Titan24
Senior Test Player
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- Oct 19, 2016
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So if we look at the format of WC 19, there are 10 teams and every team plays every other team once. So if a team has won 4-5 out of 9 and it still has 2-3 matches to go, would it try to settle for lower margin of defeat from an uncomfortable position then if they would have been playing may be group stages of earlier WCs or knockout stages.
Many theories and things have been discussed regarding Eng vs Ind WC match happened on 30th of June in WC 19. But lets have a look at it from another perspective that India may be wanted to make sure they maintain their NRR as target looked difficult to reach considering how poor Indian middle order is.
It looked like India was maybe playing to save their NRR from the very start as 28/1 in 10 overs is even slow for the cricket 20 years ago.
I am not saying that this perspective is particularly right for Eng vs Ind match but this can happen in other matches as well. A team can just play for maintaining the NRR to qualify for the stage rather than trying to risk and win a particular match.
For e.g Eng scores 350 agianst NZ so rather than going all in and risking getting all out for 150 runs NZ can try to play stably and maybe achieve 270-300 if that allows their NRR to be decent to go through the next stage.
I think the problem with this WC format is that once team are in relatively stable position they can opt for loosing less badly in some of the matches rather than trying to win those. In previous WC formats no team would have afforded to opt for any such strategy.
Many theories and things have been discussed regarding Eng vs Ind WC match happened on 30th of June in WC 19. But lets have a look at it from another perspective that India may be wanted to make sure they maintain their NRR as target looked difficult to reach considering how poor Indian middle order is.
It looked like India was maybe playing to save their NRR from the very start as 28/1 in 10 overs is even slow for the cricket 20 years ago.
I am not saying that this perspective is particularly right for Eng vs Ind match but this can happen in other matches as well. A team can just play for maintaining the NRR to qualify for the stage rather than trying to risk and win a particular match.
For e.g Eng scores 350 agianst NZ so rather than going all in and risking getting all out for 150 runs NZ can try to play stably and maybe achieve 270-300 if that allows their NRR to be decent to go through the next stage.
I think the problem with this WC format is that once team are in relatively stable position they can opt for loosing less badly in some of the matches rather than trying to win those. In previous WC formats no team would have afforded to opt for any such strategy.
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