What is 2007 Cricket World Cup?

Information about 2007 Cricket World Cup

2007 Cricket World Cup
Enlarge picture
Logo of the 2007 ICC Cricket World Cup
Logo of the 2007 ICC Cricket World Cup
The 2007 ICC Cricket World Cup was a men's cricket tournament that took place in the West Indies from 13 March to 28 April 2007, using the sport's one-day international format. There were a total of 51 matches played, three fewer than at the 2003 World Cup (despite a field larger by two teams).

The 16 competing teams were initially divided into four groups, with the two best-performing teams from each group moving on to a "Super 8" format. From this, Australia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and South Africa won through to the semi-finals, with Australia defeating Sri Lanka in the final to win their third consecutive World Cup. Australia's unbeaten record in this year's tournament increased their total to 29 consecutive World Cup matches without loss, a streak dating back to 1999-05-27, during the group stage of the 1999 World Cup.

Host selection

Enlarge picture
World Cup 2007s Venues in the West Indies.
The World Cup was awarded to the West Indies via the International Cricket Council's rotational policy. It is the first time the Cricket World Cup has been held in the Caribbean despite the fact that the West Indies cricket team have been the second most successful team in past World Cups.[1]

The United States contingent lobbied strongly for matches to be staged at its newly built cricket ground in Lauderhill, Florida, but the ICC decided to award all matches to Caribbean nations. Bids from Bermuda, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and a second bid by Jamaica were also rejected.

Venues

Eight venues across the West Indies were selected to host the World Cup final tournament. All host countries hosted six matches with the exceptions of St Lucia, Jamaica and Barbados (the last of which hosted the final) which each hosted seven matches.

The stadium capacities shown are all seated capacities.
Country City Stadium Capacity Matches Cost
 Antigua and BarbudaSt John'sSir Vivian Richards Stadium20,000Super 8US$54 Million[2]
 BarbadosBridgetownKensington Oval32,000Super 8 & FinalUS$69.1 Million[3]
 GrenadaSt George'sQueen's Park20,000Super 8
 GuyanaGeorgetownProvidence Stadium20,000Super 8US$26 Million/US$46 Million[4]
 JamaicaKingstonSabina Park30,000Group D & Semi-finalUS$26 Million[5]
 Saint Kitts and NevisBasseterreWarner Park Stadium10,000Group AUS$12 Million
 Saint LuciaGros IsletBeausejour Stadium20,000Group C & Semi-finalUS$13 Million[6]
 Trinidad and TobagoPort of SpainQueen's Park Oval25,000Group B


Four additional venues hosted warm-up matches.
Country City Stadium Capacity Cost
 BarbadosBridgetown3Ws Oval8,500
 JamaicaTrelawnyGreenfield Stadium25,000US$35 Million[7]
 Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesKingstownArnos Vale Stadium12,000
 Trinidad and TobagoSt. AugustineSir Frank Worrell Memorial Ground22,000
The Jamaican Government spent US$81 million for "on the pitch" expenses.[8] This included refurbishing Sabina Park and constructing the new multi-purpose facility in Trelawny - through a loan from China. Another US$20 million is budgeted for 'off-the-pitch' expenses, putting the tally at more than US$100 million or JM$7 billion.

This put the reconstruction cost of Sabina Park at US$46 million whilst the Trelawny Stadium will cost US$35 million.[9][10] The total amount of money spent on stadiums was at least US$301 million.

The Brian Lara Stadium, in Trinidad, lost its status as a pre-tournament warm-up match venue on 21 September 2006.[11]

Qualification

Enlarge picture
The captains of the 2007 Cricket World Cup.
The field of sixteen teams, the largest ever for the Cricket World Cup, consists of all sixteen teams which currently hold One-Day International status. This includes the ten full members of the ICC (which all have Test & permanent ODI status):
The other six (associate) ODI nations are Kenya (which has ODI status until 2009) and five further teams which qualified via the 2005 ICC Trophy (gaining ODI status until 2009, in the process):

Media coverage

The World Cup has grown as a media event with each tournament. The sponsorship and television rights that were awarded primarily to cover the 2003 and 2007 World Cups raised over US$550 m.[12] The 2007 World Cup was televised in over 200 countries to a viewing audience estimated at more than two billion television viewers and was expected to generate more than 100,000 unique visitors to the West Indies who traveled solely for the tournament.[13][14]

The 2007 Cricket World Cup featured an orange raccoon-like creature named "Mello" as its mascot. It has been announced during matches that Mello has no race, species, age or gender- it is an attitude, the attitude of the young people of the West Indies. The official song for the World Cup was "The Game of Love and Unity" by Jamaican-born Shaggy, Bajan entertainer Rupee and Trinidadian Faye-Ann Lyons.

The 2007 tournament recorded the highest ticketing revenue for a Cricket World Cup, selling more than 672,000.[15] Although, attendance leading into the semi finals for the 2007 World Cup was 403,000; an average of 8,500 supporters per match.[16]

Leadup

All major Test-playing nations had schedules allowing them to play a large number of One-Day Internationals against other major ODI teams just prior to the World Cup. Australia, New Zealand and England took part in the Commonwealth Bank Series where England defeated Australia in the finals. Australia then went to New Zealand for the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy, losing 3-0. South Africa played five ODIs against India (South Africa won 4-0) and five against Pakistan (South Africa won 3-1) while India also played four ODIs against the West Indies (India won 3-1) and four ODIs against Sri Lanka (India won 2-1). Bangladesh played four ODIs against Zimbabwe (Bangladesh won 3-1) and won a tri-series against Canada and Bermuda. The associate ODI teams took part in the World Cricket League, which Kenya won, and were also involved in other series prior to the World Cup.

