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Posted: 18 years ago
March 18, 2007
Angshuman Hazra

Yesterday's results

India lost to Bangladesh and Pakistan to Ireland. India batted way below par at the two ends of their innings and the Pakistan batsmen succumbed to Irish persistence in not allowing them to score. Indian bowlers were too wayward to defend 191 and the Pakistan bowlers didn't have enough to defend. India are still hoping for two wins and some winners' luck to qualify for the next round but Pakistan are out of the world's biggest cricket tournament by the fifth day.

We can go on and on elaborating on the surprise results of the two 17th March games in this fashion. But are we giving credit where it is due? Probably not. Yes those results were surprises, but they were not upsets in the true sense of the word. An 'upset', so far as history of such matches go, is a loss that resulted mainly (sometimes solely) from the big team playing badly. I'm not sure that was the case yesterday either at Trinidad or at Jamaica (unless we have reports of post-match upsets of a visceral kind in the Pak camp).

Bangladesh and Ireland in this World Cup

Unlike other wins of Bangladesh in other tournaments and series involving big teams, these wins are no one-off shows. Their matured game and the warm up result against New Zealand indicate otherwise. Ditto for the Irish. In fact the latter deserve a bigger applause for making full use of their county exposure to make up for lack of matches against international sides.

I gladly take back the words from an earlier post of mine. Ireland and Bangladesh were not doing too much too soon by surprising big teams in warm up matches. They were merely serving up warnings. Then, to come into the World Cup and do it against teams that were already aware of their shock value speaks of self-belief, meticulous game planning and talent in the ranks.

Bangladesh game plan

I did not see much of the Irish game except in highlights. But I watched a new look Bangladesh unfurl at the biggest stage. They were slightly aided by the ever-prepared-to-choke Indians but the win belonged to only to Bangladesh.

Bangladesh reminds us so much of the Sri Lankans in the 1996 tournament. They have a number of attacking batsmen with just one (Nafees) or two (Bashar) likely to get near a hundred. They have a swashbuckling opener (Tamim Iqbal) who announced himself in yesterday's match, and looks good to score a few in the Powerplay overs whenever a loose delivery comes him way. That bevy of enticing, accurate, strangling slow bowlers in their ranks is ably supported by one very good pace bowler, Mortaza. Just what the doctor ordered for the West Indian grounds.

From their choice of bowlers I suspect restricting opposition batsmen to a low total and chasing it down to be the Bangladesh game plan for the tournament. (Yesterday's match will lead them further on that path.) They even have an interesting plan for the chase. I noticed that most of their top, experienced batsmen like Bashar and Ashraful had moved down the order to propel the finishing act in a chase, if required. It may not be the greatest plan against top sides for an anchorman like Bashar to come in so far down the order but the Ashraful move looked a good one. They will need a combination of striking ability and big match experience in case the asking rate climbs.

It will be interesting to have them bat first though. Their flashy batsmen are likely to struggle a bit. And while their spinners can expect assistance in the afternoon on drier pitches that may not always happen, as the pitches tend to hold well on the first day. On the flip side, Mortaza and his medium pacer mate Rasel will be hard pressed to give those vital breakthroughs.


Indian woes and hopes

As for the Indian fans hoping to see India proceed further from the Group of Death, they have to add the following to their list of daily prayers:
    No rain on India's match days.
    India bat first against Bermuda and put upa total of 350 plus.
    India win both their remaining matches (with the top seven firing in both).
    Either Bangladesh beat Sri Lanka, or Sri Lanka thrash Bangladesh badly.
  • Bangladesh-Bermuda game getting washed out.

The equation, as it stands now, is elaborated by Cricinfo's Anand Vasu here. India have to overcome two major hitches to make the best of the controllables. [Those are, besides the accepted perennial minuses of lethargic fielding, inconsistent bowling and, increasingly, the Sehwag form problem.] Both of them reside in the Indian middle.

