India Drawn With Sri Lanka And South Africa For World Cup 1999 (23 Jul 1996)
As the World Cup, after two outings in the Indian subcontinent and a detour to Australia-New Zealand, returns to England in 1999, the host nation found itself drawn with India, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and the team
23-Jul-1996
23 July 1996
India drawn with Sri Lanka, S`Africa, for 1999 World Cup
By Our Correspondent
As the World Cup, after two outings in the Indian subcontinent and a detour to Australia-New Zealand, returns to
England in 1999, the host nation found itself drawn with India,
South Africa, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and the team which comes
runner-up in the ICC Trophy which will be played in Malaysia next
year.
The other group will have Australia, Pakistan, West Indies, New
Zealand and the winner of the ICC Cup.
Each team will play five round robin games, unlike in the
Wills World Cup earlier this year when each team played the others in the group twice. Again, in a departure from the 1996 model
which had four quarterfinalists per group, the England World
Cup of 1999 will have three teams progressing to the next round.
Round two will see the top three teams in Group A playing the top
three teams in Group B. These nine games will decide the final
league positions, and the top four teams as per league standing
will qualify for the semis.
What this format means, in cricketing terms, is keener competition in the preliminary stages. Remember that only three
teams can qualify from a group. Which means that in the group involving former champion India, three-time finalists England,
holders Sri Lanka and the brilliant if unfortunate South Africa
- one side will definitely lose out.
There will be 42 games in all, with the final slated for
mid-June 1999..
Meanwhile, the battle for the ICC Trophy will commence in
Kuala Lumpur on March 23, 1997. And for the first time, fixtures involving the associate nations of the ICC will be televised.
As part of the bid for improving cricket in the associate nations, the ICC has also set up a committee headed by Ali Bacher
of South Africa to develop cricket in these nations.
Source :: Rediff On The NeT (https://www.rediff.co.in)