MATCH SCHEDULE




Pakistan tour of Australia: Dec 2009 to Jan 2010 : Match Schedule & Results



Dates
Match
Venue
Start Time/Result
26-31 Dec 2009
1st Test Match
Melbourne
11.00am local, 5.00am Pak, 00am UK
03-07 Jan 2010
2nd Test Match
Sydney
11.00am local, 5.00am Pak, 00am UK
14-18 Jan 2010
3rd Test Match
Hobart
11.00am local, 5.00am Pak, 00am UK
22 January 2010
1st ODI (D/N)
Brisbane
2.30pm local, 8.30am Pak, 3.30am UK
24 January 2010
2nd ODI (D/N)
Sydney
2.30pm local, 8.30am Pak, 3.30am UK
26 January 2010
3rd ODI (D/N)
Adelaide
2.30pm local, 8.30am Pak, 3.30am UK
29 January 2010
4th ODI (D/N)
Perth
12.30pm local, 9.30am Pak, 4.30am UK
31 January 2010
5th ODI (D/N)
Perth
12.30pm local, 9.30am Pak, 4.30am UK
5 February 2010
Only Twenty20
Melbourne
7.00pm local, 12.30pm Pak, 8.00am UK

Schedule: England tour of South Africa: 2009-2010 series


England tour of South Africa: November 2009 - January 2010

Dates
Match
Venue
Start Time
13 November
1st Twenty20
Johannesburg
6.00pm SA, 4.00pm UK
15 November
2nd Twenty20
Centurion
2.30pm SA, 12.30pm UK
20 November
1st ODI (D/N)
Johannesburg
2.30pm SA, 12.30pm UK
22 November
2nd ODI (Day)
Centurion
10.00am SA, 8.00am UK
27 November
3rd ODI (D/N)
Cape Town
2.30pm SA, 12.30pm UK
29 November
4th ODI (Day)
Port Elizabeth
10.00am SA, 8.00am UK
04 December
5th ODI (D/N)
Durban
2.30pm SA, 12.30pm UK
16 December
1st Test Match
Centurion
10.30am SA, 8.30am UK
26 December
2nd Test Match
Durban
10.30am SA, 8.30am UK
03 January
3rd Test Match
Cape Town
10.30am SA, 8.30am UK
14 January
4th Test Match
Johannesburg
10.30am SA, 8.30am UK



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ICC Champions Trophy, Final

Australia v New Zealand,

ICC Champions Trophy, Final, Centurion

The youngsters won it for us - Ponting





October 5, 2009









Ricky Ponting led Australia to their second successive Champions Trophy 

Ricky Ponting
has attributed Australia's Champions Trophy success to the efforts of
youngsters in his team, especially their performance in an occasionally
tense final.


"We have gone through some ups and downs in the
last 18 months. A number of great players have left and we brought in a
lot of young, fresh players. It was great to see some of them stand up
and deliver," Ponting said after Australia's six-wicket win over New
Zealand that gave them their second Champions Trophy title.

Australia's bowling performance in the final was led by Nathan Hauritz,
who grabbed 3 for 37, including the well-set Martin Guptill for 40.
Later, in their chase of 201, Australia were in trouble at 6 for 2 but Shane Watson
and Cameron White added 128 to put them in control. "Two young guys at
the crease at 6 for 2, it doesn't get any tougher and they did a great
job," Ponting said.

Australia came in to the tournament as favourites along with South
Africa, fresh from the success of a 6-1 ODI humiliation of England.
They beat West Indies in a tough contest in Johannesburg, were dominant
against India in a washed-out game and edged Pakistan in a two-wicket
win in Centurion. They were comprehensive winners in the semi-final
against England, Ponting and Shane Watson hammering centuries in a
nine-wicket win.


"In the ODI series in England after the Ashes, we
did well there to put ourselves in a position where we can give this
tournament a little bit of a shake," Ponting said. "We've played some
great cricket over the last couple of weeks here."


The Champions Trophy also brought personal success
for Ponting, as he emerged the highest run-getter with 288 at 72 in
four games. He was honoured with a golden bat for that feat, and
followed it up with the Man-of-the-Series award, ahead of Watson, who
finished the tournament with back-to-back centuries.

"We needed discipline today, and we knew that if I was around till the
40th over, we had a chance," Watson, who was Man of the Match, said
after his innings of 105. "It was set up with Ricky's help in the
semi-finals to get me through, and he missed out today, but it was time
for another to step up.


