South Africa face Windies in World Cup opener
Johannesburg, Oct 1: Hosts South Africa will play West Indies in the opening game of the 2003 Cricket World Cup, it was announced Monday
02-Oct-2001
Johannesburg, Oct 1: Hosts South Africa will play West Indies in the
opening game of the 2003 Cricket World Cup, it was announced Monday.
Tournament executive director Ali Bacher said the day/night match
would be staged at Newlands in Cape Town in the first week of
February.
Bacher said the opening game had been decided after the pools for the
tournament were finalised, based on the world one-day rankings at the
cut-off date of Sept 30.
South Africa were always going to play in the opening game and the
local organising committee decided West Indies were the biggest
drawcard among the teams in South Africa's group.
South Africa, second in the world rankings, is in the same pool as Sri
Lanka (third), West Indies (sixth), New Zealand (seventh), Bangladesh
and Kenya (joint tenth) and Canada - who finished third in the recent
International Cricket Council Trophy tournament in Toronto, Canada.
Australia, the defending champions and current top-ranked team, will
play alongside Pakistan, India, England, Zimbabwe, Netherlands and
Namibia.
The final rankings, based on games from the end of the 1999 World Cup
up to matches played up to Sept 30, 2001 were: 1. Australia, 2. South
Africa, 3. Sri Lanka, 4. Pakistan, 5. India, 6. West Indies, 7. New
Zealand, 8. England, 9. Zimbabwe, 10. Bangladesh and Kenya.
Netherlands won the ICC Trophy and Namibia were runners-up to qualify
for the World Cup in 12th and 13th places.
Dr Bacher said in a press release that West Indies had been chosen for
the World Cup curtain raiser because of the "tremendous impact" they
had made on international cricket.
"South African cricket has long admired and respected the incredible
contribution that the West Indies have made to the international game
through the uniqueness of their cricket and their great players," he
said.
President of West Indies Cricket Board of Control (WICB) Wes Hall
responded from Antigua: "This is indeed a great honour for the people
of the West Indies. "It further emphasizes the close ties that have
existed between our two countries since South Africa re-entered
international cricket with the inaugural Test match in Barbados in
1992.
"We are not currently in the top three of international cricket but...
by 2003, this West Indies team will be right on song."
The event's match dates will be published on Oct 27. Some changes have
been made to the original schedule to fit in with television
programming, according to Bacher.
The opening game was set for Feb 6 but could be moved forward a day or
two. The final, provisionally scheduled for March 18 or 19 at The
Wanderers ground in Johannesburg, is also set to be moved forward.
He said this decision was made last week at a meeting of the Global
Cricket Corporation, representing television rights holders, the
International Cricket Council and the 2003 World Cup policy committee.
"It was decided that the final should be played over a weekend to
maximise a gloabl television audience," said Bacher. "So the final
will now be played on either Saturday March 15 or Sunday March 16."
The decision will mean that the tournament will be played in fewer
than the 42 days originally scheduled. "It could be contested over 39
or 40 days," said Bacher.
Meanwhile, England coach Duncan Fletcher has played down the
difficulty of the draw for the 2003 World Cup.
"At this stage it looks to be the slightly more difficult of the two
groups," Fletcher said during England's opening match of their tour to
Zimbabwe against Zimbabwe 'A' in Harare. "But a lot can change in
cricket over 18 months and we are looking to build a squad in that
time that can compete against the world's best."
England failed to reach the second phase of the 1999 World Cup and are
currently on an 11-match losing streak in one-day international
cricket.