The rankings of the teams at the beginning of the Cricket World Cup were:
Ranking Team Points Ranking Team Points
1 South Africa1289 Bangladesh42
2 Australia12510 Zimbabwe22
3 New Zealand11311 Kenya0
4 Pakistan11112 Scotland0% / 69%
5 India10913 Netherlands0% / 50%
6 Sri Lanka10814 Ireland0% / 44%
7 England10615 Canada0% / 33%
8 West Indies10116 Bermuda0% / 28%
Note:Teams 12-16 did not have official ODI rankings leading up to the World Cup; they are ranked based on their win percentage against full members and then wins against associate members prior to the tournament.[17]

Warm-up matches

Prior to the main tournament all 16 nations played a series of warm-up matches to prepare, experiment with different tactics and to help them get acclimated to conditions in the West Indies. The warm-up matches were not considered as official ODIs.[18] The matches were played from Monday 5 March until Friday 9 March.

Rules and regulations

Matches

All matches were held from 0930 to 1715 local time. The first innings were held from 0930 to 1300 and the second innings were held from 1345 to 1715. For all venues other than Jamaica, local time was UTC-4, while Jamaican venues had local time UTC-5.

The matches were One-Day Internationals and operated under normal ODI rules. All matches were to be 50 overs a side unless stated otherwise by the umpires or match referee. A bowler was able to bowl a maximum of 10 overs per match.

In the event of bad weather, each side must have batted a minimum of 20 overs for a result to be declared (if the match was not otherwise won, for example if the team batting second was dismissed before the completion of 20 overs). In the event of bad weather, the Duckworth-Lewis method was applied to determine the result or target. If no result was declared on the scheduled day, the teams returned the next day to complete the game, with the same situation as when the game was abandoned.

There was a new rule regarding referral of catches to the TV replay official (third umpire): if the standing umpires were unable to determine whether a catch had been taken cleanly, and/or whether a claimed catch was a "bump ball", they had discretion to refer the decision to the third umpire. Also, whilst reviewing such a catch via TV replay if it was clear to the third umpire that the batsman did not hit the ball, he was to indicate that the batsman was not out.[19]

Tournament points

In the Group Stage and in the Super 8 Stage points were awarded as follows:
Points
Results Points
Win2 points
Tie/No Result1 point
Loss0 points


The top two teams from each group advanced to the Super 8 stage and any points they earned against the other qualifier from their own group was carried through. Points earned against the non qualifying teams in the same pool were not carried over. In the Super 8s, each team played the six remaining qualifiers from the other groups and the top four teams went through to the semi-finals. Positions were decided by most points. Where two or more teams were tied on points, the following methods in turn were used to decide which team went through:[19]
  1. Most wins in their group or in Super 8 whichever is applicable
  2. Higher net run rate
  3. Higher number of wickets taken per ball
  4. Winners of head to head matches
  5. The drawing of lots

Groups

Seeds

The tournament began with a league stage consisting of four groups of four. Each team played each of the other teams in its group once. Australia, India, England and West Indies were placed in separate pools for logistical reasons, as they were expected to have the most supporters in attendance, and transport and accommodation capacity in the West Indies is limited.[21]

The groups are listed below, with seedings (rankings from April 2005) shown in brackets. Each group played all of its matches at a single ground.
Group A Group B Group C Group D
(1)
(5)
(12)
(16)
(2)
(6)
(11)
(15)
(3)
(7)
(10)
(14)
(4)
 West Indies (8)
(9)
(13)

System

The tournament was preceded by a number of warm-up matches to acclimatise the players. The Group Stage matches started on Tuesday 13 March and finished on Sunday 25 March. There were a total of 24 matches played in the group stage.

The top two teams in each group proceeded to the "Super 8" stage which will also use a league system. Each team carried forward its result against the other team qualifying from its preliminary stage group, and will play the other six qualifying teams once each. The top four teams in the league will qualify for the semi-finals. This system has been modified since the last World Cup, which had a "Super 6" stage rather than a Super 8. The Super 8 stage matches will be played from Tuesday 27 March until Saturday 21 April. A total of 24 matches will be played in the Super 8 stage.

The top four teams in the "Super 8" will advance to the Semi-Finals. This is the knockout stage, with the #1 team playing the #4 team, and the #2 team playing the #3 team in the tournament. The winners of the two semi-finals will play each other in the Final.

All tournament matches will have one reserve day (the day after the scheduled day of the match) to allow for matches to be completed in the event of bad weather.

Group Stage

Group A

All matches start at 1330 UTC.
Team Pts Pld W T L NR NRR
633000+3.433
432010+2.403
231020-2.527
030030-3.793
March 14, 2007
vswon by 203 runs
Warner Park Stadium, Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Asoka De Silva
Man of the Match: Ricky Ponting
Ricky Ponting 113 (93)
Majid Haq 2/49 (7 overs)
Colin Smith 51 (76)
Glenn McGrath 3/14 (6 overs)

March 16, 2007
vswon by 221 runs
Warner Park Stadium, Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis
Umpires: Mark Benson and Tony Hill
Man of the Match: Herschelle Gibbs
Jacques Kallis 128* (109)
Billy Stelling 1/43 (8 overs)
R ten Doeschate 57 (75)
Justin Kemp 2/18 (4 overs)
*Match reduced to 40 overs a side because of rain/ground conditions.