"The wicket today was a little slower than the
other night but Kyle Mills and Shane Bond bowled beautifully straight
up until me and White had a good partnership."

SCORECARD
Click here to find out more!













Australia won by 6 wickets (with 28 balls remaining)










New Zealand innings (50 overs maximum)
R
M
B
4s
6s
SR
View dismissal
BB McCullum*†
c †Paine b Siddle
0
16
14
0
0
0.00
View dismissal
AJ Redmond
st †Paine b Hauritz
26
84
45
3
0
57.77
View dismissal
MJ Guptill
c & b Hauritz
40
84
64
3
0
62.50
View dismissal
LRPL Taylor
c Hussey b Johnson
6
19
13
0
0
46.15
View dismissal
GD Elliott
lbw b Lee
9
22
9
0
0
100.00
View dismissal
NT Broom
run out (Hussey/Watson)
37
79
62
5
0
59.67
View dismissal
JEC Franklin
b Lee
33
68
43
4
0
76.74
View dismissal
KD Mills
run out (Ponting)
12
29
15
1
0
80.00
View dismissal
IG Butler
lbw b Hauritz
6
7
7
1
0
85.71

JS Patel
not out
16
31
19
1
0
84.21

SE Bond
not out
3
15
9
0
0
33.33

Extras
(b 1, lb 2, w 9)
12













Total
(9 wickets; 50 overs)
200
(4.00 runs per over)

Fall of wickets1-5 (McCullum, 3.2 ov), 2-66 (Redmond, 18.3 ov), 3-77 (Guptill, 22.2 ov), 4-81 (Taylor, 23.1 ov), 5-94 (Elliott, 26.4 ov), 6-159 (Broom, 40.5 ov), 7-166 (Franklin, 41.6 ov), 8-174 (Butler, 43.4 ov), 9-187 (Mills, 46.4 ov)










Bowling
O
M
R
W
Econ


View wickets
B Lee
10
1
45
2
4.50
(5w)

View wicket
PM Siddle
10
1
30
1
3.00


View wicket
MG Johnson
10
1
35
1
3.50
(1w)


SR Watson
10
0
50
0
5.00
(2w)

View wickets
NM Hauritz
10
0
37
3
3.70
(1w)










Australia innings (target: 201 runs from 50 overs)
R
M
B
4s
6s
SR

SR Watson
not out
105
203
129
10
4
81.39
View dismissal
TD Paine
c Taylor b Bond
1
5
6
0
0
16.66
View dismissal
RT Ponting*
lbw b Mills
1
5
4
0
0
25.00
View dismissal
CL White
b Mills
62
140
102
7
1
60.78
View dismissal
MEK Hussey
c Patel b Mills
11
18
9
1
0
122.22

JR Hopes
not out
22
32
22
4
0
100.00

Extras
(lb 3, w 1)
4













Total
(4 wickets; 45.2 overs; 203 mins)
206
(4.54 runs per over)
Did not bat CJ Ferguson,
MG Johnson,
B Lee,
NM Hauritz,
PM Siddle

Fall of wickets1-2 (Paine, 1.2 ov), 2-6 (Ponting, 2.2 ov), 3-134 (White, 34.5 ov), 4-156 (Hussey, 38.3 ov)










Bowling
O
M
R
W
Econ


View wickets
KD Mills
10
2
27
3
2.70


View wicket
SE Bond
10
2
34
1
3.40
(1w)


IG Butler
9
0
50
0
5.55



JEC Franklin
9
0
42
0
4.66



JS Patel
6.2
0
44
0
6.94



GD Elliott
1
0
6
0
6.00


PAKSITAN vs NEWZELAND

Live score card





YOUNIS KHAN




DANIEL VETTORI

Icc champions TROPHY

Ponting and Watson lead the rout
October 1, 2009
Text size: A | A


Australia 259 for 1 (Ponting 111*, Watson 136*) beat England 257 (Bresnan 80, Wright 48, Siddle 3-55) by nine wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out



