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Sachin Tendulkar Biography

Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar was born on April 24, 1973 in Mumbai, India. He went to Shradashram Vidyamandir, a high school in Mumbai, where he began his cricketing career under his coach Ramakant Achrekar. He attended the MRF Pace Foundation during his schooldays to train as a fast bowler, but Australian fast bowler Dennis Lillee, who saw him training, was not much impressed and suggested that Tendulkar should focus on his batting instead. As a young boy, Tendulkar would practice for hours at the net, and was driven hard by his coach Achrekar.

While at school, his extraordinary batting skills got noticed by the sports circuit. People felt that the young boy would soon become one of the greats in cricket. In the 1988 season, he scored a century in every inning that he played. In one of the inter school matches that year, he had an unbroken 664-run partnership with friend and team mate Vinod Kambli.

When he was 14, Indian batting legend Sunil Gavaskar a great Indian batsman of that time, gave him a pair of his own light pads. This touching gesture greatly encouraged the budding cricketer, who 20 years later broke Gavaskar’s world record of 34 Test centuries.

In 1988, when he was just under 16, he scored 100 not out in for Bombay against Gujrat. This was on his first-class debut. He then scored a century in his first appearance in the Deodhar and Duleep Trophy. Mumbai captain Dilip Vengsarkar picked him up after seeing him batting Kapil Dev in the nets. That season he was Bombay’s highest run-getter. In the Irani Trophy final, He made an unbeaten century. He scored a century in all three of his Irani Trophy, Ranji Trophy and Duleep Trophy debuts, and became the first player to do so. He was selected for the tour of Pakistan next year.

At the very young age of 16, Sachin played his first Test match against Pakistan in Karachi in 1989. In this Test, he received several blows to his body at the hands of Waqar Younis, a pace bowler. He made just 15 runs. In the last test in Sialkot, he had a bloody nose from a bouncer, but he went on playing. He scored better in the subsequent games, scoring 53 runs of 18 balls at Peshawar.

In the 1990 Test in England he scored a century at Old Trafford. The English were highly impressed by his disciplined display of immense maturity. He played many types of strokes. His off-side shots from the back foot greatly impressed the English. Though short in height, he confidently faced short deliveries from the English pace bowlers. His great performance made him look the embodiment of Gavaskar, India’s former famous opener.

During the 1991-1992 tour of Australia Tendulkar scored and unbeaten 148 in Sydney and another century on a bouncing pitch a Perth.

At the age of 19, Tendulkar was in England, playing for Yorkshire in 1992. He scored 1070 runs at an average of 45.25 while playing for the English county as the first overseas player.

In the 2003 Cricket World Cup, he made 873 runs in 11 matches which enabled India reach the final. Although Australia won the trophy Tendulkar was given the Man of the Tournament award.
Courtesy:http://www.justsachin.com/sachin-tendulkar-biography/

Media Awards

    * In August 2003, Sachin Tendulkar was voted as the "Greatest Sportsman" of the country in the sport personalities category in the Best of India poll conducted by Zee News.

    * In November 2006, Time magazine named Tendulkar as one of the Asian Heroes.

    * In December 2006, he was named "Sports person of the Year"

    * The current India Poised campaign run by The Times of India has nominated him as the Face of New India next to the likes of Amartya Sen and Mahatma Gandhi among others.

    * In February 2010, Sachin Tendulkar was declared "Sports Icon of the Year for 21 years" by NDTV at the NDTV Indian of the Year Awards.

Sachin Tendulkar Statistics

How would an article on Sachin Tendulkar records in cricket be complete without a tabular representation of his ODI and Test batting and bowling statistics? For those of you who believe in numbers, this should satisfy you.

