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ICC CT 2017 | India [193/2] beat South Africa [191] by 8 wickets to qualify for the semi-finals

Abdul

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India, South Africa in winner-take-all battle

The victor will move into the last four while for the vanquished, it will be the end of the road.

Match 11 Preview

Group B: India v South Africa

Date: Sunday, 11 June 2017

Venue: The Oval, London

HEAD-TO-HEAD

76 matches; India 28 wins; South Africa 45 wins; no result 3

When the ICC Champions Trophy 2017 schedule was drawn up, both teams would have expected this match to decide who would top Group B and who would finish second. The first part still holds, but now the match will determine who stays and who makes an early exit from the tournament. That it has come to this is just another reminder that the format of the ICC Champions Trophy, and its elite, top-eight nature, makes for sub-plots that no one can predict.

South Africa lost to Pakistan, which had been roundly beaten by India. In turn, India lost to Sri Lanka, which had been outclassed by South Africa. That makes this match the first of the virtual quarter-finals of the group, the other one being Pakistan v Sri Lanka the following day.

In terms of form, both India and South Africa are even. They have each beaten one opponent they were expected to beat handsomely. They have also each lost matches unexpectedly. Both their respective captains and talismans have been dismissed for ducks in those defeats.

This match will then come down to who turns up better on the day, and who can hold their nerve better.

THE CONDITIONS

The forecast for match-day is mostly bright. It looks likely that there will be a result, which rules out the possibility of the teams sharing points and India thus being assured of qualification because its net run-rate is higher. The Oval has been very friendly to batsmen in the competition, and with bright and sunny conditions, there is no reason for that to not continue.

THE MATCH-UP

JASPRIT BUMRAH v AB de VILLIERS

It is not a surprise for any batsman, no matter however great, to be dismissed for a first-ball duck. When it happens in the moment, though, it is still a pin-drop, jaw-drop moment. De Villiers will want to come back strongly from that dismissal against Pakistan, and will be up against a bowler he has faced several times in the IPL. There have been times when the batsman has won out, but Bumrah has had success against de Villiers too. His combination of yorkers and changes of pace and angles has found success against one of the modern-day greats, and the latest round of battle will be fascinating.

THE WILDCARDS

India: Hardik Pandya

He can score at better than two runs a ball. He can bowl at 140 clicks too. When both these aspects come off, Pandya looks like a world-class all-rounder. However, his bane has been inconsistency, especially with the ball. If he can get his lengths right and if he’s given space to launch an assault with the bat, he can have the kind of day that can turn a match on its head.

South Africa: Quinton de Kock

Easily among the leaders of the next generation of batsmen, de Kock has had a quiet tournament so far. He is too good a player to be out of touch for too long though, and when he does find form, the opposition ends up having no answers. Hashim Amla’s model consistency has been driving South Africa’s starts, but if that is allied to de Kock’s ability to tear attacks to shreds, they will form an unstoppable pair.

WATCH OUT FOR…

Virat Kohli. The Indian captain isn’t used to not scoring. He’s not used to not winning either. Both happened against Sri Lanka. He will be itching to set the record right again. This is Kohli’s first ICC tournament in charge of India’s One-Day International team. He will not want it to end in ignominy. The surest way to ensure that is to try and win the match off his own bat.

TEAMS
India: Virat Kohli (capt), R Ashwin, Jasprit Bumrah, Shikhar Dhawan, MS Dhoni (wk), Ravindra Jadeja, Kedar Jadhav, Dinesh Karthik, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami, Hardik Pandya, Ajinkya Rahane, Rohit Sharma, Umesh Yadav, Yuvraj Singh.

Pakistan: AB de Villiers (capt), Hashim Amla, Quinton de Kock (wk), Faf du Plessis, Jean-Paul Duminy, David Miller, Chris Morris, Wayne Parnell, Andile Phehlukwayo, Kagiso Rabada, Imran Tahir, Dwaine Pretorius, Keshav Maharaj, Farhaan Behardien, Morne Morkel.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/champions-trophy/news/418514
 
Big game today and I feel India hold advantage
 
Biggest match of the tournament thus far. No.1 vs No.3 and the defending champions.
Whoever wins the toss will be at a huge advantage here.
 
It's finally here, the biggest match, high stakes, top quality teams, the pressure is on, the excitement is on, the cricket is on, get ready for the sunday blockbuster. It's time to bury the saffers #BLEEDBLUE
 
India's batsmen have been dominant in both matches, scoring 319 and 321. It's the bowlers who let India down against SL.
BUT, despite their obvious class, the Indian batting line-up will have a blip now and then. This might be the match in which that blip occurs.
 