The Indian middle overs bowling led by Bhajji is not hot and everyone except Bermuda can expect to be let off the hook at that stage. Sri Lanka did that in three consecutive games last month and will be hoping for the same again. Also India's middle and lower order batsmen have no plan in place to counter the loss of early wickets even after so much exposure to these conditions over the last year or so. Bangladesh administered Lara's methods to Team India and the latter demonstrated their continued ability to freeze in the face of accurate slow bowling. Ones and twos are just not their cup of tea.

Let's hope for the sake of Indian cricket lovers that these 'middles' are not 'upset' anytime soon. As Dr. Mardy quotes Ovid in today's Quote of the week newsletter:

"Chance affects everything. Let your hook be always cast; in the stream where you least expect it, there will be a fish."

PS: A few weeks back Harbhajan publicly asked his lower order mates to contribute more in West Indies. Look at Bhajji's two innings since landing there: He casually gave catching practice to the cover fielder first ball in the Holland match, and was bowled attempting to cut a ball inside stumps yesterday. This, when each of the occasions, required a senior player like him to play sensibly and stay on. Perhaps that 'contribute more' call from Harbhajan was just a surreptitious request to Pathan, Zaheer, Munaf and Agarkar to share his quota of scoring runs.

Angshuman Hazra is an engineer working in the Oil sector at Haldia, an industrial town near Kolkata. The principal 'fuel' in his life is cricket, though. He blogs on the game here, and some day he hopes to learn living with the fact thhttp://desicritics.org/2007/03/18/054412.phpat the stuff inside his cranium has dimensions other than 22 yards.
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Posted: 18 years ago
LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS
India's Sachin Tendulkar bats as Bermuda's wicket keeper Dean Minors looks on during the Group B Cricket World Cup match between India and Bermuda at the Queen's Park Oval in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, March 19.
Sehwag's sizzling 'ton' sets up record victory
Bermuda hit by hurricane innings as India gets back in contention for place in next round
Mar 20, 2007 04:30 AM

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad–Virender Sehwag scored his first limited-overs century in two years to set up India's World Cup record 257-run win over Bermuda yesterday.

Sehwag's belligerent 114 spurred an Indian innings that finished with a World Cup 50-over record total of 413 for five. Bermuda was then all out for 156 in 43.1 overs with five batsmen failing to get off the mark, giving India the biggest ever win in World Cups.

Australia held the previous mark for the biggest victory, by 256 runs over Namibia in the 2003 World Cup.

India became the first team to surpass 400 runs in the World Cup as its batsmen sent the ball soaring over the fence for 18 sixes, surpassing Sri Lanka's 398 for five against Kenya at home in Kandy in 1996.

"We achieved what we wanted to in this match," said Indian captain Rahul Dravid. "We finished ahead of Sri Lanka's margin of victory against Bermuda."

India's previous best limited-overs total came in the 1999 World Cup match against Sri Lanka at Taunton, England, where it amassed 373 for six.

Dravid said Sehwag set up the big total.

"Sehwag's a good player and it's good for us that he's back in form before the crucial game," he said.

The runaway win pulled India back into contention for a place in the Super Eights after a stunning five-wicket loss in its first Group B match to Bangladesh.

World Cup winner in 1983 and finalist in 2003, India must defeat Sri Lanka in its last preliminary round fixture on Friday and then hope for other results to fall in place to advance to the second round.

Sri Lanka and Bangladesh each go into their match tomorrow at 1-0.

Sehwag, 28, emerged from the leanest form of his career, during which he just had one half-century in 14 previous limited-overs internationals, by cracking three huge sixes and 17 boundaries off 87 deliveries.

Sehwag featured in a 202-run second-wicket stand with Saurav Ganguly, who fell 11 runs short of becoming the first batsman to post five World Cup centuries.

Ganguly scored 89 from 114 balls, including two sixes and six boundaries after getting a reprieve when he was dropped on 14.

His opening partner Robin Uthappa departed for three, giving 17-year-old Malachi Jones a wicket with his first World Cup delivery. The emotion was too much for Jones, who was moved to tears as his teammates joined him in celebration.

Mahendra Dhoni made a cameo 29 before a rapid 122-run partnership off 62 balls between left-hander Yuvraj Singh and Sachin Tendulkar.