March 18, 2007
vswon by 229 runs
Warner Park Stadium, Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Tony Hill
Man of the Match: Brad Hodge
Brad Hodge 123 (89)
Tim de Leede 2/40 (10 overs)
Daan van Bunge 33 (33)
Brad Hogg 4/27 (4.5 overs)

March 20, 2007
vswon by 7 wickets
Warner Park Stadium, Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis
Umpires: Mark Benson and Asoka De Silva
Man of the Match: Graeme Smith
Dougie Brown 45* (64)
Andrew Hall 3/48 (10 overs)
Graeme Smith 91 (65)
Majid Haq 2/43 (6 overs)

March 22, 2007
vswon by 8 wickets
Warner Park Stadium, Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis
Umpires: Asoka De Silva and Tony Hill
Man of the Match: Billy Stelling
Glenn Rogers 26 (30)
Billy Stelling 3/12 (8 overs)
R ten Doeschate 70* (68)
John Blain 2/29 (5 overs)

March 24, 2007
vswon by 83 runs
Warner Park Stadium, Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis
Umpires: Mark Benson and Steve Bucknor
Man of the Match: Matthew Hayden
Matthew Hayden 101 (68)
Andrew Hall 2/60 (10 overs)
AB de Villiers 92 (70)
Brad Hogg 3/61 (10 overs)


Group B

All matches start at 1330 UTC.
Team Pts Pld W T L NR NRR
633000+3.493
432010-1.523
231020+1.206
030030-4.345
March 15, 2007
vswon by 243 runs
Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Umpires: Daryl Harper and Ian Howell
Man of the Match: Mahela Jayawardene
Mahela Jayawardene 85 (90)
Saleem Mukuddem 2/50 (10 overs)
Lionel Cann 28 (32)
Farveez Maharoof 4/23 (7 overs)

March 17, 2007
vswon by 5 wickets
Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Steve Davis
Man of the Match: Mashrafe Mortaza
Sourav Ganguly 66 (129)
Mashrafe Mortaza 4/38 (9.3 overs)
Mushfiqur Rahim 56* (107)
Virender Sehwag 2/17 (5 overs)

March 19, 2007
vswon by 257 runs
Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Ian Howell
Man of the Match: Virender Sehwag
Virender Sehwag 114 (87)
Delyone Borden 2/30 (5 overs)
David Hemp 76* (105)
Ajit Agarkar 3/38 (10 overs)

March 21, 2007
vswon by 198 runs (DL)
Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Umpires: Steve Davis and Daryl Harper
Man of the Match: Sanath Jayasuriya
Sanath Jayasuriya 109 (87)
Mohammad Rafique 1/48 (10 overs)
Mohammad Ashraful 45* (63)
Lasith Malinga 3/27 (6 overs)
*Match shortened due to rain; Duckworth-Lewis revised target to win: 311 runs in 46 overs for Bangladesh.

March 23, 2007
vswon by 69 runs
Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Daryl Harper
Man of the Match: Muttiah Muralitharan
Upul Tharanga 64 (90)
Zaheer Khan 2/49 (10 overs)
Rahul Dravid 60 (82)
Muttiah Muralitharan 3/41 (10 overs)

March 25, 2007
vswon by 7 wickets (DL)
Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Umpires: Steve Davis and Ian Howell
Man of the Match: Mohammad Ashraful
Dean Minors 23 (25)
Abdur Razzak 3/20 (4 overs)
Mohammad Ashraful 29* (32)
Saleem Mukuddem 3/19 (5 overs)
*Match reduced to 21 overs a side due to rain during Bermuda's innings; Duckworth-Lewis revised target to win: 96 runs for Bangladesh.


Group C

All matches start at 1330 UTC.
Team Pts Pld W T L NR NRR
633000+2.138
432010+0.418
231020-1.194
030030-1.389
March 14, 2007
vswon by 7 wickets
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
Umpires: Asad Rauf and Peter Parker
Man of the Match: Steve Tikolo
Geoff Barnett 41 (50)
Jimmy Kamande 2/25 (10 overs)
Steve Tikolo 72* (76)
Sunil Dhaniram 1/34 (9 overs)

March 16, 2007
vswon by 6 wickets
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
Umpires: Asad Rauf and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Scott Styris
Kevin Pietersen 60 (92)
Shane Bond 2/19 (10 overs)
Scott Styris 87 (113)
James Anderson 2/39 (8 overs)

March 18, 2007
vswon by 51 runs
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
Umpires: Billy Doctrove and Peter Parker
Man of the Match: Paul Collingwood
Ed Joyce 66 (103)
Sunil Dhaniram 3/41 (10 overs)
Asif Mulla 58 (60)
Ravinder Bopara 2/43 (9 overs)

20 March, 2007
vswon by 148 runs
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
Umpires: Billy Doctrove and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Ross Taylor
Ross Taylor 85 (107)
Thomas Odoyo 2/55 (10 overs)
Ravindu Shah 81 (89)
James Franklin 2/20 (7.2 overs)

22 March, 2007
vswon by 114 runs
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
Umpires: Asad Rauf and Billy Doctrove
Man of the Match: Lou Vincent
Lou Vincent 101 (107)
Kevin Sandher 2/58 (10 overs)
John Davison 53 (31)
Jeetan Patel 3/25 (9.2 overs)

24 March, 2007
vswon by 7 wickets
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
Umpires: Rudi Koertzen and Peter Parker
Man of the Match: Ed Joyce
Steve Tikolo 76 (97)
James Anderson 2/27 (9 overs)
Ed Joyce 75 (90)
Thomas Odoyo 1/27 (6 overs)
*Overnight rain delayed the start. Match reduced to 43 overs per side.


Group D

All matches start at 1430 UTC.

Team Pts Pld W T L NR NRR
 West Indies633000+0.764
331110-0.092
231020+0.089
130120-0.886
13 March, 2007
West Indies 
241/9 (50 overs)
vs West Indies won by 54 runs
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
Umpires: Billy Bowden and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Dwayne Smith
Marlon Samuels 63 (70)
Iftikhar Anjum 3/44 (10 overs)
Shoaib Malik 62 (54)
Dwayne Smith 3/36 (10 overs)

15 March, 2007
vsMatch tied
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
Umpires: Ian Gould and Brian Jerling
Man of the Match: Jeremy Bray
Jeremy Bray 115* (139)
Elton Chigumbura 2/21 (6 overs)
Stuart Matsikenyeri 73* (77)
Kyle McCallan 2/56 (9 overs)

17 March, 2007
vswon by 3 wickets (DL)
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
Umpires: Billy Bowden and Brian Jerling
Man of the Match: Niall O'Brien
Kamran Akmal 27 (53)
Boyd Rankin 3/32 (9 overs)
Niall O'Brien 72 (106)
Mohammad Sami 3/29 (10 overs)
*Match shortened due to bad light and rain; Duckworth-Lewis revised target to win: 128 runs in 47 overs for Ireland.

