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The ICC Cricket World Cup, generally referred to as the Cricket World Cup, is the premier international championship of men's One-day International (ODI) cricket. The event is organised by the sport's governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC), with preliminary qualification rounds leading up to a finals tournament which is held every four years.ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 web site
- World Cup Cricket 1975 - England
- World Cup Cricket 1979 - England
- World Cup Cricket 1983 - England
- World Cup Cricket 1987 - India & Pakistan
- World Cup Cricket 1992 - Australia & New Zealand
- World Cup Cricket 1996 - India, Pakistan & Sri Lanka
- World Cup Cricket 1999 - England
- World Cup Cricket 2003 - South Africa
- World Cup Cricket 2007 - West Indies
- World Cup Cricket 2011 - Bangladesh, India, Pakistan & Sri Lanka
Prudential World Cup Cricket 1983, England
Dates: 9 June 1983 to 25 June 1983
Teams: England, Australia, New Zealand, West Indies,
India, Pakistan, Srilanka and Zimbabwe
World Cup Cricket 1983
Discuss World Cup
India Won the World Cup
The third World Cup, the last to be sponsored by the Prudential Assurance Company, began with two fine surprises, when India beat West Indies and Zimbabwe beat Australia in the opening round of matches, and ended with the greatest surprise of all, when India beat West Indies again, this time in the final at Lord’s. None of the eight sides had to make do without a victory.
The competition differed from its two predecessors in that in the preliminary groups the sides played each other not once but twice. This was partly to increase revenue but also to lessen the chances of a side being eliminated through having greater misfortune with the weather than its rivals. In the event, no sooner had the sides started to arrive in England for the 1983 World Cup than the rain, which had made the month of May one of the wettest on record, cleared away.
Of the 27 matches played, only three were not begun and finished in a day. Many were played in warm sunshine, and throughout the competition, from June 9–25, interest ran high. After losing their opening match, West Indies carried all before them until failing, for the first time, to win the final. Australia had a disappointing fortnight, and with Imran Khan unfit to bowl for them, Pakistan were a shadow of the side which had trounced India and Australia in the previous winter.
New Zealand’s main batting provided them with insufficient runs for a consistent challenge, while Sri Lanka, though they won their return match against New Zealand, were too short of bowling to be a serious threat. Zimbabwe, playing for the first time, having qualified as winners of the ICC Trophy in 1982, made a welcome contribution. Their side included several players with first-class experience, acquired when, as Rhodesia, their country played in the Currie Cup. Apart from beating Australia they gave West Indies a run for their money at Worcester.
India’s unexpected success (they were quoted at 66 to 1 before the competition began) came under a young and relatively new captain (Kapil Dev) and owed much to the presence in their side of three all-rounders (Kapil Dev, Roger Binny and Mohinder Amarnath) who, at critical moments, found enough in the conditions to help form an effective attack. Who would ever have thought before a ball was bowled that the leading wicket-takers in the competition would be the Sri Lankan De Mel and Binny, with his gentle medium-pace?
Each side received 60 overs. No bowler was allowed more than twelve overs per innings and, to prevent negative bowling, the umpires applied a stricter interpretation than in first-class cricket in regard to wides and bumpers.
The total amount of the Prudential Assurance Company’s sponsorship was £500,000, and the gate receipts came to £1,195,712. The aggregate attendance was 232,081, compared with 160,000 in 1975 and 132,000 in 1979. The surplus, distributed to full and associate members of the International Cricket Conference, was in excess of £1,000,000, this being over and above the prior payments of £53,900 to each of the seven full members and one of £30,200 to Zimbabwe.
In addition to the Trophy and silver-gilt medals for each player, India received £20,000 for their victory. As runners-up West Indies won £8,000. The losing semi-finalists, England and Pakistan, each won £4,000. There were also awards of £1,000 to the group winners, plus Man of the Match awards (£200 for the group matches, £400 for the semi-finals and £600 for the final).
At their meeting which followed the World Cup, the ICC asked for tenders, to be submitted by the end of 1983, from countries wishing to stage the competition when next it is held.
Cricket World Cup 1983 Finals Score Board
Discuss World Cup
India beat West Indies by 43 runs
A sell-out crowd at Lord's turned up to see what many predicted would be a West Indian walkover and Clive Lloyd's World Cup hat-trick.Lloyd and his men had had a scare earlier in the tournament when they lost their first ever World Cup match to the Indians after 10 successive wins.
