Sport
Australia chase rare treble, cricket eyes toehold in US
The 20-team tournament set to kick off in the United States and the Caribbean
May 29, 2024 | 11:22 PM
Australia will be aiming to become the first team to possess all three of cricket’s global titles at the same time, but a bigger success will be if the T20 World Cup next month can help the game crack a lucrative market in the United States.Australia won a hat-trick of one-day World Cups between 1999-2007 and, going by their heady success in recent global events, they are close to recreating that ‘golden era’.Under Pat Cummins, they won the World Test Championship title and the one-day World Cup last year - beating a formidable India in both the finals.The onus is now on Mitchell Marsh to lead Australia to another successful campaign, which would make them the reigning world champions in all three formats of the game.It is not going to be a cakewalk of course.India have not won a global trophy in more than a decade despite dominating the business side of the game and coming agonisingly close on two occasions last year itself.That they run the world’s richest T20 league and yet have not won a 20-overs World Cup since the inaugural edition in 2007 does not sit well with the fans.It could well be the last limited-overs World Cup for captain Rohit Sharma and stalwart Virat Kohli and nothing would please their fans more than watching them do the victory lap on June 29 in Bridgetown.England’s 50-overs title defence fizzled out in India last year and they will do everything they can to prevent another meltdown, which could have serious ramifications on the future of captain Jos Buttler and coach Matthew Mott.They have gambled on Jofra Archer’s fitness despite the speedster’s several aborted comeback attempts from back and elbow injuries, while test captain Ben Stokes has opted out.Other challengersAlso in the reckoning will be Pakistan, who have brought back Babar Azam as captain of the side and appointed Gary Kirsten as the coach hoping their collaboration will yield a second T20 World Cup title for them.South Africa will arrive with a bunch of power-hitters but their bowling resources look rather thin, while New Zealand will be determined to shed their ‘nearly-man’ tag under Kane Williamson’s inspiring leadership.Co-hosts West Indies will also be in the reckoning having handed the coaching reins to Daren Sammy, who led them to both of their T20 World Cup titles.The ninth edition of the tournament will feature a record 20 teams, including the United States, who will be making their World Cup debut as the co-hosts of the event.The US will stage 16 matches, including the June 9 India v Pakistan blockbuster at the brand new 34,000-seater Nassau County International Cricket Stadium in Long Island, New York.There was considerable buzz around the launch of the Major League Cricket in the US last year and the 2028 Los Angeles Games will feature the T20 format for the first time at an Olympics.A successful organisation of the 20-team jamboree could go a long way in finally helping cricket gain foothold in a sporting landscape hugely dominated by baseball, basketball, ice hockey, American football, motor sports and golf among other games.FACTBOXThe following outlines the schedule, venues and prize money for the 2024 T20 World Cup in the United States and West Indies, as well as a list of past winners of the tournament which begins on June 1.DATES• The 9th edition of the 20-overs showpiece event will run from June 1-29.• It begins with hosts United States taking on CanadaTEAMS• The tournament will feature 20 teams, divided into four groups.• Group A - India, Pakistan, Canada, Ireland, United States (hosts)• Group B - England, Australia, Namibia, Scotland, Oman.• Group C - New Zealand, West Indies (hosts), Afghanistan, Papua New Guinea, Uganda• Group D - South Africa, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Netherlands, Nepal.• Teams in each group will face each other once in a round robin format. A win is worth two points and a tie or no result is worth one point each.• The top two teams from each group will progress to the Super 8s, where they will be divided into two groups of four each, and play each other in a round robin format.• The top two teams from each Super 8s group will go to the semi-finals.VENUES• Games are being staged at 9 stadiums - 6 in West Indies and 3 in the United States.• Stadiums in West Indies: Sir Vivian Richards Stadium (Antigua & Barbuda), Kensington Oval (Barbados), Providence Stadium (Guyana),Daren Sammy Cricket Ground (St Lucia), Arnos Vale Stadium (St Vincent & the Grenadines) and Brian Lara Cricket Academy (Trinidad & Tobago).• Stadiums in the United States: Central Broward Park (Florida), Nassau County International Cricket Stadium (New York), Grand Prairie Stadium (Texas).• The Kensington Oval in Bridgetown, Barbados, which has a capacity of 28,000, will host the final.PAST WINNERS2007: India beat Pakistan by 5 runs2009: Pakistan beat Sri Lanka by 8 wickets2010: England beat Australia by 7 wickets2012: West Indies beat Sri Lanka by 36 runs2014: Sri Lanka beat India by 6 wickets2016: West Indies beat England by 4 wickets2021: Australia beat New Zealand by 8 wickets2022: England beat Pakistan by 5 wickets
May 29, 2024 | 11:22 PM