Singh hammered seven sixes and three boundaries to blaze 83 off 43 deliveries. Singh fell in the 49th over, but his stroke play even eclipsed star batsman Tendulkar, who was unbaten on 57.

Bermuda's only professional player, Glamorgan left-hander David Hemp, scored an unbeaten 76, but wickets tumbled at the other end.

http://www.thestar.com/Sports/article/193767

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Posted: 18 years ago
Sehwag made a cracking century.


INDIA SET RECORDS IN ROUT

India took out the frustration of their shock World Cup defeat to Bangladesh with the biggest victory in one-day international history over hapless Bermuda today.

Having been skittled for just 191 in their opening Group B encounter, India posted a tournament record 413 for five before sealing a crushing 257-run win - one more than Australia's previous record - at Queen's Park Oval in Port of Spain, Trinidad.

It was the sort of margin of victory they were looking for to help their chances of qualification for the Super Eight stage.

Bermuda were made to rue electing to field as Virender Sehwag finally found some form.

Sehwag, who struggled to find anything like his best form in his side's opener, top-scored with 114 off 87 balls - his first World Cup century - which contained three sixes and 17 fours as part of a 202-run second-wicket stand with Sourav Ganguly.

The former skipper, who weighed in with 89, continues to look in good touch.

Another shock had looked possible early on when Robin Uthappa was caught at slip for three by Dwayne Leverock, the 19-stone left-armer diving spectacularly to his right to cling on to the catch which gave Malachi Jones a wicket with his first ball in World Cup cricket.

Jones immediately burst into tears at the enormity of it all but soon the weeping spread to his team-mates as India plundered the Bermuda bowling.

With the match already out of Bermuda's reach, Yuvraj Singh smashed seven sixes and three fours in an innings of 83 in 46 balls.

Sachin Tendulkar hammered a six - one of four in his innings - to take India past 400 as he finished 57 not out off just 29 balls, guiding the 1983 champions past the previous best score of 398 for five made by Sri Lanka against Kenya at Kandy in 1995-96.

Kevin Hurdle was the only bowler to escape with anything like respectable figures, claiming one for 53 off 10 overs.

Bermuda's reply was always going to be a formality and it was not long before the wickets began to tumble.

Zaheer Khan got the ball rolling by clean bowling Oliver Pitcher, with neither opener having troubled the scoreboard.

Zaheer struck again soon after, making it 18 for two with one that nipped back through the gate, clipping the top of Stephen Outerbridge's middle stump for nine.

David Hemp arrived to try to steady the ship, but his embryonic partnership with Delyone Borden (13) was scuppered by an extraordinary lbw decision by Aleem Dar off the bowling of Munaf Patel.

Dar raised his finger despite the ball appearing to be comfortably sailing over the top of the stumps.

A more plausible leg-before call followed with the score on 57, captain Irving Romaine becoming spinner Anil Kumble's first victim of the tournament.

Number two was not long in arriving, Janeiro Tucker going for a duck after playing and missing one that crashed into the stumps.

Somewhat predictably, only Glamorgan captain Hemp was providing any real resistance but with his partners falling with frequency it was never likely to be enough.

Dean Minors made a decent 21 - and looked like he might provide Hemp with a promising foil - before he perished to an ungainly swipe which sent the ball looping to substitute fielder Dinesh Karthik from Ajit Agarkar's bowling.

Lionel Cann gave the seamer his next scalp soon after, giving himself next to no chance to get used to the conditions before attempting an ambitious pull from a ball that hurried him.

The ball lobbed in the air but the batsman stood his ground after Uthappa took a stooping catch close to the ground.

After some discussion Cann was sent on his way, leaving Hemp to provide the Bermudan cheer with a commanding shot to leg to bring up his 50.

Agarkar continued to sweep up the tail when he accounted for Hurdle without scoring.

Hurdle faced four deliveries before Agarkar's nagging accuracy caught him out and bowled him out to bring the end ever closer.

Leverock made his way to crease and after frustrating India for 31 balls he finally fell cutting the part-time leg-spin of Tendulkar into the gloves of Mahendra Dhoni for nine.

