My favourite World Cup cliffhangers: Part 11

By Kersi Meher-Homji / Expert

Now to the final episode, climaxing with the World Cup held in Australia and New Zealand in 2015. Call it a finale.

Shenwari’s sixes lead to Afghanistan’s one-wicket win
The match between two minor cricketing nations, Afghanistan and Scotland, turned out to be an epic encounter.

Scotland started poorly, losing 8-144, but Majid Haq and Alasdair Evans added 62 for the ninth wicket to total 210.

Tall Afghani fast-medium bowler Shapoor Zadran, with a long run-up and longer hair, captured 4-38 and was supported by medium pacer Dawlat Zadran (3-29).

Opener Javed Ahmadi started off with a run-a-ball 51 enriched with eight fours but Afghanistan were soon 7-97. However, they recovered to reach 9-211 and win with a wicket and three balls to spare.

The player behind the recovery and victory was man of the match Samiullah Shenwari, who hit 96.

Six-maniac Shenwari belted seven fours and five sixes, three of the maximums coming in the 47th over, with the third landing near the Afghan supporters chanting “Mighty, mighty Afghans.”

Boult from the blue as Kiwis win by one wicket
Nineteen wickets fell in only 55.3 overs, the scheduled 100-over match finishing in almost half that time, but the home crowd of Kiwis were delighted – a win against Australia makes them ecstatic.

Australia was swung out, crashing from 1-80 in 13th over to 9-106 in the 22nd and all out for 151 in 32.2. The destroyer of the Aussie castle was seamer Trent Boult.

New Zealand captain and opening batsman Brendon McCullum played an aggressive innings of 50 at a run rate of over 200, smashing the two Mitchells – Johnson and Starc. In all, he hit seven fours and two sixes. But his dismissal led to a collapse.

Ross Taylor and Grant Elliott fell off successive deliveries from Starc on either side of the break. New Zealand lost three wickets for one run and was 4-79 in the ninth over. Cool and classy batsman Kane Williamson propped up the slide.

Corey Anderson attacked lustily, adding 52 runs with Williamson and took New Zealand to 131, now only 21 runs needed for an upset win. Then the match took a further twist as three wickets tumbled in successive overs and they were 7-145, needing seven runs to win with plenty of overs remaining.

Williamson was batting faultlessly but he erred in taking a single in the 23rd over from Starc, exposing the tail-enders Adam Milne and Tim Southee who were bowled. Wisely, Boult left the last two balls from Starc alone.

It came down to six runs to win with only number 11 batsman Boult remaining. Amid ear-splitting appalause, Williamson hit the first ball from Cummins for a six.

The home crowd exploded, cheering their heroes and booing the Aussies as New Zealand won by one wicket.

(Photo by Christopher Lee-IDI/IDI via Getty Images)

Guptill’s ton behind Kiwis’ sixth successive win
Bangladesh’s Mahmudullah was at his prolific best, smashing an unbeaten 128 runs off 123 deliveries. He added 90 runs for the third wicket with Soumya Sarkar (51) and 78 with Sabbir Rahman (40 off 23) for the sixth wicket.

Bangladesh totalled a competitive 7-288. Skipper and slow left-arm orthodox bowler Shakib Al Hasan opened the attack and took 4-55.

New Zealand opener Martin Guptill batted confidently and struck 105 runs off 100 balls to add 131 runs for the third wicket with Ross Taylor (56 runs).

Later, Corey Anderson hit three fours and three sixes in his 26-ball blitz of 39 runs. Tail-ender Southee smashed a six and a four in the 49th over as his team reached the win target with three wickets and seven balls remaining.

Guptill was man of the match in New Zealand’s sixth win in a row.

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South Africa chokes
In a rain-interrupted semi-final, South Africa made 5-281 in 43 overs, with Faf du Plessis scoring 82 and AB de Villiers 65 not out. Then came rains and the match was reduced to 43 overs. David Miller smashed 49 off 18 balls, while Corey Anderson took the most wickets but was expensive.