19 March, 2007
vs West Indies
204/4 (47.5 overs)
 West Indies won by 6 wickets
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
Umpires: Ian Gould and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Sean Williams
Sean Williams 70* (88)
Jerome Taylor 2/42 (10 overs)
Brian Lara 44* (68)
Christopher Mpofu 1/34 (9 overs)

21 March, 2007
vswon by 93 runs (DL)
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
Umpires: Brian Jerling and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Imran Nazir
Imran Nazir 160 (121)
Gary Brent 3/68 (10 overs)
Elton Chigumbura 27 (11)
Shahid Afridi 3/20 (4 overs)
*Match shortened due to rain; Duckworth-Lewis revised target to win: 193 runs in 20 overs for Zimbabwe.

23 March, 2007
vs West Indies
190/2 (38.1 of 48 overs)
 West Indies won by 8 wickets (DL)
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
Umpires: Billy Bowden and Ian Gould
Man of the Match: Shivnarine Chanderpaul
Jeremy Bray 41 (71)
Chris Gayle 2/23 (10 overs)
Shivnarine Chanderpaul 102* (113)
Kyle McCallan 1/35 (10 overs)
*Match shortened due to rain; Duckworth-Lewis revised target to win: 190 runs in 48 overs for West Indies.

Super 8 stage



The top two teams in each first-round group moved on to a "super eight" stage which is scored as a complete round-robin. But each of the eight teams played only six new matches, rather than seven— each group's two representatives carried forward their result against each other rather than play again. Thus the table below, showing seven matches for each team, covers all matches between the Super 8 qualifiers, including those from the Group Stage.

Teams depicted in green backgrounds qualified for the semi-finals.

Team Pts Pld W T L NR RF OF RA OB NRR
14770001725266.11314322+0
10750201586301.11275337+0
107502013783081457345.1+0
8740301561299.11635333.2+0
6730401557344.41511307.40
 West Indies4720501595338.11781337.10
271060108431813982840
271060111133312262420
Abbreviations:
  • Pts = Points
  • W = Won
  • T = Tied
  • L = Lost
  • RF = Runs for
  • OF = Overs faced
  • RA = Runs against
  • OB = Overs bowled


Super 8 Matchup by Teams
 West Indies
 West Indies

Matches

All matches start at 1330 UTC.
March 27, 2007
vs West Indies
219 all out (45.3 overs)
won by 103 runs
Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound, Antigua and Barbuda
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Asad Rauf
Man of the Match: Matthew Hayden
Matthew Hayden 158 (143)
Daren Powell 2/53 (10 overs)
Brian Lara 77 (83)
Glenn McGrath 3/31 (8 overs)
*Play was postponed due to rain after the Australian innings on 27 March. Match concluded on 28 March.

March 28, 2007
vswon by 1 wicket
Providence Stadium, Georgetown, Guyana
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Daryl Harper
Man of the Match: Charl Langeveldt and Lasith Malinga .[22]
Tillakaratne Dilshan 58 (76)
Charl Langeveldt 5/39 (10 overs)
Jacques Kallis 86 (110)
Lasith Malinga 4/54 (9.2 overs)

March 29, 2007
West Indies 
177 all out (44.4 overs)
vswon by 7 wickets
Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound, Antigua and Barbuda
Umpires: Asad Rauf and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Jacob Oram
Chris Gayle 44 (56)
Jacob Oram 3/23 (8 overs)
Scott Styris 80* (90)
Daren Powell 2/39 (10 overs)

March 30, 2007
vswon by 48 runs
Providence Stadium, Georgetown, Guyana
Umpires: Billy Doctrove and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Paul Collingwood
Paul Collingwood 90 (82)
Boyd Rankin 2/28 (7 overs)
Niall O'Brien 63 (88)
Andrew Flintoff 4/43 (8.1 overs)

March 31, 2007
vswon by 10 wickets
Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound, Antigua and Barbuda
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Billy Bowden
Man of the Match: Glenn McGrath
Mashrafe Mortaza 25* (17)
Glenn McGrath 3/16 (5 overs)
Adam Gilchrist 59* (44)
Abdur Razzak 0/15 (3 overs)
*Wet outfield delayed start. Match reduced to 22 overs a side.

April 1, 2007
vs West Indies
190 all out (44.3 overs)
won by 113 runs
Providence Stadium, Georgetown, Guyana
Umpires: Mark Benson and Daryl Harper
Man of the Match: Sanath Jayasuriya
Sanath Jayasuriya 115 (101)
Daren Powell 2/38 (10 overs)
Shivnarine Chanderpaul 76 (110)
Sanath Jayasuriya 3/38 (8.3 overs)

April 2, 2007
vswon by 9 wickets
Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound, Antigua and Barbuda
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Shane Bond
Mohammad Rafique 30* (36)
Scott Styris 4/43 (10 overs)
Stephen Fleming 102* (92)
Syed Rasel 1/22 (7 overs)

April 3, 2007
vswon by 7 wickets (DL)
Providence Stadium, Georgetown, Guyana
Umpires: Daryl Harper and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Jacques Kallis
Andrew White 30 (30)
Charl Langeveldt 3/41 (7 overs)
Jacques Kallis 66* (86)
Boyd Rankin 2/26 (7 overs)
*Match shortened due to rain; Duckworth-Lewis revised target to win: 160 runs in 35 overs for South Africa.