Cmon South Africa. IF somehow Pakistan beat SL and England and make it to the final then there is no way we are beating India. South Africa must win here
 
"Having lost to Sri Lanka now - they have never won an ICC tournament in which they(India )Having lost to Sri Lanka "
😈
 
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"Having lost to Sri Lanka now - they have never won an ICC tournament in which they(India ) lose a match to Sri Lanka "
😈
 
After a long long time SA are not favourites in a tournament and underperforming in early matches.These are a good sign

Have a feeling that toss will play a huge role in today's match
 
This is a blockbuster match. A virtual quarter final. Both teams lost their last match. Two favorites already on their way home, who will be the third?

If you ask me South Africa will be favorites. India dont maximize their batting potential.
 
Two strong teams which have displayed their achilles heels in their last ODI. SA has somewhat of a shaky middle order and India's bowling worries resurfaced like a bad penny. Looking forward to the contest.
 
SA are favourites. Need more mongrel from India. Ashwin has to play too. SA feast on pace.
 
India, South Africa in winner-take-all battle

The victor will move into the last four while for the vanquished, it will be the end of the road.

Match 11 Preview

Group B: India v South Africa

Date: Sunday, 11 June 2017

Venue: The Oval, London

HEAD-TO-HEAD

76 matches; India 28 wins; South Africa 45 wins; no result 3

When the ICC Champions Trophy 2017 schedule was drawn up, both teams would have expected this match to decide who would top Group B and who would finish second. The first part still holds, but now the match will determine who stays and who makes an early exit from the tournament. That it has come to this is just another reminder that the format of the ICC Champions Trophy, and its elite, top-eight nature, makes for sub-plots that no one can predict.

South Africa lost to Pakistan, which had been roundly beaten by India. In turn, India lost to Sri Lanka, which had been outclassed by South Africa. That makes this match the first of the virtual quarter-finals of the group, the other one being Pakistan v Sri Lanka the following day.

In terms of form, both India and South Africa are even. They have each beaten one opponent they were expected to beat handsomely. They have also each lost matches unexpectedly. Both their respective captains and talismans have been dismissed for ducks in those defeats.

This match will then come down to who turns up better on the day, and who can hold their nerve better.

THE CONDITIONS

The forecast for match-day is mostly bright. It looks likely that there will be a result, which rules out the possibility of the teams sharing points and India thus being assured of qualification because its net run-rate is higher. The Oval has been very friendly to batsmen in the competition, and with bright and sunny conditions, there is no reason for that to not continue.

THE MATCH-UP

JASPRIT BUMRAH v AB de VILLIERS

It is not a surprise for any batsman, no matter however great, to be dismissed for a first-ball duck. When it happens in the moment, though, it is still a pin-drop, jaw-drop moment. De Villiers will want to come back strongly from that dismissal against Pakistan, and will be up against a bowler he has faced several times in the IPL. There have been times when the batsman has won out, but Bumrah has had success against de Villiers too. His combination of yorkers and changes of pace and angles has found success against one of the modern-day greats, and the latest round of battle will be fascinating.

THE WILDCARDS

India: Hardik Pandya

He can score at better than two runs a ball. He can bowl at 140 clicks too. When both these aspects come off, Pandya looks like a world-class all-rounder. However, his bane has been inconsistency, especially with the ball. If he can get his lengths right and if he’s given space to launch an assault with the bat, he can have the kind of day that can turn a match on its head.

South Africa: Quinton de Kock

Easily among the leaders of the next generation of batsmen, de Kock has had a quiet tournament so far. He is too good a player to be out of touch for too long though, and when he does find form, the opposition ends up having no answers. Hashim Amla’s model consistency has been driving South Africa’s starts, but if that is allied to de Kock’s ability to tear attacks to shreds, they will form an unstoppable pair.

WATCH OUT FOR…

Virat Kohli. The Indian captain isn’t used to not scoring. He’s not used to not winning either. Both happened against Sri Lanka. He will be itching to set the record right again. This is Kohli’s first ICC tournament in charge of India’s One-Day International team. He will not want it to end in ignominy. The surest way to ensure that is to try and win the match off his own bat.

TEAMS
India: Virat Kohli (capt), R Ashwin, Jasprit Bumrah, Shikhar Dhawan, MS Dhoni (wk), Ravindra Jadeja, Kedar Jadhav, Dinesh Karthik, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami, Hardik Pandya, Ajinkya Rahane, Rohit Sharma, Umesh Yadav, Yuvraj Singh.

