marlonbrowndo
Senior ODI Player
- Joined
- May 29, 2015
- Runs
- 22,526
- Post of the Week
- 2
I can’t breathe right now
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No. But still a great game.
No. But still a great game.
What can possibly be better than this?? Its a World Cup final man
What a last ball from Archer.
Super stuff
Unbelievable scenes.
Congrats England, the best ODI team in the world.
However, I do get the feeling that when people talk about this particular match a lot will say "England was the luckier side".
NZ deserve all the respect for being super in the final.
Easily no other match comes close.
Aus Vs SA 99 SF
Aus Vs SA (434 chase)
These two come distant 2nd and 3rd.
a real shame that stupid boring tennis will make the international headlines instead of this
i feel sorry for those who did not witness this final
NO.
It was the greatest sports game of all time.
To do this in a final of a massive sport, wowwowoowow
It was the most horrible final ever in any sport the match ended as a tie and England is awarded the cup.
This was a joke by ICC and cricket rules maker that robbed two incredible team and top quality players a deserving victory.
What can be a better game than this really??
World Cup Final
Lord's ground
Tied game
Super Over tied
What else you want?? This is the greatest ever and I certainly don't see anything toppling that in history of the cricketing sports..
No less fair than all those Word Cup Football games that end with penalty shootouts.
A difference of day and night they don't decide the winner based on which team made most attempts on the goal but until the match is won.
Greatest sports game I've ever witnessed. My top 3 are:
1) 2019 Cricket World Cup Final (England v New Zealand)
2) 2005 Champions League Final (Liverpool v AC Milan)
3) 2007 Wimbledon Final (Federer v Nadal)
Greatest sports game I've ever witnessed. My top 3 are:
1) 2019 Cricket World Cup Final (England v New Zealand)
2) 2005 Champions League Final (Liverpool v AC Milan)
3) 2007 Wimbledon Final (Federer v Nadal)
Fix point 3 mate. It’s the Federer vs Djokovic 2019 Wimbledon.
Two of the greatest matches played on the same day
No less fair than all those Word Cup Football games that end with penalty shootouts.
I don't think you quite know the real rule of WC penalty shootouts. As Lineker famously said "Football is a simple game. Twenty-two men chase a ball for 90 minutes and at the end, the [team of your flag] always win." Sort of makes sense why you think penalty shootouts are fair
Jokes apart, as long as the rules are known beforehand and the outcome is not decided by the toss of a coin, it is all fair.
Since I saw Australasia cup final as a kid with Miandad last ball six, this final will be the no 2 greatest cricket match I ever saw.
Please enlighten me what I don't know about penalty shoot out and how this is comparable to that. Also please tell me what the rule is when initial 5-5 penalties end up in a draw?
Also, if this is a fair rule that means wickets hold no value? Every jurisdiction should keep the vital fact in mind that players can influence the outcome with their effort in that time and not something they should have kept in mind before the situation was there.
The joke was you will like penalty shootouts because Germany never loses one. Its record in WC penalty shootouts is 4-0.
It hasn't lost a penalty shootout in 43 years, other countries can complain that is not fair as the game is supposed to be about being able to score goals from the field and not from the penalty spot.
https://www.the42.ie/germany-40-year-penalty-record-euro-2016-talking-points-2859078-Jul2016/
It was the greatest cricket match ever, the greatest cricket final ever and, from those which I´ve witnessed, it was the greatest sports match of all times!
My father is otherwise a very calm man and he doesn´t take all these things too seriously, but his blood pressure shot up by the end of the match.
The only thing which was missing from the ODI World Cup history was a final like this. The 1987 Final too was pretty good but this one is stuff of dreams.....
Nearly a week later and the unreality of that World Cup final has not sunk in. In all my years of watching cricket, I have NEVER seen so many sliding doors moments in one game, from the ricochet to the boundary off Stokes' bat and the fateful decision to award six runs, Boult fluffing a catch on the boundary, Santner ducking the last ball, Guptill's review that meant Taylor couldn't review his LBW, Roy not being given out, Archer's first ball of the Super Over called a wide, and so on.
After an underwhelming marketing campaign, the 2019 World Cup needed the final to deliver as a spectacle, to be the BEST possible showcase of the sport and all it's intricacies. And it was. The recipe for the perfect cricket match includes ingredients such as tension slowly building over the course of seven hours to a nerve wracking finale; a healthy serving of twists and turns; a SPORTING pitch; individual brilliance and outstanding athleticism. To top it off, the backdrop of Lord's - the Home of Cricket. If anything it was the antithesis to The Hundred tournament the ECB has foolishly exhausted its reserves with.
What's so heartwarming is how many people tuned in and emotionally invested in the game including those who had never seen a single ball of cricket.
Cricket since 2005 when all live England internationals went behind a paywall made the sport inaccessible to millions of working class households. It caused participation and viewing figures to plummet, with the nation unable to enjoy the communal viewing experience that FTA sport provides. Most kids born after the 2005 Ashes couldn't pick Ben Stokes or Jos Buttler out of a lineup.
This final will change that. I've read so many stories online of how kids are now picking up a bat and ball. You CANNOT put a price on that, nor let bitterness however understandable given NZ lost on an arcane technicality, cloud the fact this was a shot in the arm cricket desperately needed.
It was also the short in the arm a deeply divided country needed. At each others throats since the 2016 Brexit referendum, this country enjoyed a rare unifying moment. Enjoy it while it lasts, to the sound of Ian Smith's majestic voice:
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