April 4, 2007
vswon by 2 runs
Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound, Antigua and Barbuda
Umpires: Asad Rauf and Billy Bowden
Man of the Match: Ravi Bopara
Upul Tharanga 62 (103)
Sajid Mahmood 4/50 (9 overs)
Kevin Pietersen 58 (80)
Dilhara Fernando 3/41 (9 overs)

April 7, 2007
vswon by 67 runs
Providence Stadium, Georgetown, Guyana
Umpires: Mark Benson and Billy Doctrove
Man of the Match: Mohammad Ashraful
Mohammad Ashraful 87 (83)
Andre Nel 5/45 (10 overs)
Herschelle Gibbs 56* (59)
Abdur Razzak 3/25 (9.4 overs)

April 8, 2007
vswon by 7 wickets
Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound, Antigua and Barbuda
Umpires: Billy Bowden and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Shaun Tait
Kevin Pietersen 104 (122)
Nathan Bracken 3/33 (10 overs)
Ricky Ponting 86 (106)
Andrew Flintoff 1/35 (10 overs)

April 9, 2007
vswon by 129 runs
Providence Stadium, Georgetown, Guyana
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Peter Fulton
Peter Fulton 83 (110)
Kyle McCallan 2/35 (10 overs)
Kevin O'Brien 49 (45)
Daniel Vettori 4/23 (8.4 overs)

April 10, 2007
vs West Indies
289/9 (50 overs)
won by 67 runs
Queen's Park, St George's, Grenada
Umpires: Mark Benson and Daryl Harper
Man of the Match: AB de Villiers
AB de Villiers 146 (129)
Corey Collymore 2/41 (10 overs)
Ramnaresh Sarwan 92 (75)
Shaun Pollock 2/33 (8 overs)

April 11, 2007
vswon by 4 wickets
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Sajid Mahmood
Shakib Al Hasan 57* (95)
Monty Panesar 3/25 (7 overs)
Michael Vaughan 30 (59)
Syed Rasel 2/25 (10 overs)

April 12, 2007
vswon by 6 wickets
Queen's Park, St George's, Grenada
Umpires: Asad Rauf and Billy Doctrove
Man of the Match: Chaminda Vaas
Scott Styris 111* (157)
M Muralitharan 3/32 (10 overs)
Kumar Sangakkara 69* (104)
Daniel Vettori 2/35 (10 overs)

April 13, 2007
vswon by 9 wickets
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
Umpires: Billy Bowden and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Glenn McGrath
John Mooney 23 (44)
Glenn McGrath 3/17 (7 overs)
Adam Gilchrist 34 (25)
Trent Johnston 1/18 (3 overs)

April 14, 2007
vswon by 5 wickets
Queen's Park, St George's, Grenada
Umpires: Mark Benson and Daryl Harper
Man of the Match: Craig McMillan
Herschelle Gibbs 60 (100)
Craig McMillan 3/23 (5 overs)
Scott Styris 56 (84)
Andre Nel 2/33 (9.2 overs)

April 15, 2007
vswon by 74 runs
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
Umpires: Billy Bowden and Steve Bucknor
Man of the Match: William Porterfield
William Porterfield 85 (136)
Mashrafe Mortaza 2/38 (10 overs)
Mohammad Ashraful 35 (36)
Kyle McCallan 2/25 (8 overs)

April 16, 2007
vswon by 7 wickets
Queen's Park, St George's, Grenada
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Billy Doctrove
Man of the Match: Nathan Bracken
Mahela Jayawardene 72 (88)
Nathan Bracken 4/19 (9.4 overs)
Ricky Ponting 66* (80)
Russel Arnold 2/20 (4 overs)

April 17, 2007
vswon by 9 wickets
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Andrew Hall
Andrew Strauss 46 (67)
Andrew Hall 5/18 (10 overs)
Graeme Smith 89* (58)
Andrew Flintoff 1/36 (6 overs)

April 18, 2007
vswon by 8 wickets
Queen's Park, St George's, Grenada
Umpires: Mark Benson and Billy Doctrove
Man of the Match: Farveez Maharoof
Jeremy Bray 20 (29)
Farveez Maharoof 4/25 (10 overs)
Mahela Jayawardene 39* (27)
Boyd Rankin 1/36 (4 overs)

April 19, 2007
West Indies 
230/5 (50 overs)
vs West Indies won by 99 runs
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
Umpires: Billy Bowden and Rudi Koertzen
Man of the Match: Ramnaresh Sarwan
Ramnaresh Sarwan 91* (90)
Mashrafe Mortaza 1/39 (10 overs)
Mushfiqur Rahim 38* (75)
Daren Powell 3/38 (10 overs)

April 20, 2007
vswon by 215 runs
Queen's Park, St George's, Grenada
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Asad Rauf
Man of the Match: Matthew Hayden
Matthew Hayden 103 (100)
James Franklin 3/74 (8 overs)
Peter Fulton 62 (72)
Brad Hogg 4/29 (6.5 overs)

April 21, 2007
West Indies 
300 all out (49.5 overs)
vswon by 1 wicket
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
Umpires: Rudi Koertzen and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Kevin Pietersen
Chris Gayle 79 (58)
Michael Vaughan 3/39 (10 overs)
Kevin Pietersen 100 (91)
Dwayne Bravo 2/47 (9.5)

Knockout stage

 Semi-finalsFinal
       
24 April - Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
 2 289/5 
 3 208 
 
28 April - Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
    215/8
  281/4
25 April - Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
 1 153/3
 4 149 

Semi-finals

24 April 2007 1430 UTC
vswon by 81 runs
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica
Umpires: Rudi Koertzen and Simon Taufel
Man of the Match: Mahela Jayawardene
Mahela Jayawardene 115* (109)
James Franklin 2/46 (9 overs)
Peter Fulton 46 (77)
Muttiah Muralitharan 4/31 (8 overs)

25 April 2007 1330 UTC
vswon by 7 wickets
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia
Umpires: Aleem Dar and Steve Bucknor
Man of the Match: Glenn McGrath
Justin Kemp 49* (91)
Shaun Tait 4/39 (10 overs)
Michael Clarke 60* (86)
Shaun Pollock 1/16 (5 overs)

Final

28 April 2007 1330 UTC
vswon by 53 runs (DL)
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and Aleem Dar
Man of the Match: Adam Gilchrist
Adam Gilchrist 149 (104)
Lasith Malinga 2/49 (8 overs)
Sanath Jayasuriya 63 (67)
Michael Clarke 2/30 (4 overs)
*Match reduced to 38 overs per side due to rain. Sri Lanka's innings interrupted by rain and reduced to 36 overs.


