With 100 days until the 2019 World Cup gets underway, might it be the year that England lift the global game's premier limited-overs trophy at long last?
Business
Standard : With 100 days until the 2019
World Cup gets underway, might it be the year that England lift
the global game's premier limited-overs trophy at long last? England
-- the pioneers of one-day cricket as a professional sport -- have
taken part in every World Cup since staging the inaugural men's event
in 1975.
But
all they have to show for their efforts are runners-up medals from
the 1979, 1987 and 1992 finals.
Test
cricket has long been the priority for everyone in English cricket,
be they players, fans or administrators.
That
changed, however, after another World Cup group-stage exit at the
2015 edition in Australia and New Zealand was sealed with a woeful
loss to Bangladesh.
Then
England and Wales Cricket Board supremo Andrew Strauss decreed that
white-ball cricket would no longer be the "poor relation",
with the former England
captain sacking head coach Peter Moores and bringing in Australian
Trevor Bayliss specifically to turn round the team's limited-overs
form.
The
transformation has been remarkable with a newly-liberated England
twice setting new records for the highest ODI totals -- their 444 for
three against Pakistan at Trent Bridge in 2016 a prelude to last
year's colossal 481 for six at the same ground.
England,
captained in 50-over cricket by former Ireland batsman Eoin Morgan,
with the side featuring Test skipper Joe Root and the hard-hitting
talents of Jason Roy, Alex Hales and Jos Buttler, now sit atop the
ODI world rankings heading into their upcoming five-match series away
to the West Indies.
'Now
is the time'
"We
can say we were the best ODI side to play for England... but without
a trophy, it will be difficult to say that," said all-rounder
Moeen Ali, looking to help England's men win just their second major
global event following the 2010 World Twenty20 in the Caribbean.
"We
have come close and we feel now is the time."
"We
don't feel we have to win it, it's more 'this is the time to win it'.
We are an amazing side but we know this year is massive for us,"
added Moeen, with England, as was the case in 1975, playing host to a
World Cup and an Ashes series in the same season.
But
unlike that first eight-team edition 43 years ago, which featured two
then non-Test sides in East Africa and the long since elevated Sri
Lanka, this year's event will be a 10-team affair contested solely by
Test nations.
No comments:
Post a Comment