Sachin Tendulkar Batting Statistics



Matches Innings Not Outs Runs Scored Highest Score Average 100's 50's
Tests 177 290 32 14,692 248* 56.94 51 59
ODIs 446 435 41 17,777 200* 45.12 47 93
T20s 1 1 0 10 10 10.00 0 0

Sachin Tendulkar Bowling Statistics


Matches Innings Balls Runs Wickets Average Econ. 5w BB (Inng)
Tests 177 135 4096 2388 45 53.06 3.49 0 3/10
ODIs 442 267 8020 6817 154 44.26 5.10 2 5/32
T20s 1 1 15 12 1 12.00 4.80 0 1/12

Recently, the Maestro added another feather to his cap during the 3rd edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL). He was awarded the 'Orange Cap' for emerging as the highest run-getter of the tournament. The 618 runs that Sachin Tendulkar scored during the course of the tournament was also a new record for the highest run aggregrate in a single edition of the IPL (erasing the previous record of 616 runs scored by Shaun Marsh in IPL 2008).

Biography of MS DHONI












Captain Cool MS DHONI




The only place he calls home is a little cottage, fronted by gorgeous and lovingly-attended dahlias, zinnias and roses, where his parents -- Pan and Devki Singh live in a colony in the town's Doranda suburb.


Dhoni was born here and this was where he was schooled and where he rose to fame playing fabulous strokes at the colony's stadium.

The cricketer pops home once in two months and if he is lucky he spends a day with his parents, his sister Jayanti Gupta, who is an English teacher and lives down the road and his favourite dogs, a Labrador named Zarah and an Alsation Sam.

Dhoni's parents are a modest, simple couple. Pan Singh still roams the colony on a bicycle and Dhoni's fame has changed their lifestyle very little. It just meant getting used to the voracious, insatiable media. Even their neighbours across the fence get their fair share of media attention.

Devki Singh plies you with cups of tea, biscuits, sweets and Chuda when you visit his home.

The pride of the house is a giant television screen on which they track their son's games with pride and nervousness. A large picture of Dhoni graces one wall. And there's a cabinet of trophies belonging to Dhoni, and his elder brother Narendra, across the way.

Read more: http://www.articlesbase.com/sports-and-fitness-articles/mahendra-singh-dhonis-biography-353810.html#ixzz1GXmjKWlk

Personal information
Full name Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Born 7 July 1981 (1981-07-07) (age 29)
Ranchi, Bihar (now in Jharkhand), India
Nickname Mahi
Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Batting style Right-hand batsman
Bowling style Right-hand medium
Role Wicket-keeper, India captain
International information
National side India
Test debut (cap 251) 2 December 2005 v Sri Lanka
Last Test 9 October 2010 v Australia
ODI debut (cap 158) 23 December 2004 v Bangladesh
Last ODI 19 February 2011 v Bangladesh
ODI shirt no. 7


Personal life

Mahendra Singh Dhoni was born in Ranchi, Bihar (now in Jharkhand) to Pan Singh and Devaki Devi. His paternal village Lvali is in the Lamgarha block of the Almora District of Uttarakhand. Dhoni's parents, moved from Uttarakhand to Ranchi where Pan Singh worked in junior management positions in MECON. Dhoni has a sister Jayanti and a brother Narendra. Dhoni had long hair which he has now shortened; he cut it because he wanted to look like his favourite film star John Abraham.He likes Bikes A Hummer to add to the four cars and 23 high-speed motorcycles already parked in his garage in Ranchi.He is endorsing 15 brands from clothes to cold Drinks. And, he is one of the highest income tax payers in last year Dhoni is a fan of Adam Gilchrist, and his childhood idols were cricket teammate Sachin Tendulkar, Bollywood actor Amitabh Bachchan and singer Lata Mangeshkar

Dhoni studied at DAV Jawahar Vidya Mandir, Shyamali,(now the school is known as JVM , Shyamli,Ranchi) Ranchi,Jharkhand where he initially excelled in badminton and football and was selected at district and club level in these sports.Dhoni was a goalkeeper for his football team and was sent to play cricket for a local cricket club by his football coach. Though he had not played cricket, Dhoni impressed with his wicket-keeping skills and became the regular wicketkeeper at the Commando cricket club (1995–1998). Based on his performance at club cricket, he was picked for the 1997/98 season Vinoo Mankad Trophy Under-16 Championship and he performed well. Dhoni focused on cricket after his 10th standard.




