1985 World Championship of Cricket final

The 1985 World Championship of Cricket Final was a One Day International (ODI) match played on 10 March 1985 between India and Pakistan at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne.[1] Popularly known as World Championship of Cricket, this ODI tournament was held from 17 February to 10 March 1985 in Australia and it marked the culmination of the only World Championship of Cricket with India defeating Pakistan by 8 wickets.[2][3]

1985 World Championship of Cricket Final
Melbourne Cricket Ground
EventWorld Championship of Cricket
Pakistan India
Pakistan India
176/9 177/2
50 overs 47.1 overs
India won by 8 wickets
Date10 March 1985
VenueMelbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne
Player of the matchKrishnamachari Srikkanth (Ind)

Road to the Final edit

India reached the final by defeating New Zealand by seven wickets.[4]

After the group stages, the expected outcome was that the 1983 Cricket World Cup finalists India and West Indies would meet again in the final of the World Championship. India held up their end of the bargain by beating New Zealand in the first semi final, however Pakistan produced the one major upset of the tournament to beat West Indies by seven wickets.[5]

Details edit

Heading into the match, Pakistan had to play Azeem Hafeez instead of Wasim Akram, from their semi-final victory over West Indies while India made one change with Chetan Sharma replacing Roger Binny from their victory over New Zealand. Pakistan skipper Javed Miandad won the toss and elected to bat. Kapil Dev had Pakistan reeling at 29/3 as he dismissed Mudassar Nazar, Mohsin Khan and Qasim Umar. Soon Rameez Raja was dismissed by Sharma cheaply, but Captain Javed Miandad and Imran Khan steadied Pakistan with 68 runs partnership after both had been controversially given not out by umpire Raymond Isherwood, having edged deliveries to the wicketkeeper. Ironically for India, Imran was yet to open his account. Finally the partnership was broken as Imran was run out for 35. Later Saleem Malik and Javed Miandad, both got dismissed by L Sivaramakrishnan with the same score reading 131.

At one stage, Pakistan were 145/9 in 42 overs, but Wasim Raja, the last official batsman for Pakistan remained unbeaten on 21 as he pushed the score with the help of tailender Azeem Hafeez. At the end of the stipulated 50 overs, Pakistan made only 176 for 9, a below par score in a final. For India, Kapil Dev claimed three wickets, While Sharma, Madan Lal and Mohinder Amarnath had economical spell of under 3 runs per over. 19-year-old leg spinner Laxman Sivaramakrishnan had been a revelation during the tournament and produced another superb spell in the final claiming 3 wickets. It was the first time, in the tournament, that India had failed to bowl out the opposition. India bagged 49 out of a maximum possible 50 wickets in the tournament.

Indian openers Ravi Shastri and Krishnamachari Srikkanth, each had wonderful tournament and chasing the target of 177 to win, their century opening stand did most of the work for their strong batting line-up. Finally Srikkanth was dismissed for 67 by Imran. Azharuddin had a 39 runs partnership with Shastri before being dismissed for 25. Ravi Shastri and Vengsarkar remained unbeaten on 63 and 18 respectively as Indian chased down 177 in 47.1 overs. None of the Pakistan bowlers threatened Indian batsmen, even though Imran Khan, Azeem Hafeez, Tahir Naqqash and Mudassar Nazar had economical spells. For their consistency, at the end of the match, Srikkanth won the Player of the Match award, while Shastri was named the player of the tournament, or as it was known, the Champion of Champions.[6][7] He was awarded his prize of an Audi 100 motor car, valued at A$35,000 and immediately drove it around the MCG with his entire team sitting either in or on the car[8][9] The attendance of 35,296 in the match was the highest in Australia at a match in which the home side was not involved

Scorecard edit

[1]

