. They caught fire five times in their first 13 games, but all were left in place. ICC says it won’t change, but strangely the slide show has stopped. But the most worrying thing is that the group stage will fall into a series of deadlocks. Then, on the summer solstice, England take on Sri Lanka in Leeds. Even on stunned fairways, the 233 targets 99-of-100 will fall inside the home team’s infield. But this is the World Cup and Lasith Malinga is scarred and his confidence is gone. That’s exactly what the World Cup (if not England) needs: a breakaway group gets injured and this group catches up again. There’s a sense of danger now, and while the Fantastic Four eventually make headway, it turns out to be fun getting there. Headingley’s hiccups reinforced the change in strategy. As the stakes increase and the serve becomes more difficult, so does the value of the wound in the pot. From the Australia-Bangladesh clash in Nottingham on June 20 to the final, the captains opted to bat in 18 of 23 at-bats, including the final nine. The results confirmed this hypothesis: Of the 23 games, the team that batted first won 17 games and one draw. That air of vulnerability was intensified as England fell apart again, heading to Rhodes College in Australia. They beat three first-down underdogs, but the chase — as long as they did — proved to be an entirely different prospect. As well as beating a shaky West Indies, they also lost to Pakistan, Sri Lanka and now Australia. Still ahead are India and New Zealand, the latter two undefeated teams. It looked eerily like a crisis: A misstep in any one game could — and did — lead to the end result. England topped the World Cup but briefly lost the top spot to India after their third defeat. Their prosperity is inseparable from the opening combination of Jason Roy and Bairstow. But Roy strained his hamstring against West Indies, causing the wheel to come off. Against India, England let him take a risk, even though he was not in great form. he