Dhoni married Sakshi (née Rawat) on July 04, 2010. Sakshi Dhoni, a Kolkata girl, is studying hotel management and was working as a trainee at the Taj Bengal when the two of them met two years ago. The wedding stumped the media and the fans as it took place only a day after the couple got engaged. Bollywood actress Bipasha Basu, a close friend of Dhoni, was quick to inform the media that the wedding was planned for months and was not a spur of the moment decision.

MS Dhoni and Sakshi Singh Rawat got engaged at Hotel Competant in Dehradun on Saturday and their marraige took place the next day at Vishranti Resort, near Dehradun. Vishranti Resort is owned by Raje and many high profile guests attended Dhoni's marriage.
Sakshi, a hotel management graduate and Dhoni had been knowing each other since their school days. Their fathers also worked together in Ranchi and both the families were quite close since then.
Dhoni's wedding was attended by high profile guests like ICC chief Sharad Pawar, BCCI President Shashank Manohar, former Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje, Actor John Abraham, Director Farah Khan and cricketers R.P.Singh, Harbhajan Singh, Ashish Nehra and Suresh Raina.

Playing style

Dhoni is a right-handed batsman and wicket-keeper. Dhoni is one of the number of wicket-keepers who have come through the ranks of junior and India A cricket teams to represent the national team — Parthiv Patel, Ajay Ratra and Dinesh Karthik also followed this route. Dhoni, referred to as 'Mahi' by his friends, debuted in the Bihar cricket team during the 1998/99 cricket season and was selected to represent India-A for a tour to Kenya in 2004. Along with Gautam Gambhir, Dhoni made multiple centuries against the Pakistan-A team in a tri-nation series and was selected in the Indian national team later in that year.

Dhoni tends to play mostly from the back foot with a pronounced bottom hand grip. He has a very fast hand speed through the ball which often results in the ball racing across the ground. From this initial stance his feet do not show much movement which sometimes results in chasing balls while not coming to the pitch of the ball or inside edging a lot of balls.
Dhoni scored 148 against Pakistan in his fifth ODI match in 2005 — then the highest score by an Indian wicketkeeper. Later in the year, he broke his own record as well as set the current world record for the highest score in the second innings in ODI matches as he scored 183* against Sri Lanka. Dhoni's success in the limited overs format secured him a place in the test team. Consistent performances in ODI cricket through the end of the 2005/06 season saw Dhoni briefly ranked as the No. 1 batsman in the ICC ODI ratings.The shot that he plays are fondly called "The Helicopter Shot".
Dhoni's form dipped through 2006 as India lost matches at the ICC Champions trophy, DLF Cup, away bilateral series against West Indies and South Africa. A return to form in the home series against West Indies and Sri Lanka in early 2007 proved to be an inaccurate indicator of Dhoni's form as India crashed out of the first round in the 2007 Cricket World Cup. Dhoni was out for a duck in both India's losses. After the World Cup, Dhoni won the Man of the series award in the bilateral ODI tournament against Bangladesh. For the tour of England, Dhoni was named the ODI team vice-captain.

 Cricket performance

ODI Cricket

ODI career records by opposition
# Opponent Matches Runs Average High Score 100s 50s Catches Stumping
1 Africa XI 3 174 87.00 139* 1 0 3 3
2 Australia 23 690 43.12 124 1 3 26 9
3 Bangladesh 9 247 61.75 101* 1 1 9 6
4 Bermuda 1 29 29.00 29 0 0 1 0
5 England 18 501 33.40 96 0 3 19 7
6 Hong Kong 1 109 - 109* 1 0 1 3
7 New Zealand 9 269 67.25 84* 0 2 7 2
8 Pakistan 23 920 54.11 148 1 7 22 6
9 Scotland 1 - - - - - 2 -
10 South Africa 10 196 24.50 107 0 1 7 1
11 Sri Lanka 38 1514 63.08 183* 2 12 38 9
12 West Indies 18 499 49.90 95 0 3 16 4
13 Zimbabwe 2 123 123.00 67* 0 2 0 1
Total 156 5271 51.67 183* 7 34 151 51
ODI Centuries:
ODI centuries
# Runs Match Against Stadium City/Country Year
1 148 5 Pakistan ACA-VDCA Stadium Vishakapatnam, India 2005
2 183* 22 Sri Lanka Sawai Mansingh Stadium Jaipur, India 2005
3 139* 74 Africa XI MA Chidambaram Stadium Chennai, India 2007
4 109* 109 Hong Kong National Stadium Karachi, Pakistan 2008
5 124 143 Australia VCA Stadium Nagpur, India 2009
6 107 152 Sri Lanka VCA Stadium Nagpur, India 2009
7 101* 156 Bangladesh Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium Dhaka, Bangladesh 2010
  Courtesy:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahendra_Singh_Dhoni

