My favourite World Cup cliffhangers: Part 10

By Kersi Meher-Homji / Expert

There were three more nailbiters played in 2011.

Third thriller in eight days as England wins, Chennai 2011
England’s luck changed as they defeated South Africa after a tie against India eight days ago and a narrow loss to Ireland four days ago.

England started disastrously, losing skipper Andrew Strauss for a duck, Kevin Pietersen for two and Ian Bell for five. All three were victims of pace bowler Robin Peterson and England was 3-15. The scoreboard showed a quirky item: Pietersen c. Kallis b. Peterson 2.

Jonathan Trott (52) and man of the match Ravi Bopara (60) added 99 for the fourth wicket but England was all out for 171 in 45.4 overs. Peterson 3-22 and leg-break googly bowler Imran Tahir 4-38 were the chief destroyers.

South Africa’s chase for 172 appeared easy when they were 3-124, only 48 runs needed with seven wickets in hand but their ‘World Cup choke syndrome’ haunted them again and they lost by six runs.

Stuart Broad had marvellous figures of 6.4-0-15-4 but it was his fast ball partner Jimmy Anderson who started the collapse by bowling South Africa’s star batsman AB de Villiers, shaving the off-stump so gently that at first only wicketkeeper Matthew Prior noticed the bail displacement of the bail.

This was followed by three quick wickets as Graeme Swann’s accuracy dried up the run flow. Broad claimed the last two wickets and England won by six runs with 14 balls remaining.

(Matthew Lewis/Getty Images)

Home crowd celebrate until 2am after Bangladesh’s finest hour at Chittagong, 2011
England missed their star batsman Kevin Pietersen, who flew home for a hernia operation, and accurate fast bowler Stuart Broad had a side strain.

Jonathan Trott scored 67 and added 109 for the fourth wicket with Eoin Morgan (63). But the steady Bangladesh attack restricted England to 225 in 49.4 overs.

Bangladesh started well, being 3-155. Opener Imrul Kayes (60) and skipper Shakib Al Hasan (32) added 82 for the fourth wicket. But once Kayes was run out, Bangladesh lost 5-14 runs and became 8-169, Ajmal Shahzad taking 3-43 and Graeme Swann 2-42 and needed 57 runs for a shock win.

Not to be perturbed, No. 7 batsman Mohammad Mahmudullah and No. 10 bat Shafiul Islam took Bangladesh to a two-wicket victory with an over to spare. It was their first win against England.

England had her revenge this Saturday when they defeated Bangladesh at Cardiff by 106 runs despite Shakib Al Hasan’s run-a-ball 121.

Imrul Kayes was cheered lustily when presented the man of the match award in 2011. The home crowd was ecstatic and celebrated the win until 2am.

India lose to South Africa despite Tendulkar’s masterly century, Nagpur 2011
This was a roller-coaster encounter featuring aggressive batting, accurate bowling and acrobatic fielding. India started well. Virender Sehwag (73 off 66 balls) and Sachin Tendulkar (111 off 101 balls) added 142 runs for the first wicket. Then Tendulkar and Gautam Gambhir (69) were associated in another century stand and India was floating at 1-267.

It was Tendulkar’s sixth World Cup century and 99th in all internationals, but his dismissal started a collapse and India lost their last nine wickets for a paltry 29 runs to be all out for 296 in 48.4 overs. Fast bowler Dale Steyn broke the Indian bubble by capturing 5-50, combining speed and reverse swing to perfection.

South Africa’s start was not as spectacular as India’s but their middle-order batsmen did not cave in as India’s did. Hashim Amla, Jaques Kallis and AB de Villiers scored 50s and South Africa chased the winning target. In the final over South Africa needed 13 to win.

Indian skipper MS Dhoni gave the last over to medium pacer Ashish Nehra instead of off spinner Harbhajan Singh, who had taken 3-53. Tail-ender Robin Peterson hit a four and a six and South Africa won by three wickets with two balls remaining.

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For derailing India – a fast-moving ‘train’ – Steyn was adjudged of the match.

Tomorrow will be featured the final episode of this series, climaxing with the World Cup held in Australia and New Zealand in 2015 with the hosts in the final.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2019-06-11T09:09:07+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Expert


Thank you, Sheeky. I think every decade had its highs and its lows.

2019-06-11T08:38:44+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Well done Kersi, My interest in cricket started to wane in the 2000s. While i can conjure up memories of tests & to a lesser extent, ODIs, from the 70s, 80s & 90s, by the time we move into the 2000s, my memory is less secure, even though the events closer.

2019-06-10T05:09:55+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Haha. Yeah no worries Kersi. I’m looking forward to more articles. I am learning so much from reading your articles. There’s always a great feeling of nostalgia associated with reading your articles.

AUTHOR

2019-06-10T01:59:54+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Expert


Thank you Neel. It's so good to be appreciated. Although one has to work hard researching without becoming boring, a comment like yours makes it worth its while. I watched the Australia-India high scoring match till the end; till 3.30am EST today. Apart from Dhawan's splendid century, Kohli asking Indian fans not to boo Steve Smith was to me the highlight of the match. The final part of my series, Part 11, will be published tomorrow morning.

2019-06-10T01:43:20+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


12 part series over 12 days. Amazing stuff Kersi. I’m amazed at how well you have researched each of these games and made them into such a wonderful series. That England vs South Africa game was brilliant. That was South Africa’s only loss in the group stages of that tournament and I honestly couldn’t believe they lost that game. They were dominating most of the game and Stuart Broad bowled superbly that day and it all went downhill for the South Africans in that particular game.

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