This was the first World Cup final to be a repeat – the sides previously met in the 1996 World Cup final, which Sri Lanka won. Australia has won every World Cup match against Sri Lanka apart from that loss.[23] The match was Sri Lanka's second World Cup final appearance and Australia's sixth, their fourth in a row.
Enlarge picture
A large crowd of over 10,000 fans welcome to the Australian team on completing the first World Cup hat-trick - Martin Place, Sydney.
Ricky Ponting won the toss and elected to bat. However, the start of play was delayed due to rain, and the match was reduced to 38 overs per side. Adam Gilchrist played an incredible innings of 149 - the highest for any batsman in a World Cup final - to give Australia an imposing total going in at to break.[24] While Sri Lankan batsmen Kumar Sangakkara and Sanath Jayasuriya were adding 116 for the second wicket, the contest was alive, but after the pair got out, Sri Lanka's chance's slowly washed way.<ref name="final" /> Further rain forced the reduction of Sri Lanka's innings to just 36 overs, with the target revised to 269. At the culmination of the 33rd over, with Sri Lanka still trailing the adjusted Duckworth-Lewis target by 37 runs, the umpires suspended the game due to bad light. While Australia's players began to celebrate their victory (since the minimum 20 overs had been reached), the umpires incorrectly announced that because the match was suspended due to light and not rain, the final three overs would have to be bowled the following day. With Sri Lanka needing 61 runs from 18 deliveries, Mahela Jayawardene agreed there was no need to return the following day, and instructed his team to resume batting, with Ricky Ponting agreeing to play only spinners. Umpires later apologized for their error, and that the match should have ended then with Australia winning by 37 runs.[25] During the last three overs, Sri Lanka added nine runs, giving Australia a 53-run victory via the DL method, as Sri Lanka had batted 2 overs fewer than Australia.[26]

Australia won the tournament undefeated, concluding a streak of 29 World Cup games without a loss.[27] Australian bowler Glenn McGrath was named 'Player of the Series'.[28]

Records

2007 Cricket World Cup Records
Record Performance Player Country
Most runs
659M Hayden
548M Jayawardene
539R Ponting
Most wickets
26G McGrath
23M Muralitharan
S Tait
Most dismissals
(wicketkeeper)
17A Gilchrist
15K Sangakkara
14B McCullum
Most catches
(fielder)
8P Collingwood
G Smith
7H Gibbs
E Morgan
M Hayden
R Ponting
Source: Cricinfo.com