Cricket Info: ICC World Cup History, Teams, Captains, Winners

Cricket Info: ICC World Cup History, Teams, Captains, Winners

ICC World Cup History, Teams, Captains, Winners

The 1st ICC World Cup took place in 1975, with 8 teams playing 60 overs per innings. West Indies, led by Clive Lloyd, was the winner. This post deals with such details as number of teams, tournament duration, winners, formats, major changes introduced, and highlights concerning the ICC World Cup from 1975 to 2011. These details were gathered from various web portals on the internet.

1975 World Cup

 

 

No. of teams: 8
Winner: West Indies
Tournament duration: 15 days
Overs per inning: 60
Highest score: 334/4 by England against India in Group A
Lowest team score: 86 by Sri Lanka against West Indies in Group B
Unforgettable moment: Dennis Amiss making the first ever World Cup century when he scored 137 off just 147 balls. Another unforgettable moment was Sunil Gavaskar scoring 36 off 174 balls while batting out the 60 overs

1979 World Cup


Winner: West Indies
No. of teams: 8
Tournament duration: 15 days
Overs per inning: 60
Highest score: 286/9 by West Indies against England in the final
Lowest team score: 45 by Canada against England in Group A
Unforgettable moment: A great knock of 138 by Vivian Richards in the final at Lord's



1983 World Cup

 

Winner: India
No. of teams: 8
Tournament duration: 17 days
Overs per inning: 60
Field restrictions: 30-yard circle introduced in cricket for the first time. Minimum of 4 fielders inside it throughout the innings
Highest score: 338/5 by Pakistan against Sri Lanka in Group A
Lowest team score: 136 by Sri Lanka against England in Group A
Unforgettable moment: India beating the tournament favourite West Indies in a dramatic final at Lord's

1987 World Cup


Winner: Australia
No. of teams: 8
Tournament duration: 31 days
Overs per inning: 50
Field restrictions: Yes. 30-yard circle
Biggest change in format: Reduction in number of overs from 60 to 50 plus introduction of neutral umpire concept
Highest score: 360/4 by West Indies against Sri Lanka in Group B
Lowest team score: 135 by Zimbabwe against India in Group A
Unforgettable moment: First hat-trick in World Cup history. The honours went to Chetan Sharma of India who removed Kiwi batsmen Ken Rutherford, Ian Smith and Chatfield in successive balls



1991 World Cup

 

Winner: Pakistan
No. of teams: 9
Tournament duration: 32 days
Format: Round robin. All teams played each other once and top four went through to the semi finals
Clothing: Coloured clothing and white balls
Overs per inning: 50
Field restrictions: Only 2 fielders allowed outside 30-yard circle in the first 15 overs
Biggest change in format: Day-night matches. Coloured clothing and white balls
Highest score: 313/7 by Sri Lanka against Zimbabwe
Lowest team score: 74 by Pakistan against England
Unforgettable moment: South Africa rejoining mainstream cricket after the end of apartheid

1995 World Cup

 

Winner: Sri Lanka
No. of teams: 12
Tournament duration: 33 days
Format: Two groups and top four in each group through to quarterfinals
Clothing: Coloured clothing
Overs per inning: 50
Field restrictions: 30-yard circle in the first 15 overs. Only 2 fielders allowed outside of it
Biggest change in format: Quarterfinal stage introduced for the first time
Highest score: 398/5 by Sri Lanka against Kenya in Group A
Lowest team score: 93 by West Indies against Kenya in Group A
Unforgettable moment: Sri Lanka scoring over 100 runs in the first 15 overs in 3 matches enroute to winning their first World Cup plus Aravinda de Silva's back-to-back Man-of-the-match awards in the semi final and final. Add to this Kenya shocking West Indies at Poona after bundling out the Caribbean giants for the tournament's lowest total