Pakistan: AB de Villiers (capt), Hashim Amla, Quinton de Kock (wk), Faf du Plessis, Jean-Paul Duminy, David Miller, Chris Morris, Wayne Parnell, Andile Phehlukwayo, Kagiso Rabada, Imran Tahir, Dwaine Pretorius, Keshav Maharaj, Farhaan Behardien, Morne Morkel.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/champions-trophy/news/418514

It's pretty evident no one reads the match thread OP :))) :))) :))) :)))

#CPECeffect !!!
 
India, South Africa in winner-take-all battle

The victor will move into the last four while for the vanquished, it will be the end of the road.

Match 11 Preview

Group B: India v South Africa

Date: Sunday, 11 June 2017

Venue: The Oval, London

HEAD-TO-HEAD

76 matches; India 28 wins; South Africa 45 wins; no result 3

When the ICC Champions Trophy 2017 schedule was drawn up, both teams would have expected this match to decide who would top Group B and who would finish second. The first part still holds, but now the match will determine who stays and who makes an early exit from the tournament. That it has come to this is just another reminder that the format of the ICC Champions Trophy, and its elite, top-eight nature, makes for sub-plots that no one can predict.

South Africa lost to Pakistan, which had been roundly beaten by India. In turn, India lost to Sri Lanka, which had been outclassed by South Africa. That makes this match the first of the virtual quarter-finals of the group, the other one being Pakistan v Sri Lanka the following day.

In terms of form, both India and South Africa are even. They have each beaten one opponent they were expected to beat handsomely. They have also each lost matches unexpectedly. Both their respective captains and talismans have been dismissed for ducks in those defeats.

This match will then come down to who turns up better on the day, and who can hold their nerve better.

THE CONDITIONS

The forecast for match-day is mostly bright. It looks likely that there will be a result, which rules out the possibility of the teams sharing points and India thus being assured of qualification because its net run-rate is higher. The Oval has been very friendly to batsmen in the competition, and with bright and sunny conditions, there is no reason for that to not continue.

THE MATCH-UP

JASPRIT BUMRAH v AB de VILLIERS

It is not a surprise for any batsman, no matter however great, to be dismissed for a first-ball duck. When it happens in the moment, though, it is still a pin-drop, jaw-drop moment. De Villiers will want to come back strongly from that dismissal against Pakistan, and will be up against a bowler he has faced several times in the IPL. There have been times when the batsman has won out, but Bumrah has had success against de Villiers too. His combination of yorkers and changes of pace and angles has found success against one of the modern-day greats, and the latest round of battle will be fascinating.

THE WILDCARDS

India: Hardik Pandya

He can score at better than two runs a ball. He can bowl at 140 clicks too. When both these aspects come off, Pandya looks like a world-class all-rounder. However, his bane has been inconsistency, especially with the ball. If he can get his lengths right and if he’s given space to launch an assault with the bat, he can have the kind of day that can turn a match on its head.

South Africa: Quinton de Kock

Easily among the leaders of the next generation of batsmen, de Kock has had a quiet tournament so far. He is too good a player to be out of touch for too long though, and when he does find form, the opposition ends up having no answers. Hashim Amla’s model consistency has been driving South Africa’s starts, but if that is allied to de Kock’s ability to tear attacks to shreds, they will form an unstoppable pair.

WATCH OUT FOR…

Virat Kohli. The Indian captain isn’t used to not scoring. He’s not used to not winning either. Both happened against Sri Lanka. He will be itching to set the record right again. This is Kohli’s first ICC tournament in charge of India’s One-Day International team. He will not want it to end in ignominy. The surest way to ensure that is to try and win the match off his own bat.

TEAMS
India: Virat Kohli (capt), R Ashwin, Jasprit Bumrah, Shikhar Dhawan, MS Dhoni (wk), Ravindra Jadeja, Kedar Jadhav, Dinesh Karthik, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami, Hardik Pandya, Ajinkya Rahane, Rohit Sharma, Umesh Yadav, Yuvraj Singh.

Pakistan: AB de Villiers (capt), Hashim Amla, Quinton de Kock (wk), Faf du Plessis, Jean-Paul Duminy, David Miller, Chris Morris, Wayne Parnell, Andile Phehlukwayo, Kagiso Rabada, Imran Tahir, Dwaine Pretorius, Keshav Maharaj, Farhaan Behardien, Morne Morkel.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/champions-trophy/news/418514

Didn't know Pakistan changed there entire squad in the middle of a tournament.
:trollface
 
South Africa should play Maharaj before PArnell today. The former had a good outing against Enland earlier
 
Cmon South Africa. IF somehow Pakistan beat SL and England and make it to the final then there is no way we are beating India. South Africa must win here

Come on Yar !! and here I thought we were peaking at the right time :imran
 
trust me if the result were along the lines of what PP wished for....You lot wouldn't have qualified for the tournament :yk NOBODY LIKES YOU !!