Overview

Notable events

  • Ireland tied their first match against Zimbabwe, only the third time a tie had occurred in the World Cup.
  • Ricky Ponting's 113 against Scotland was his 4th century in World Cup matches. He joined Mark Waugh, Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly in the list of highest century makers in World cups.
  • Herschelle Gibbs hit six sixes in one Daan van Bunge over for South Africa against the Netherlands in their Group A match in Warner Park, Saint Kitts and Nevis, becoming the first player to achieve the feat in ODI cricket.
  • South African batsmen hit 18 sixes in the game against the Netherlands; This is the highest number of sixes hit in an innings of a World Cup ODI. This record was equalled by India in the game against Bermuda.
  • Brendon McCullum scored the fastest World Cup fifty (off 20 balls) for New Zealand against Canada, beating Mark Boucher's 21-ball record set against the Netherlands six days earlier.
  • Bangladesh earned qualification from the group stage in a World Cup for the first time, by beating India and Bermuda. Bangladesh later went on to beat South Africa in the Super 8 stage.
  • Ireland defeated Pakistan in their group match and knocked them out of the tournament in the process. Ireland proceeded to qualify for the Super 8 stages in their first ever World Cup.
  • Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer was found dead in his hotel room the day after his team's defeat against Ireland. Murder investigation was launched due to the circumstances of Woolmer's death, but Jamaican police have since confirmed Woolmer died from natural causes.
  • Imran Nazir scored 160 for Pakistan against Zimbabwe in their final Group Stage match; this was the highest individual List A innings ever made in the West Indies.
  • Pakistan captain Inzamam-ul-Haq announced his retirement from one-day cricket, and resigned from the Pakistan captaincy, effective from the conclusion of Pakistan's involvement in the tournament.
  • Disciplinary action was taken against several English players for breaking their curfew: several players were fined and Andrew Flintoff was stripped of the English vice-captaincy and left out of their group match against Canada.
  • India scored 413-5 in 50 overs against Bermuda, breaking the World Cup record for the highest team total, and became the first team to score 400 runs in a World Cup innings. It was also the highest List A team total ever made in the West Indies. India bowled out Bermuda for 156 to win by 257 runs, the largest winning margin in ODIs.
  • Matthew Hayden scored the fastest World Cup hundred (off 66 balls) for Australia against South Africa, one ball quicker than the previous record.
  • Both Herschelle Gibbs and Matthew Hayden were awarded honorary citizenship of Saint Kitts and Nevis after their individual record-breaking feats.[29]
  • Lasith Malinga became the fifth player to record a hat-trick in the World Cup, taking three wickets in succession for Sri Lanka against South Africa, and with his next delivery proceeded to become the first player ever to take four wickets in four consecutive balls in international cricket.
  • Glenn McGrath became the leading wicket taker in the history of the World Cup, taking his 56th World Cup wicket against Bangladesh, overtaking Wasim Akram's 55 wicket total.
  • West-Indies captain Brian Lara announced his retirement from all forms of cricket.
  • Following Ireland's successful World Cup debut: defeating two full members (Pakistan and Bangladesh), Ireland was promoted to the main ODI championship table.[30]
  • Ireland's wins against Pakistan and Bangladesh boosted their team's ODI rank to number 10 ahead of Kenya and full member Zimbabwe.
  • Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden put on 76 for the first wicket in the Super-8 game against Sri Lanka. This was their 40th partnership of over 50 runs. The previous highest was 39 partnerships of over 50 runs between Desmond Haynes and Gordon Greenidge of the West Indies.
  • Matthew Hayden's century against New Zealand was the 100th time a century was scored in the World Cup and the third time any individual player scored three centuries in one tournament. He joins Mark Waugh and Sourav Ganguly as the only players to score three centuries in a World Cup.
  • By officating in the England - West Indies match Rudi Koertzen overtook David Shepherd as the most capped umpire in ODI's. The match was Koertzen's 173rd ODI. Shepherd officated in 172 ODIs.
  • Steve Bucknor officiated in a record fifth consecutive World Cup final.
  • Sri Lankan player Russel Arnold announced his retirement from international cricket.
  • After more than a decade at the helm, New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming resigned the captaincy of New Zealand's one-day team in the wake of his team's defeat in the Semi-Final of the World Cup against Sri Lanka at Sabina Park. He captained New Zealand team in 218 one-day matches.
  • Australia created history by participating in their 4th consecutive Cricket World Cup final.
  • South Africa's score of 149 all out against Australia in the semi-final was their lowest World Cup score ever.
  • Glenn McGrath's haul of 3 wickets against South Africa lifted his wicket tally to 25 in the tournament, the most in a World Cup so far.
  • Matthew Hayden's innings of 41 against South Africa brought up the remarkable 600 runs in a tournament, becoming the 2nd person to do so. He achieved a further 38 runs in the final against Sri Lanka, leaving him 14 short of Sachin Tendulkar's record of 673 runs.
  • The 172-run partnership between Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden is the highest opening partnership in a World Cup final.
  • Adam Gilchrist became the 5th batsman to score a century in the Cricket World Cup final in 2007 after Clive Lloyd in 1975, Viv Richards in 1979, Aravinda de Silva in 1996 and Ricky Ponting in 2003. His score of 149 is the highest individual score ever in the final of the World Cup beating the previous highest of 140* by Ricky Ponting in 2003.
  • Australia became the first team to win 3 consecutive World Cups.
  • Glenn McGrath retired from all forms of international cricket following the successful campaign.

Death of Bob Woolmer



Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer was found dead on 18 March 2007, one day after his team's defeat to Ireland put them out of the running for the World Cup. Jamaican police performed an autopsy which was deemed inconclusive.[31] The following day police announced that the death was suspicious and ordered a full investigation.[32] Further investigation revealed the cause of death was "manual strangulation",[33] and that the investigation would be handled as a murder.[34]. After a lengthy investigation the Jamaican police rescinded the comments that he was murdered, and confirmed that he died from natural causes.[35]

Criticism

The 2007 World Cup organizers were criticized early on for being over-commercialized and, in particular, the generally smaller crowds have been blamed on the ICC's security restrictions on things such as outside food, signs, replica kits and musical instruments, despite Caribbean cricketing customs,[36] as well as the authorities being accused of "running [cricket and cricketing traditions] out of town, then sanitising it out of existence".[37] Sir Viv Richards echoed the concerns.[38] The ICC were also condemned for high prices for tickets and concessions, which were considered unaffordable for the local population in many of the locations.[39] ICC CEO, Malcolm Speed, said that the ICC recognized the problem but said it was the local organizers' fault.[40] However, the later matches had more crowds as the tournament progressed with the local organizers easing restrictions.[41] Although they did not meet the target of US$42m, the revenue from ticket sales was double the ticket sales revenue from the last world cup and recorded the highest ticketing revenue for a Cricket World Cup with more than $32 million in ticket revenue.[42] [43]<ref name="Attendance" />

The tournament was also criticised as overlong. At 6 weeks, it was the same length as the 2003 World Cup, but longer than the 5 week 1999 World Cup and the 4 week 1996 World Cup. The famous West Indian fast bowler Michael Holding also criticised the qualification process for the 2007 World Cup. Holding expressed doubts over the benefit to less established teams of turning up and being heavily defeated.[44] However, former Scotland captain George Salmond claims that the opportunity to play one-day cricket against the bigger teams is invaluable for smaller teams such as his own, and questioned the validity of Holding's statements.[45] The majority of the experts and players participating in the tournament backed up the smaller teams taking part in the World Cup.[46] This was further backed up with Ireland and Bangladesh making the Super 8s and being competitive and sportsmanlike throughout the tournament.[47]

Further criticism was generated by the confusion at the end of the final match, during which the umpires suspended play due to bad light and while official announcements and the scoreboard declared Australia the winners and the Australian team celebrated, while the umpires incorrectly insisted that the game was only suspended not completed, and that 3 overs remained to be played. And so in farcical light conditions, Sri Lanka batted out the 3 overs following a gentleman's agreement between the two captains.[48] The umpires and ICC apologized for the unnecessary situation and cited it as a unnecessary fundamental error due to the pressure of the situation.[49] In June the ICC announced that the officials involved — onfield umpires Steve Bucknor and Aleem Dar, reserve umpires Rudi Koertzen and Billy Bowden, and match referee Jeff Crowe — would all be suspended from the 2007 Twenty20 World Championship. [50]