But lightning could not strike twice, especially after Lloyd won the toss, put India in and saw Sunil Gavaskar dismissed with the score on two.
India never got going and when they were all out for 183 the writing looked to be on the wall.
The West Indies had to score at only just over three an over, and even after Gordon Greenidge fell early there seemed little to suggest that they would not achieve that target against India's battery of medium-pace bowlers.
But then Madan Lal found a rich vein of form dismissing Desmond Haynes, Viv Richards and Larry Gomes and from 50 for one the West Indies were floundering on 76 for five.
Jeff Dujon and Malcolm Marshall tried to get the innings going again but Mohinder Amarnath broke their partnership of 43, dismissing both men, before closing out an unexpected win with his third wicket of the day.
Man of the Match: M Amarnath
183 all out(54.4 overs) |
140 all out (52 overs) |
Batsman |
|
Runs |
Balls |
4s |
6s |
|
SM Gavaskar | c Dujon | b Roberts | 2 |
12 | 0 | 0 |
K Srikkanth | lbw | b Marshall | 38 |
57 | 7 | 1 |
M Amarnath | b Holding |
26 |
80 | 3 | 0 | |
Yashpal Sharma | c sub(AL Logie) | b Gomes | 11 |
32 | 1 | 0 |
SM Patil | c Gomes | b Garner | 27 |
29 | 0 | 1 |
Kapil Dev | c Holding | b Gomes | 15 | 8 | 3 | 0 |
KBJ Azad | c Garner | b Roberts | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
RMH Binny | c Garner | b Roberts | 2 | 8 | 0 | 0 |
S Madan Lal | b Marshall | 17 | 27 | 0 | 1 | |
SMH Kirmani | b Holding | 14 | 43 | 0 | 0 | |
BS Sandhu | not out | |
11 |
30 | 1 | 0 |
Extras | |
1nb 5lb 9w 5b | 20 | |
||
Total | |
all out | 183 | |
|
|
Live Cricket
Batsman |
|
Runs |
Balls |
4s |
6s | |
CG Greenidge | b Sandhu |
1 |
12 | 0 | 0 | |
DL Haynes | c Binny |
b Madan Lal |
13 |
33 | 2 | 0 |
IVA Richards | c Kapil Dev |
b Madan Lal |
33 |
28 | 7 | 0 |
CH Lloyd | c Kapil Dev | b Binny |
8 |
17 | 1 | 0 |
HA Gomes | c Gavaskar |
b Madan Lal |
5 |
16 | 0 | 0 |
SFAF Bacchus | c Kirmani |
b Sandhu |
8 |
25 | 0 | 0 |
PJL Dujon | b Amarnath |
25 |
73 | 0 | 1 | |
MD Marshall | c Gavaskar | b Amarnath |
18 |
51 | 0 | 0 |
AME Roberts | lbw |
b Kapil Dev |
4 |
14 | 0 | 0 |
J Garner |
not out |
5 |
19 | 0 | 0 | |
MA Holding |
lbw |
b Amarnath |
6 |
24 | 0 | 0 |
Extras |
|
10w 4lb | 14 |
| ||
Total |
|
all out | 140 |
|
|
|
Live Cricket Umpires: HD Bird and BJ Meyer
India Team: SM Gavaskar, K Srikkanth, M Amarnath, Yashpal Sharma, SM Patil, N Kapil Dev, KBJ Azad, RMH Binny, S Madan Lal, SMH Kirmani, BS Sandhu.
West Indies Team:CG Greenidge, DL Haynes, IVA Richards, CH Lloyd, HA Gomes, SFAF Bacchus, PJL Dujon, MD Marshall, AME Roberts, J Garner, MA Holding.
Summary of 1983 World Cup
Group A: England v New Zealand at The Oval - June 9, 1983
England won by 106 runs. England 322-6 (60 ov); New Zealand
216 (59 ov).
Group A: Pakistan v Sri Lanka at Swansea - June 9, 1983
Pakistan won by 50 runs. Pakistan 338-5 (60 ov); Sri Lanka
288-9 (60 ov).
Group B: Australia v Zimbabwe at Nottingham - June 9,
1983
Zimbabwe won by 13 runs. Zimbabwe 239-6 (60 ov); Australia
226-7 (60 ov).