Yeah a lot of nobodies on this forum don't like team India :afridi1, good thing this isn't a popularity contest :srini
 
Yeah a lot of nobodies on this forum don't like team India :afridi1, good thing this isn't a popularity contest :srini

Yet this same discussion board comprising of Nobodies has been mentioned by top cricketing analysts and a lot of news outlets over the years :afridi BTW why are you wasting your precious time with us nobodies then ?? :yk
 
India should lose today. Bangladesh need saffers in order to go to the final.
 
Yet this same discussion board comprising of Nobodies has been mentioned by top cricketing analysts and a lot of news outlets over the years :afridi BTW why are you wasting your precious time with us nobodies then ?? :yk

Because not all are nobodies, some people have great cricketing acumen like mamoon bhai :srini
 
Kohli sharing a laugh with ABD. What are you doing man? You don't rule the world by being nice to people. Ask Trump.
 
So Sa batting first, no pressure on their batting, so no excuse for choke now ::yk [MENTION=142991]TahirFan[/MENTION]
 
Huge advantage batting first. More chances of India winning.But sad thing is if a good batting pitch yet again only our bowlers would be blamed.
 
I don't think IND chasing is a good idea. This could get out of hand with SA putting up 350+.
 
Should have dropped Jadeja and Pandya and brought in Ash and Shami. Our batting did not lose us the last match. The bowling did.
 
Don't know why folks think SA have already lost. They are a better side batting first than chasing. If we score 320 against them, they won't chase it like SL did.
 
Huge advantage batting first. More chances of India winning.But sad thing is if a good batting pitch yet again only our bowlers would be blamed.
Batting is good enough to chase 325 on most days against most attacks. If bowlers give more than that and allow SA to reach 350 or more. Then obviously it's their fault.
 
Any team batting 2nd will win 80%. Knowing South Africa they always choke in the pressure situation just like us we used to choke in semi and now anyday against India
 
2 pacemen really India :facepalm:

BD went in with 4 pacers against NZ and was successful. Pak demolished SA using pace
 
Bad decision to bowl first. Sa choke in such games if they have to chase.
 
Any team batting 2nd will win 80%. Knowing South Africa they always choke in the pressure situation just like us we used to choke in semi and now anyday against India
SA bowling is very strong. They would love any total around 280.
 
I didn't understand IND's strategy today. They picked 2.5 spinners & decided to bowl on a belter, in a sunny day. SAF is the last team that I'll opt to put in in a KO situation, because it just allows them to play freely. That SRL chase was one of a blue moon thing - IND bowled poor & lost defending 321, but batting first wasn't a bad decision.

IND still might win, but I would have always batted first, put 300+ & bring 3 spinners in the game against a team not famous for turning it in clutch matches. I thought of the 3 elements, IND's batting was shaky & now they'll need to chase against a bowling line-up that has top 2 bowlers in world & what happens to be the best fielding unit left in the tournament.

Anyway, no point discussing now, because the decision is taken & players have to back the call.
 
SA bowling is very strong. They would love any total around 280.

South Africa bowling isn't that strong at all, morkel is great but then they have freebees like parnell and morris, rabada looks good on the day he clicks but can be smashed for runs, tahir is a leg spinner, Indians love leg spinners :amla
 
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Regardless, given all before, the sub-plots, the magnitude of the game and the strength of both teams, the game should be fascinating; hope it lives up to the promise.
 
Yet this same discussion board comprising of Nobodies has been mentioned by top cricketing analysts and a lot of news outlets over the years :afridi BTW why are you wasting your precious time with us nobodies then ?? :yk

Great achivement that.."been mentioned by analysts"...when was the last time those analysts and their teams visited your country. Just chill dhonduu..
 
Statistically, SAF is by far the best batting unit in world.
 
Why are you so defensive about the bowling though?
Because our bowling is good. Whenever we lose bowlers are blamed. Remember t20 game against WI in WC, many were criticising bowlers initially. Its always the case when we lose.
 
Should have dropped Kedar and Bumrah for Ashwin and Shami. Instead they dropped Umesh and didn't inculde Shami. Bumrah is not a new ball bowler. He is more containment instead of attacking. Get ready for 350+ score from SA. :facepalm:
 
If SA can get to 30 overs 3 down they will demolish India in the last 20, 350 on the cards . India need wickets up front but have no pace .
 
Because our bowling is good. Whenever we lose bowlers are blamed. Remember t20 game against WI in WC, many were criticising bowlers initially. Its always the case when we lose.

Our bowling is one of the best in the world, but it was bad against lanka, yeah we lost the t20 game against wi due to batting, it was wrong to criticize the bowlers then but the bowlers do deserve some criticism for their effort against lanka
 
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