1999 World Cup

 

Winner: Australia
No. of teams: 12
Tournament duration: 38 days
Format: 2 groups and top 3 from each group progressed to Super Six. the top 4 from Super Six made it to semi finals
Clothing: Coloured clothing
Overs per inning: 50
Field restrictions: 30-yard circle
Biggest single change in format: Introduction of Super Six
Highest score: 373/6 by India against Sri Lanka in Group A
Lowest team score: 68 by Scotland against West Indies in Group B
Unforgettable moment: Tied semi final match between Australia and South Africa, which allowed the Aussies to go through on better net run rate

2003 World Cup


Winner: Australia
No. of teams: 14
Tournament duration: 43 days
Format: 2 groups and top 3 from each group progressed to Super Six. the top 4 from Super Six made it to semi finals
Clothing: coloured clothing
Overs per inning: 50
Field restrictions: 30-yard circle for the first 15 overs
Biggest single change in format: Nothing notable
Highest score: 359/2 by Australia against India in the final
Lowest team score: 36 by Canada against Sri Lanka in Pool B
Unforgettable moment: First time cricket world cup event went to the African continent. Ricky Ponting's phenomenal 146 off just 121 balls in the final

2007 World Cup

 

Winner: Australia
No. of teams: 16
Tournament duration: 47 days
Format: 4 groups of 4 teams each. Top two from each group progress to super 8. The top 4 in Super eight progressed to semi finals
Clothing: coloured clothing
Overs per inning: 50
Field restrictions: Powerplay introduced for the first time in World Cup cricket
Biggest change in format: Introduction of Super 8 and powerplay
Highest score: 377/6 by Australia against South Africa in Group A
Lowest team score: 77 by Ireland against Sri Lanka in Super Eight stage
Unforgettable moment: Bangladesh knocking India out in first round and Ireland knocking Pakistan out in the first round. Plus Gilchrist's unbelievable 149 off just 104 balls simply stands out as the greatest World Cup final inning by an individual

2011 World Cup


No. of teams: 14
Tournament duration: 41 days
Format: 2 Groups with 7 teams in each group. The top 4 in each group go through to the quarterfinals
Clothing: Coloured
Overs per inning: 50
Field restrictions: Powerplay
Biggest change in format: Super Eight removed. UDRS and Super Over introduced
 