Jones (one) was then trapped lbw by the wily Kumble - who, like Agarkar returned figures of three for 38 - to wrap up the record for India and leave the unfortunate Hemp stranded on 76 not out.

http://www.sportinglife.com/story_get.cgi?STORY_NAME=cricket /07/03/20/manual_065137.html

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Posted: 18 years ago
India crush Bermuda by record margin
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Dwayne Leverock dives to take the catch that dismissed Indian batsman Robin Uthappa.
Photo: AFP

March 20, 2007 - 8:41AM
< =1.1> Page 1 of 2 | Single page

A Virender Sehwag century steered India to a record World Cup total as debutants Bermuda were crushed by the biggest ever one-day victory margin of 257 runs today.

India piled up 413 for five before Bermuda were skittled for 156 in the Group B encounter, allowing the 1983 champions to surpass Australia's previous record winning margin of 256, achieved against Namibia in 2003.
They also eclipsed Sri Lanka's previous Cup highest total of 398 for five made against Kenya in 1996.

The result will keep alive India's qualification hopes after their shock opening game defeat by Bangladesh on Saturday.

However, they still need to defeat a formidable Sri Lankan side convincingly in their third and final group game on Friday to be in contention if three teams tie on points.

Sehwag emerged from a prolonged slump in form to blaze an 87-ball 114 for his eighth one-day hundred. He set the tone in a 202-run second-wicket stand with Saurav Ganguly (89) after Bermuda put India into bat.

Yuvraj Singh (83 off 46 balls) and Sachin Tendulkar (57 not out off 29 balls) then tore into Bermuda's lightweight bowling to pile up 122 from just 63 balls for the fifth wicket.

India's win would have been even more emphatic had it not been for Glamorgan's David Hemp, whose defiant 76 not out put India's victory celebrations on hold until the 44th over.

Paceman Ajit Agarkar and leg spinner Anil Kumble took three wickets each.

India grabbed a golden chance to show off after Bermuda asked their shaken rivals to take first strike at the Queen's Park Oval.

Sehwag, coming in at number three despite calls to drop him from the team, cut loose to stroke his first hundred since April 2005.

The 28-year-old had scored just one 50 in his last 14 innings.

Bermuda's 17-year-old paceman Malachi Jones struck with his first delivery to remove opener Robin Uthappa (3) in the second over when policeman Dwayne Leverock flung his 19-stone frame at slip to produce a stunning one-handed catch.

Sehwag quickly turned things around as he struck 17 fours and three sixes until he mistimed a heave off paceman Kevin Hurdle and holed out to Jones at deep mid-off in the 30th over.

Ganguly, 34, looked set for a Cup record fifth hundred until he was stumped off spinner Delyone Borden, who had dropped a stiff chance off Hurdle when he was on 14.

Yuvraj and Tendulkar added 136 runs in the last 10 overs with the latter hoisting seamer Hemp over square leg for six in the final over as India became the first team to cross the 400-mark barrier in the 32-year history of the tournament.

Bermuda's experienced seamer Saleem Mukuddem was dropped for the match as a disciplinary measure, skipper Irvine Romaine said.

"There was disciplinary action on Saleem but I can't say what it is,'' Romaine told a news conference.

When asked, team manager Lionel Tannock refused to give details or say whether he would be selected for final group tie against Bangladesh on March 25.

The South Africa-born Mukuddem had bowled impressively in the opening game defeat against Sri Lanka to finish with 2-50.

Bermuda replaced him with 17-year-old seamer Malachi Jones.

SCOREBOARD

India
R.Uthappa c Leverock b Jones 3
S.Ganguly st Minors b Borden 89
V.Sehwag c Jones b Hurdle 114
M.Dhoni c Tucker b Borden 29
Y.Singh c Jones b Leverock 83
S.Tendulkar not out 57
R.Dravid not out 7
Extras: (lb-7 w-17 nb-7) 31
Total (five wickets, 50 overs) 413

Fall of wickets: 1-3 2-205 3-238 4-269 5-391
Bowling: Hurdle 10-0-53-1 (5nb 1w), Jones 7-0-74-1 (1nb 9w), Tucker 9-1-67-0 (1w), Hemp 2-0-32-0 (1nb), Leverock 10-0-96-1, Borden 5-0-30-2, Cann 7-0-54-0 (6w).