Group B: India v West Indies at Manchester - June 9,
1983
India won by 34 runs. India 262-8 (60 ov); West Indies
228 (54.1 ov).
Group A: England v Sri Lanka at Taunton - June 11, 1983
England won by 47 runs. England 333-9 (60 ov); Sri Lanka
286 (58 ov).
Group A: New Zealand v Pakistan at Birmingham - June
11, 1983
New Zealand won by 52 runs. New Zealand 238-9 (60 ov);
Pakistan 186 (55.2 ov).
Group B: Australia v West Indies at Leeds - June 11,
1983
West Indies won by 101 runs. West Indies 252-9 (60 ov);
Australia 151 (30.3 ov).
Group B: India v Zimbabwe at Leicester - June 11, 1983
India won by 5 wickets. Zimbabwe 155 (51.4 ov); India
157-5 (37.3 ov).
Group A: England v Pakistan at Lord's - June 13, 1983
England won by 8 wickets. Pakistan 193-8 (60 ov); England
199-2 (50.4 ov).
Group A: New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Bristol - June 13,
1983
New Zealand won by 5 wickets. Sri Lanka 206 (56.1 ov);
New Zealand 209-5 (39.2 ov).
Group B: Australia v India at Nottingham - June 13, 1983
Australia won by 162 runs. Australia 320-9 (60 ov); India
158 (37.5 ov).
Group B: West Indies v Zimbabwe at Worcester - June 13,
1983
West Indies won by 8 wickets. Zimbabwe 217-7 (60 ov);
West Indies 218-2 (48.3 ov).
Group A: England v New Zealand at Birmingham - June 15,
1983
New Zealand won by 2 wickets. England 234 (55.2 ov); New
Zealand 238-8 (59.5 ov).
Group B: India v West Indies at The Oval - June 15, 1983
West Indies won by 66 runs. West Indies 282-9 (60 ov);
India 216 (53.1 ov).
Group A: Pakistan v Sri Lanka at Leeds - June 16, 1983
Pakistan won by 11 runs. Pakistan 235-7 (60 ov); Sri Lanka
224 (58.3 ov).
Group B: Australia v Zimbabwe at Southampton - June 16,
1983
Australia won by 32 runs. Australia 272-7 (60 ov); Zimbabwe
240 (59.5 ov).
Group A: England v Pakistan at Manchester - June 18,
1983
England won by 7 wickets. Pakistan 232-8 (60 ov); England
233-3 (57.2 ov).
Group A: New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Derby - June 18,
1983
Sri Lanka won by 3 wickets. New Zealand 181 (58.2 ov);
Sri Lanka 184-7 (52.5 ov).
Group B: Australia v West Indies at Lord's - June 18,
1983
West Indies won by 7 wickets. Australia 273-6 (60 ov);
West Indies 276-3 (57.5 ov).
Group B: India v Zimbabwe at Tunbridge Wells - June 18,
1983
India won by 31 runs. India 266-8 (60 ov); Zimbabwe 235
(57 ov).
Group A: England v Sri Lanka at Leeds - June 20, 1983
England won by 9 wickets. Sri Lanka 136 (50.4 ov); England
137-1 (24.1 ov).
Group A: New Zealand v Pakistan at Nottingham - June
20, 1983
Pakistan won by 11 runs. Pakistan 261-3 (60 ov); New Zealand
250 (59.1 ov).
Group B: Australia v India at Chelmsford - June 20, 1983
India won by 118 runs. India 247 (55.5 ov); Australia
129 (38.2 ov).
Group B: West Indies v Zimbabwe at Birmingham - June
20, 1983
West Indies won by 10 wickets. Zimbabwe 171 (60 ov); West
Indies 172-0 (45.1 ov).
Semi-Final: England v India at Manchester - June 22,
1983
India won by 6 wickets. England 213 (60 ov); India 217-4
(54.4 ov).
Semi-Final: Pakistan v West Indies at The Oval - June
22, 1983
West Indies won by 8 wickets. Pakistan 184-8 (60 ov);
West Indies 188-2 (48.4 ov).
Final: India v West Indies at Lord's - June 25, 1983
India won by 43 runs. India 183 (54.4 ov); West Indies
140 (52 ov).