Batting Records in World cup








Most runs Till world cup 2011
Player Span     Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 0
SR Tendulkar (India) 1992-2011  40 39 4 2009 152 57.40 2258 88.97 5 13 2
RT Ponting (Aus) 1996-2011 42 38 4 1577 140* 46.38 1960 80.45 4 6 1
BC Lara (WI) 1992-2007 34 33 4 1225 116 42.24 1420 86.26 2 7 1
ST Jayasuriya (SL) 1992-2007 38 37 3 1165 120 34.26 1285 90.66 3 6 0
AC Gilchrist (Aus) 1999-2007 31 31 1 1085 149 36.16 1107 98.01 1 8 1
Javed Miandad (Pak) 1975-1996 33 30 5 1083 103 43.32 1592 68.02 1 8 2
SP Fleming (NZ) 1996-2007 33 33 3 1075 134* 35.83 1398 76.89 2 5 2
HH Gibbs (SA) 1999-2007 25 23 4 1067 143 56.15 1221 87.38 2 8 1
PA de Silva (SL) 1987-2003 35 32 3 1064 145 36.68 1229 86.57 2 6 2
IVA Richards (WI) 1975-1987 23 21 5 1013 181 63.31 1191 85.05 3 5 0
SC Ganguly (India) 1999-2007 21 21 3 1006 183 55.88 1298 77.50 4 3 1
ME Waugh (Aus) 1992-1999 22 22 3 1004 130 52.84 1199 83.73 4 4 2
ML Hayden (Aus) 2003-2007 22 21 2 987 158 51.94 1062 92.93 3 2 0
SR Waugh (Aus) 1987-1999 33 30 10 978 120* 48.90 1207 81.02 1 6 0
A Ranatunga (SL) 1983-1999 30 29 8 969 88* 46.14 1197 80.95 0 7 3
JH Kallis (SA) 1996-2011 32 28 7 944 128* 44.95 1273 74.15 1 7 2
Saeed Anwar (Pak) 1996-2003 21 21 4 915 113* 53.82 1157 79.08 3 3 0
GA Gooch (Eng) 1979-1992 21 21 1 897 115 44.85 1418 63.25 1 8 1
S Chanderpaul (WI) 1996-2011 29 26 3 891 102* 38.73 1393 63.96 1 7 0
MD Crowe (NZ) 1983-1992 21 21 5 880 100* 55.00 1053 83.57 1 8 1
R Dravid (India) 1999-2007 22 21 7 860 145 61.42 1147 74.97 2 6 0
DL Haynes (WI) 1979-1992 25 25 2 854 105 37.13 1485 57.50 1 3 0
M Azharuddin (India) 1987-1999 30 25 4 826 93 39.33 1066 77.48 0 8 2
DC Boon (Aus) 1987-1992 16 16 1 815 100 54.33 1117 72.96 2 5 0
A Flower (Zim) 1992-2003 30 29 4 815 115* 32.60 1195 68.20 1 4 2
G Kirsten (SA) 1996-2003 21 21 4 806 188* 47.41 1068 75.46 1 5 2
DPMD Jayawardene (SL) 1999-2011 28 25 2 796 115* 34.60 924 86.14 2 4 2
SB Styris (NZ) 2003-2011 22 18 5 795 141 61.15 902 88.13 2 5 1
KC Sangakkara (SL) 2003-2011 25 24 5 767 92 40.36 978 78.42 0 6 1
SO Tikolo (Kenya) 1996-2011 27 26 1 758 96 30.32 1114 68.04 0 8 1
V Sehwag (India) 2003-2011 18 18 0 717 175 39.83 679 105.59 2 2 0
Inzamam-ul-Haq (Pak) 1992-2007 35 33 3 717 81 23.90 961 74.60 0 4 4
Rameez Raja (Pak) 1987-1996 16 16 3 700 119* 53.84 1092 64.10 3 2 0
N Kapil Dev (India) 1979-1992 26 24 6 669 175* 37.16 581 115.14 1 1 0
Imran Khan (Pak) 1975-1992 28 24 5 666 102* 35.05 1014 65.68 1 4 2
AJ Lamb (Eng) 1983-1992 19 17 4 656 102 50.46 780 84.10 1 3 0
GC Smith (SA) 2003-2011 16 16 1 651 91 43.40 716 90.92 0 6 0
RB Richardson (WI) 1987-1996 20 20 3 639 110 37.58 1016 62.89 1 4 1






Records includes the following current or recent matches:
India v Netherlands at Delhi, ICC Cricket World Cup 25th match, Mar 9, 2011
New Zealand v Pakistan at Pallekele, ICC Cricket World Cup 24th match, Mar 8, 2011
Canada v Kenya at Delhi, ICC Cricket World Cup 23rd match, Mar 7, 2011
Courtesy:espncricinfo











































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































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ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 Team Squad

ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 Team Squad


India: M.S.Dhoni (Captain & WK), Sachin Tendulkar, Virendra Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Yuvraj Singh, Virat Kohli, Yusuf Pathan, Suresh Raina, Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan, R. Ashwin, P.Chawla, Ashish Nehra, S.Sreesanth, Munaf Patel.