Bermuda
O.Pitcher b Khan 0
S.Outerbridge b Khan 9
D.Borden lbw b Patel 13
D.Hemp not out 76
I.Romaine lbw b Kumble 0
J.Tucker b Kumble 0
D.Minors c sub b Agarkar 21
L.Cann c Uthappa b Agarkar 0
K.Hurdle b Agarkar 0
D.Leverock c Dhoni b Tendulkar 9
M.Jones lbw b Kumble 1
Extras (lb-12 w-12 nb-3) 27
Total (all out, 43.1 overs) 156

Fall of wickets: 1-0 2-18 3-47 4-57 5-63 6-106 7-106 8-110 9-154 10-156
Bowling: Khan 10-1-32-2 (1nb 2w), Agarkar 10-0-38-3 (3w), Patel 8-2-20-1 (1w), Kumble 9.1-0-38-3 (1nb 6w), Sehwag 5-0-15-0 (1nb), Tendulkar 1-0-1-1
Result: India won by 257 runs
Man-of-the-match: Virender Sehwag (India)

BIGGEST EVER WORLD CUP WINS

India 257 runs v Bermuda, Port of Spain 2007
Australia 256 runs v Namibia, Potchefstroom 2003
Sri Lanka 243 runs v Bermuda, Port of Spain 2007
Australia 229 runs v Netherlands, Basseterre 2007
South Africa 221 runs v Netherlands, Basseterre 2007
Australia 203 runs v Scotland, Basseterre 2007
England 202 runs v India, Lord's 1975
England 196 runs v East Africa, Birmingham 1975
Pakistan 192 runs v Sri Lanka, Nottingham 1975
West Indies 191 runs v Sri Lanka, Karachi 1987

Note: India's win is highest in all one-day internationals.

Reuters

http://www.smh.com.au/news/cricket/india-crush-bermuda-by-re cord-margin/2007/03/20/1174153013101.html

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Posted: 18 years ago

I was not worried with slump in form: Sehwag

PORT OF SPAIN, Mar 20: Under tremendous pressure for a prolonged run-drought, one more failure could have made his life even more difficult but Virender Sehwag claimed he never lost sleep over the slump, for he was sure about regaining his touch.

Adjudged "Man of the Match" for his sparkling 114-run knock in the Group B match against Bermuda, Sehwag said all he needed was bit of patience to be back among runs again.

"I was not worried about anything. This innings was long due and I was expecting it for a long time," said Sehwag, architect of India's thumping 257-run win against Bermuda.

"I was taking deep breath in between the deliveries and telling myself 'As long as you are there, runs will come'", he said.

Sehwag also felt that he played lot straighter in this match and that made a lot of difference.

"Obviously I was playing lot straighter today. I have been practising hard to play straight and in fact in the last match too, I tried that", he said.

Sehwag felt the pitch at the Queen's Park Oval here also suited his batting style.

"The pitch did something in the morning but later it was coming nicely on to the bat. I knew I had to get set with the new ball and once I could hang around for 30 overs, it would be good for me and the team as well", said the hard-hitting batsman

http://worldcup.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1781665.cms

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Posted: 18 years ago
Record win keeps India alive
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Born slippy: Bermuda's Dwayne Leverock takes a diving beauty to dismiss India's Robin Uthappa.
Photo: AFP

March 20, 2007 - 9:10AM

A Virender Sehwag century steered India to a record World Cup score as debutants Bermuda were crushed by the biggest ever one-day victory margin of 257 runs today.

India smashed 5-413 before Bermuda were skittled for 156 in the Group B encounter.

India swept past Sri Lanka's previous record total of 5-398 made against Kenya in 1996.

The result will keep alive India's qualification hopes after their shock opening game defeat by Bangladesh on Saturday.

They eclipsed Australia's previous one-day record victory margin of 256 runs, achieved against Namibia in the 2003 World Cup.