Chasing a revised target of 298 runs, New Zealand received given a blistering start, as McCullum scored 59. With 94 runs needed off 70 deliveries, de Villiers squandered a run-out chance, then with only 14 required off seven balls, Grant Elliott was almost caught by substitute fielder Farhaan Berhardien but there was a collision and Elliott survived.

Needing 12 runs in the final over, Elliott drove the penultimate ball from Dale Steyn over long-on for a six and New Zealand won by four wickets to enter a World Cup final for the first time.

Another Aussie victory
Oozing confidence, New Zealand met Australia in the final on the Melbourne Cricket Ground and the home side exacted revenge, winning by seven wickets as 90,000 Aussie spectators chanted “Aussie, Aussie, Aussie; oi, oi, oi!”

It was a convincing victory but not a thriller.

I hope you have been enjoying my 11-part series on World Cup heart-stoppers. These thrillers – spanning 40 years on five continents – gave me joy to watch either live or on television.

Which is your favourite World Cup cliffhanger, Roarers?

The Crowd Says:

2019-06-17T02:39:22+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


I know man. Well, the Bangladesh-New Zealand game was pretty close. Maybe not a thriller though. Disappointing that we haven’t had a thriller so far. We had a lot of rain though Kersi.

AUTHOR

2019-06-17T02:35:16+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Expert


Neel, India comfortably beat Pakistan last night. The "foes" have faced each other seven times in World Cup and India has won all those seven matches. The 2019 World Cup is half way through and not one thriller so far.

2019-06-14T02:00:20+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Yeah I am happy Kersi about that. I did want a game last night and that game had serious potential to be a brilliant game of cricket. We have some really tough games from now on so that will test us out. India has Pakistan on the weekend which should be really good.

AUTHOR

2019-06-13T22:37:36+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Expert


Neel, thank you very much for your encouraging comments. Only a few have appreciated this series and you are in the forefront. Last night I was prepared to stay awake watching the NZ - Ind match but unfortunately it was rained off. You must be happy that NZ is unbeaten in this CWC, just as I am that Ind is unbeaten.

2019-06-13T14:41:07+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Those two games featuring New Zealand were absolute thrillers. McCullum playing blistering knocks and Elliot’s innings under serious pressure was amazing. Starc bowled beautifully and nearly single handedly won the game for Australia. Some great memories as a Kiwi fan in that 2015 World Cup until the final. The final was unfortunate for us and we got beaten by a much better team on the day. Oh well, it was a memorable World Cup as a Kiwi fan and I enjoyed this series Kersi. Thanks for re-igniting some memories that I had as a kid watching some classic World Cup matches. Thank you and I appreciate the effort and time you put into making this wonderful 11-part series.

AUTHOR

2019-06-11T09:05:50+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Expert


Hi Sheek. The 2015 final was one-sided but the semi-final between RSA and NZ was fantastic. Hope you are keeping well.

AUTHOR

2019-06-11T09:03:09+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Expert


Thankyou, Warnie's Love Child, comments like yours keeps me afloat. Come on Roarers, give us favorite CWC match/es.

2019-06-11T08:41:18+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


You're right Kersi, The 2015 final was a convincing win for Oz but not a thriller. When the Kiwi skipper went for a duck 2nd or 3rd ball, that was pretty much the end of the contest. There you go, I can't even recall the Kiwi captain now without having to look it up. Terrible!

2019-06-11T05:56:34+00:00

Warnie's Love Child

Guest


Thank you for all the time and effort in compiling the complete series, I read and enjoyed all of them It's hard to believe the WC has been going now for 40 years. My favourite is an obvious one - the 1999 matchup between Australia and South Africa which ended with the Alan Donald afternoon stroll. I like the way you waited until the final installment to slip in Six-maniac. There's been a few of those throughout the 4 decades. Well done !

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