Pakistan batting
Player Status Runs Balls 4s 6s Strike rate
Mudassar Nazar c Vishwanath b Kapil Dev 14 39 0 0 35.89
Mohsin Khan c Azharuddin b Kapil Dev 5 17 4 0 29.41
Rameez Raja c Srikkanth b Sharma 4 12 0 0 33.33
Qasim Umar b Kapil Dev 0 1 0 0 0.00
Javed Miandad * st Vishwanath b Sivaramakrishnan 48 92 2 0 52.17
Imran Khan run out 35 67 2 0 52.23
Saleem Malik c Sharma b Sivaramakrishnan 14 14 0 0 100.00
Wasim Raja not out 21 26 1 0 80.76
Tahir Naqqash c Vishwanath b Shastri 10 8 1 0 125.00
Anil Dalpat c Shastri b Sivaramakrishnan 0 2 0 0 0.00
Azeem Hafeez not out 7 28 0 0 25.00
Extras (b 7) (lb 8) (nb 2) (w 1) 18
Total (9 wickets; 50 overs) 176

Fall of wickets: 1-17 (Mohsin Khan), 2-29 (Mudassar Nazar), 3-29 (Qasim Umar), 4-33 (Ramiz Raja), 5-101 (Imran Khan), 6-131 (Saleem Malik), 7-131 (Javed Miandad), 8-142 (Tahir Naqqash), 9-145 (Anil Dalpat)

India bowling
Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Econ Wides NBs
Kapil Dev 9 1 23 3 2.55 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Chetan Sharma 7 1 17 1 2.42 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Madan Lal 6 1 15 0 2.50 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
M Amarnath 9 0 27 0 3.00 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Ravi Shastri 10 0 44 1 4.40 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
L Sivaramakrishnan 9 0 35 3 3.88 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}


India batting
Player Status Runs Balls 4s 6s Strike rate
Ravi Shastri not out 63 148 3 0 42.56
K Srikkanth c Wasim Raja b Imran Khan 67 77 6 2 87.01
M Azharuddin b Tahir Naqqash 25 26 3 0 96.15
DB Vengsarkar not out 18 32 0 0 56.25
SM Gavaskar * did not bat 0 0 0 0 00.00
Mohinder Amarnath did not bat 0 0 0 0 00.00
Kapil Dev did not bat 0 0 0 0 00.00
Madan Lal did not bat 0 0 0 0 00.00
Chetan Sharma did not bat 0 0 0 0 00.00
Sadanand Viswanath did not bat 0 0 0 0 00.00
L Sivaramakrishnan did not bat 0 0 0 0 00.00
Extras (lb 2, w 2) 4
Total (2 wickets; 47.1 overs) 177

Fall of wickets: 1-103 (Kris Srikkanth), 2-142 (Mohammad Azharuddin)

Pakistan bowling
Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets Econ Wides NBs
Imran Khan 10 3 28 1 2.80 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Azeem Hafeez 10 1 29 0 2.29 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Tahir Naqqash 10 2 35 1 3.50 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Wasim Raja 7.1 0 42 0 5.86 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Mudassar Nazar 8 0 26 0 3.25 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}
Saleem Malik 2 0 15 0 7.50 {{{wides}}} {{{no-balls}}}

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Final (D/N), Benson & Hedges World Championship of Cricket at Melbourne". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  2. ^ "Benson & Hedges World Championship of Cricket 1985". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  3. ^ "1985 World Championship of Cricket Final Highlights - India vs Pakistan". YouTube. 18 November 2012. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  4. ^ "1st SF (D/N), Benson & Hedges World Championship of Cricket". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  5. ^ "2nd SF (D/N), Benson & Hedges World Championship of Cricket". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  6. ^ Waingankar, Makarand (31 July 2013). "Ravi Shastri: This 'Champion of Champions' saw light at the end of the tunnel". The Times of India. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  7. ^ Vishwanath, G (10 March 2018). "On this day: Ravi Shastri crowned 'Champion of Champions'". The Sportstar. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  8. ^ Rebello, Maleeva. "When cricketer Ravi Shastri won an Audi way back in 1985". The Economic Times. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  9. ^ "Winning an ICC tournament a bloody obsession, going to chase it with my team: Ravi Shastri". India Today. 14 December 2019. Retrieved 19 March 2020.

External links edit