Squads announced for ICC Intercontinental Cup 2004 finals
The four teams participating in the ICC Intercontinental Cup 2004 finals have officially announced their squads today
Hilary Marshall
29-Oct-2004
The four teams participating in the ICC Intercontinental Cup 2004 finals have officially announced their squads today.
Canada, Kenya, Scotland and UAE will do battle for the first ever ICC Intercontinental Cup trophy from 16-22 November.
The four winners of the regional qualifying events will play in semi-finals from 16-18 November with Kenya taking on Scotland at Abu Dhabi while Canada will play UAE at Sharjah. The winners will meet in the final at Sharjah from 20-22 November.
The squads:
Kenya
- Rageb Aga (captain)
- Rajesh Bhudiya
- Ravindu Shah
- Lameck Ngoche
- Anitkumar Bhudia
- Kalpesh Patel
- Stephen David Okumu
- Tanmay Mishra
- Malhar Patel
- Jadavji Bhimji
- Timothy Muange
- Abeed Janmohamed
- Brijal Patel
- Ramesh Bhalla (Manager)
- Andrew Moles (Coach)
Canada
- John Davison (captain)
- Ashif Mulla
- Ian Billcliff
- Austin Codrington
- Haninder Dhillon
- Sunil Dhaniram
- Don Maxwell
- Ashish Patel
- Kevin Sandher
- Umar Bhatti
- Zubin Surkari
- Sanjayan Thuraisingam
- Jason Patraj
- Mike Henry (Manager)
- Rupert Gomes (Coach)
Scotland
- Craig Wright (captain)
- Douglas Lockhart
- Paul Hoffmann
- Gavin Hamilton
- David Watts
- Gregor Maiden
- Ryan Watson
- Douglas Brown
- John Blain
- Colin Smith
- Cedric English
- Kyle Coetzer
- Asim Butt
- Peter Drinnen (Manager)
- Anthony Judd (Coach)
UAE
- Mohamed Tauqir (captain)
- Ali Asad Abbas
- Khuram Khan
- Syed Maqsood Ahmed
- Arshad Ali
- Naeemuddin Aslam
- Ram Veera Rai
- Kashif Hussain Khan Tareen
- Muhammad Taskeen Sadique
- Rizwan Ahmed
- Sameer Zia
- Zahid Shah
- Muhamad Atif
- Abdul Razzak Kazim (Manager)
- Syed Abid Ali (Coach)
About the ICC Intercontinental Cup:
The ICC Intercontinental Cup is a new tournament for ICC Associate Member countries, and sees the introduction of a first-class competition for countries below Test match level.
With innovative playing conditions including a points system specifically created for the event, the ICC Intercontinental Cup gives players the chance to develop their skills in the longer version of the game, and assist in the progression to the next level of competition.
The ICC Intercontinental Cup is part of the High Performance arm of the ICC Development Program, launched in 1997 to develop cricket as a global sport.
Since its inception, the ICC Development Program has helped the number of ICC members increase by over 40 in the past seven years. The ICC now has 92 member countries; 10 Full, 27 Associate and 55 Affiliate members.
For scorecards, statistics, rules and reports on the ICC Intercontinental Cup 2004 visit www.icc-intercontinentalcup.com.