Sehwag blazed an 87-ball 114 for his eighth one-day hundred to set the tone in a 202-run second wicket stand with Saurav Ganguly (89) after Bermuda put them into bat.

Yuvraj Singh (83 off 46 balls) and Sachin Tendulkar (57no off 29 balls) then tore into Bermuda's lightweight bowling to pile up 122 runs from just 63 balls for the fifth wicket.

The 1983 champions still need to defeat a formidable Sri Lankan side convincingly in their third and final group game on Friday to be in contention if three teams tie on points

http://www.theage.com.au/news/cricket/world-record-for-india /2007/03/20/1174153014480.html

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Posted: 18 years ago
Dravid confident, says team will perform: Video
Press Trust of India / Port of Spain March 20, 2007
CLICK HERE FOR VIDEO

India will have to overcome huge odds to qualify for the Super 8 stage of the World Cup but a defiant Team India captain Rahul Dravid insists his side can still make things happen.

Stunned by Bangladesh in the first match, India pummelled Bermuda in their second group B match on Monday to stay in the hunt for a place in the Super 8 and they face Sri Lanka in a do-or-die match on March 23.

"There are something we can control and something we can't. We'll try to do our best to do things which are controllable. We'll try to play to our potential and if we can do that, we can still make things happen", Dravid said after his side's 257-run win against Bermuda.

"Now we have this big match against Sri Lanka. Hopefully we can take some confidence from this match to that game", he added.

Dravid was visibly happy with the show of the frontline batsmen against Bermuda and said, "We needed a big performance after our last match's performance and the boys did well - they laid a good foundation and then some good hitting towards the end."

Against Bermuda, India rewrote history by putting on 413 runs for the loss of five wickets - the highest score in World Cup's history.

http://www.business-standard.com/common/storypage_c_online.p hp?leftnm=11&bKeyFlag=IN&autono=21579

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Posted: 18 years ago
India win by biggest margin

19/03/2007 23:22 - (SA)
Port of Spain - Virender Sehwag's first limited-overs century in two years has helped set up India's World Cup record 257-run win over Bermuda. Sehwag's belligerent 114 spurred India's innings that finished with a World Cup 50-over record total of 413 for five. Bermuda were bowled out for 156 in 43.1 overs with five batsmen failing to get off the mark, giving India the biggest ever win in World Cups. Australia held the previous mark for biggest victory (256 runs over Namibia in the 2003 World Cup). India became the first team to surpass 400-run in the World Cup as its batsmen sent the ball soaring over the fence for 18 sixes, surpassing Sri Lanka's 398-5 against Kenya at Kandy in 1996. India's previous best limited-overs total came in the 1999 World Cup match against Sri Lanka at Taunton, England, where it amassed 373-6. The runaway win pulled India back into contention for a place in the Super Eights after a stunning five-wicket upset in its first Group B match against Bangladesh.
  • 24.com is offering users a FREE SMS alert service to keep you up-to-date with the results at the Cricket World Cup.
  • News24/AP

    http://www.news24.com/News24/Sport/CricketWC_2007/0,,2-9-213 7_2086205,00.html

    43685 thumbnail
    Posted: 18 years ago

    India reach new high


    By Nelson Clare in Port of Spain, Trindiad
    Last Updated: 4:00am GMT 20/03/2007

    Have your say

    Scoreboard: Bermuda v India

    India (413-5) beat Bermuda (156) by 257 runs

    India recorded the highest total in World Cup history after Virender Sehwag blazed an 87-ball 114 to power them to 413 for five against debutants Bermuda yesterday.

    Six of the best: India's Virender Sehwag hits another boundary

    India erased Sri Lanka's previous mark of 398 for five, made against Kenya in 1996, after breaking their own one-day record of 373 for six scored against Sri Lanka in 1999.

    Bermuda were dismissed for 156, leaving India with a 257-run win.

    Sehwag shared a 202-run second-wicket partnership with Sourav Ganguly (89) after Bermuda did India a favour by asking them to bat first in the Group B match.