Australia's cricketers proved that their recent 6-1 thrashing of England was neither an aberration nor entirely irrelevant, as Ricky Ponting and Shane Watson produced their country's highest partnership in limited-overs cricket, a majestic alliance of 252 in 242 balls, to power their side into Monday's final of the Champions Trophy.
Chasing a target of 258 that was swelled only by an improbable career-best from Tim Bresnan at No. 8, Australia sauntered to a nine-wicket victory against their favourite ODI opponents with a massive 49 balls to spare. Ponting chalked up his 28th one-day century, and his 12,000th run in the format, en route to an unbeaten 111 from 115 balls, while Watson provided the gloss finish with 136 not out from 132 balls, his third and highest hundred in 89 games.
Incredibly there were no Australian players named in the ODI Team of the Year that was unveiled at the ICC's annual awards ceremony on Thursday night, but the world's leading 50-over nation proved once more that they may be a side in transition, but they are by no means a spent force, as they secured the right to defend the title they won in India in October 2006. The end, when it came, was nose-rubbingly humiliating, as the Aussies claimed the batting Powerplay with 28 runs still required, and duly clobbered 23 of them in a single over from Paul Collingwood, including three of Watson's seven sixes, all from exuberant heaves through the leg-side. For a man who started the tournament with two ducks, it was a spectacular riposte.











England were utterly powerless to stem the tide, and in fact, the only thing that came close to upstaging Australia's canter to victory was the swarm of moths that flocked to sample Centurion's floodlights, and so delayed the start of their run-chase. Andrew Strauss won the toss, as he always does - this was his ninth in 11 ODIs in the past month, and his seventh out of eight against the Aussies - but after slashing a four and a six in his first eight deliveries, he was brilliantly caught by James Hopes at square leg in the second over of the match, and in so doing he set an unfortunate precedent for his team-mates.
After 20.2 overs of the match, England's spirited campaign was in ruins. They had chosen to bat with the same gung-ho aggression that had carried them to impressive wins against Sri Lanka and South Africa, but in so doing they shed six wickets for 101, and were in danger of being skittled with half of their overs remaining. Owais Shah followed his breathtaking 98 from 89 balls at this same venue on Sunday with a second-ball duck, and though Paul Collingwood bristled during a counterattacking 34, he was snaffled one-handed by the wicketkeeper Tim Paine, who claimed five catches in a hyperactive performance behind the stumps.
The rest of the specialist batsmen followed meekly. Joe Denly looked composed before falling in the thirties, as is his unfortunate habit, while Steven Davies - making his ODI debut after replacing the ill Matt Prior - lasted a mere four deliveries before inside-edging Watson onto his off stump. When Eoin Morgan carved at a cut to end a laboured innings of 9 from 27 balls, normal service was all set to be resumed, after England's whitewash-averting victory at Durham a fortnight ago.
But instead, Bresnan and Wright set about rebuilding from the very foundations of the innings, adding 107 for the seventh wicket in a performance that both put their colleagues to shame, and proved the placid nature of the surface. After bedding themselves in with discipline, Wright signalled the charge in the 35th over by smacking Nathan Hauritz for two sixes over midwicket, and though he was caught behind soon afterwards for 48, Bresnan continued to march onwards and upwards, using a good eye and a heavy bat to punish any error in line or length.
Bresnan was a late addition to the side after Stuart Broad failed to recover from a strained left buttock, and he entered the game with a slap on the wrists from the management after abusing a fan who had made fun of his weight on the social networking site, Twitter. With an improbable century on the cards, he was bowled by Brett Lee during the batting Powerplay, whereupon England's innings finished as disappointingly as it had begun, with a spate of run-outs curtailing their innings with 14 balls remaining.
After their insect interlude, Australia suffered an early setback when Graham Onions extracted Tim Paine in his first over, but from that moment on, they didn't ever look like being troubled. Ponting dealt almost exclusively in boundaries in the formative stage of his innings, with 28 of his first 29 runs coming in fours, while Watson's only genuine let-off came when Wright strayed out of position on the long-on boundary, and spilled a catch off Graeme Swann over the rope for his first six.
Australia's batsmen played formidably, but England's bowlers were way off the mark, consistently banging the ball in short in a bid to ruffle a few feathers, but instead offered far too many scoring opportunities. James Anderson, as ever, was the most potent attacking option, but even he lost his groove after a hideous piece of fielding from Morgan, who collected the ball in the covers and winged a wild shy clean over the keeper's head for four. Ponting, the beneficiary, followed up with three more boundaries from the next five balls that Anderson bowled at him.
In the end, there was an inevitability to Australia's destructive denouement. England's campaign has been one of their most successful forays into one-day cricket for many a long year, but they still managed only a 50-50 success rate in their four games, never mind the humiliating margin of this latest contest. Australia, meanwhile, march onwards towards another yet slice of silverware. Ponting's emotional celebrations of his century spoke volumes of his continuing resolve. On this form, it will not matter who they face in the final.