Preparation problems

A number of preparation problems surfaced before the start of the World Cup. Some of the venues were not complete by the opening ceremony on 11 March 2007.[51] At Sabina Park, seats had to be removed at the newly constructed north-stand due to safety concerns.[52] At Trelawny Stadium in Jamaica, ground staff were unable to gain admission to the ground during the warm up matches due to accreditation problems.[53] Additionally, South Africa and Australia both expressed concerns over practice facilities.[54]

See also

Notes

1. ^ In terms of number of wins, win percentage, and number of cups won. In fact, they were on top on all of these criteria from 1975 to 1987, and only in 2003 did Australia pass their number of cups won.
2. ^ Stadium named after Richards getting ready. The Hindu (India). Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
3. ^ Kensington Oval cost. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
4. ^ Providence Stadium cost Guyana Providence Stadium - Progress Information (2007-02-18). Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
5. ^ Mayor Mckenzie Lobbies for Sabina Park to Host World Cup Cricket (2004-02-24). Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
6. ^ The Saint Lucia Bid for Cricket World Cup West Indies 2007. Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
7. ^ More planning needed for Cricket World Cup (2006-07-09). Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
8. ^ Robert Bryan, executive director, Jamaica 2007 Cricket Limited (from www.jamaica-gleaner.com). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
9. ^ World Cup 2007: Eyes Wide Shut by Claude Robinson from www.caribbeancricket.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
10. ^ Cricket: 'Run wid it again!' (2006-04-24). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
11. ^ Mark Pouchet (2006-09-21). Brian Lara stadium exits World Cup. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
12. ^ Sponsorship revenue. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
13. ^ Taipai Times Editorial. Retrieved on 2007-04-18.
14. ^ World Cup Overview. cricketworldcp.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-29.
15. ^ [1]World Cup profits boost debt-ridden Windies board}
16. ^ ICC CWC 2007 Match Attendance Soars Past 400,000. Cricketworld.com (2007-04-24). Retrieved on 2007-04-25.
17. ^ Associate ODI Rankins after WCL Division 1. ICC (2007-02-13). Retrieved on 2007-05-24. - Note: The ODIs in the WCL Division 1 were the last ODIs played by associates before the World Cup.
18. ^ ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 match schedule announced (from icc-cricket.org; explains that there are 51 ODIs scheduled but that only fits with the main tournament). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
19. ^ ICC Playing Conditions for 2007 World Cup. Retrieved on February 27, 2007.
20. ^ ICC Playing Conditions for 2007 World Cup. Retrieved on February 27, 2007.
21. ^ World Cup seedings plan announced. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
22. ^ Langeveldt and Malinga jointly awarded Man of the Match. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
23. ^ Australia v Sri Lanka: World Cup Series Summary. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2007-04-28.
24. ^ Gilchrist leads Australia to World Cup treble. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2007-05-06.
25. ^ World Cup Referee apologize. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
26. ^ World Cup final scorecard. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
27. ^ Australia v Sri Lanka, World Cup final, Barbados. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
28. ^ ICC World Cup - Final. Cricinfo (2007-04-28). Retrieved on 2007-04-28.
29. ^ Hayden finds passport to World Cup success, Cricinfo, 26 March, 2007, accessed on 24 May, 2007.
30. ^ "Ireland qualifies for LG ICC ODI Championship", International Cricket Council, 16 April 2007. Retrieved on 2007-05-25.2007"> 
31. ^ "Woolmer's post-mortem inconclusive", CricInfo, 2007-03-20. Retrieved on 2007-03-23. 
32. ^ "Woolmer's death 'suspicious' - police", CricInfo, 2007-03-21. Retrieved on 2007-03-23. 
33. ^ Raedler, John. "Woolmer was strangled, police say", cnn.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-24. 
34. ^ "Pakistan Woolmer death treated as murder", BBC, 2007-03-23. Retrieved on 2007-03-23. 
35. ^ "Woolmer 'dIED OF NATURAL CAUSES'", BBC, 2007-06-12. Retrieved on 2007-06-12. 
36. ^ Tim de Lisle (2007-04-03). A public relations disaster. Cricinfo. Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
37. ^ Mike Selvey (2007-04-05). Weep for the ghosts of calypsos past in this lifeless forum. The Guardian. Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
38. ^ Richards attacks Cup organisation. BBC (2007-04-05). Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
39. ^ Crushing the essence of the Caribbean. Cricinfo (2007-04-05). Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
40. ^ Quote ... unquote. Cricinfo (2007). Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
41. ^ Barbados determined to restore local flavour. Cricinfo (2007-04-05). Retrieved on 2007-05-24.
42. ^ World Cup profits boost debt-ridden Windies board
43. ^ Ticket sales double of previous World Cup - Dehring. Cricinfo (2007-04-16). Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
44. ^ Holding slams World Cup minnows (2007-02-20). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
45. ^ cricket.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1659807.cms. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
46. ^ Bermuda have 'wonderful experience' in huge loss. Cricinfo (2007-03-16). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
47. ^ Ireland qualifies for ODI Championship. ICC (2007-04-22). Retrieved on 2007-04-22.
48. ^ Awesome Australia but awful organising. Cricinfo (2007-04-28). Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
49. ^ Speed apologises for light chaos. Cricinfo (2007-04-28). Retrieved on 2007-04-30.
50. ^ World Cup officials banned by ICC. Cricinfo (2007-06-22). Retrieved on 2007-06-24.
51. ^ Some Cup venues still not ready (2007-03-11). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
52. ^ A week before the opening Cricket World Cup game, chinks appear at Sabina Park (2007-03-11). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
53. ^ Michael Atherton (2007-03-12). Hosts hope calm is not followed by a storm. The Sunday Telegraph. Retrieved on 2007-04-09.
54. ^ Warmup matches start amid last minute preparations (2007-03-04). Retrieved on 2007-04-09.

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