    Yuvraj Singh then smashed 83 off 46 balls and Sachin Tendulkar 57 not out in a whirlwind 122-run fifth wicket stand as Indian batsmen vented their frustration after their defeat to Bangladesh on Saturday.

    The last 10 overs netted 136 runs, Tendulkar hoisting seamer David Hemp over square leg for six to bring up the cup record total and produce the first 400-run total in the tournament.

    Bermuda's 17-year-old paceman Malachi Jones struck with his first World Cup delivery to remove opener Robin Uthappa in the second over.

    Uthappa edged a rising ball and Bermudan policeman Dwayne Leverock flung his 19st frame at slip to produce a stunning one-handed catch.

    Sehwag, coming in at No 3 amid calls for his sacking after making just one fifty in 14 innings, tore into the lightweight bowling to score his first one-day hundred since April 2005.

    The Delhi batsman struck 17 fours and three sixes until he mistimed a heave off paceman Kevin Hurdle and holed out to Jones at deep mid-off.

    Ganguly was stumped off spinner Delyone Borden.

    43685 thumbnail
    Posted: 18 years ago

    India plunder runs, script history

    Ashis Ray
    PORT OF SPAIN (Trinidad and Tobago), March 19: An 81-ball hundred by Virender Sehwag ~ his first in a World Cup ~ entwined with a rollicking 202 run partnership for the second wicket between him and Sourav Ganguly, followed by a brutal fifth wicket stand of 122 in 10.2 overs between Yuvraj Singh and Sachin Tendulkar, hoisted India to a World Cup record total of 413 for five, lowering the previous best of 398 for five by Sri Lanka against Kenya in 1996. Bermuda could only muster 156 in reply, which left India winners by a margin of 257 runs, another World Cup record. Only David Hemp, captain of the Welsh county of Glamorgan, resisted with a fluent half-century.
    Most importantly for India, the Herculean feat helped the 1983 champions to steal a substantial march over Bangladesh, their vanquishers last Saturday, on run rate, which could decide India's fate vis-a-vis qualifying for the Super Eight stage, if they beat Sri Lanka on Friday. The Sri Lankans are still ahead with a return of 6.42. But India, boosted by Monday's 8.26 runs per over, now have an average run rate of 6.04, as compared to Bangladesh's run rate of 3.97.
    India's outstanding effort was thanks primarily to a blistering 46-ball 83 by Yuvraj, who battered the onside terraces with seven sixes, while Tendulkar toyed with the bowling for a 29-ball unbeaten 57, which included four sixes.
    Harbhajan Singh made way for Anil Kumble. There were almost as many Indian flags on view as the smattering of spectators on a pleasant but occasionally overcast sky. Not surprisingly, Bermuda invited India to bat. Indeed, in only the second over Robin Uthappa, promoted to open instead of Sehwag, was brilliantly caught by the burly policeman Dwayne Leverock at first slip off the medium pace of Malachi Jones, the youngest player in the competition.
    Unfortunately for Bermuda, that's where their windfall ended. Ganguly was dropped at mid-on off Kevin Hurdle when he was 14. But Sehwag, in a merciless mood, savaged the inexperienced bowlers, cutting and off-driving and even elegantly turning the ball to leg. He punished Jones for four fours in an over, which cost 17 in all.
    Having reached his first 50 since last year's Champions Trophy, he greeted David Hemp with two sixes in his first over, which prompted Irving Romaine to immediately withdraw him from the attack. But Sehwag was unstoppable. Though he lived dangerously as he approached his hundred, he crossed this milestone with a daredevil late cut.
    Meanwhile, Ganguly had joined the picnic. He stepped out to Leverock to send the ball thudding into the grassy banks behind long-off and long-on. His 50 arose in 79 balls. Both he and Sehwag hit the ball aerially, sometimes perilously close to fielders, once even to hand ~ a half chance at mid-off ~ from Sehwag. But the duo pegged the third highest partnership in World Cup history before being separated when Sehwag holed out at deep mid-off. He had pummelled 17 fours and three sixes.

    http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=5&theme=& amp;usrsess=1&id=150239

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