Australia: Shane Watson, Brad Haddin (WK), Ricky Ponting (Captain), Michael Clarke, Callum Ferguson, David Hussey, Cameron White, Tim Paine (wk), Steven Smith, John Hastings, Mitchell Johnson, Jason Krejza, Brett Lee, Shaun Tait, Doug Bollinger.(Returned back due to injury)

South Africa: Graeme Smith (Captain), Hashim Amla, Johan Botha, AB de Villiers (WK), JP Duminy, Faf du Plessis, Colin Ingram, Jacques Kallis, Morne Morkel, Wayne Parnell, Robin Peterson, Dale Steyn, Imran Tahir, Lonwabo Tsotsobe, Morne van Wyk (WK).

England: Andrew Strauss (Captain), James Anderson, Ian Bell, Tim Bresnan, Stuart Broad, Paul Collingwood, Ravi Bopara, Kevin Pietersen(Returned back due to injury), Matt Prior (WK), Ajmal Shahzad, Graeme Swann, James Tredwell, Jonathan Trott, Luke Wright, Michael Yardy.

Pakistan: Shahid Afridi, Misbah-ul-Haq, Mohammad Hafeez, Kamran Akmal (WK), Younis Khan, Asad Shafiq, Umar Akmal, Abdul Razzaq, Abdur Rehman, Saeed Ajmal, Shoaib Akhtar, Umar Gul, Wahab Riaz, Sohail Tanvir, Ahmed Shehzad.

Sri Lanka: Kumar Sangakkara (Captain & WK), Mahela Jayawardene, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Upul Tharanga, Thilan Samaraweera, Chamara Silva, Chamara Kapugedera, Angelo Mathews, Thisara Perera, Nuwan Kulasekara, Lasith Malinga, Dilhara Fernando, Muttiah Muralitharan, Ajantha Mendis, Rangana Herath.

New Zealand: Daniel Vettori (Captain), James Franklin, Martin Guptill, Jamie How, Jesse Ryder, Scott Styris, Ross Taylor, Kane Williamson, Luke Woodcock, Nathan McCullum, Brendon McCullum (WK), Kyle Mills, Jacob Oram, Hamish Bennett, Tim Southee.

West Indies: Darren Sammy (Captain), Chris Gayle, Dwayne Bravo, Darren Bravo, Kieron Pollard, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Devon Smith, Sulieman Benn, Nikita Miller, Carlton Baugh (WK), Andre Rusell, Ravi Rampaul, Kemar Roach, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Adrian Barath.

Bangladesh: Shakib Al Hasan (Captain), Tamim Iqbal, Imrul Kayes, Junaid Siddique, Shahriar Nafees, Raqibul Hasan, Mohammad Ashraful, Mushfiqur Rahim (WK), Naeem Islam, Mahmudullah, Abdur Razzak, Rubel Hossain, Shafiul Islam, Nazmul Hossain, Suhrawadi Shuvo.

Zimbabwe: Elton Chigumbura (Captain), Regis Chakabva, Charles Coventry, Graeme Cremer, Craig Ervine, Tino Mawoyo, Gregory Lamb, Shingirai Masakadza, Christopher Mpofu, Raymond Price, Edward Rainsford, Tatenda Taibu, Brendan Taylor, Prosper Utseya, Sean Williams

Netherlands: Peter Borren (Captain), Wesley Baressi (WK), Mudassar Bukhari, Atse Buurman Tom Cooper, Tom de Grooth, Alexei Kervezee, Bradley Kruger, Bernard Loots, Adeel Raja, Pieter Seelaar, Eric Swarczynski, Ryan Ten Doeschate, Berend Westdijk, Bas Zuiderent.

Canada: Ashish Bagai (Captain & WK), Rizwan Cheema (VC), Harvir Baidwan, Nitish Kumar, Hiral Patel, Tyson Gordon, Henry Osinde, John Davison, Ruvindu Gunasekera, Parth Desai, Karl Whatham, Khurram Chohan, Jimmy Hansra, Zubin Surkari, Balaji Rao.

Ireland: William Porterfield (Captain), Andre Botha, Alex Cusack, Niall O’Brien (WK), Kevin O’Brien, George Dockrell, Trent Johnston, Nigel Jones, John Mooney, Boyd Rankin, Paul Stirling, Albert van der Merwe, Gary Wilson (wk), Andrew White, Ed Joyce.

Kenya: Jimmy Kamande (Captain), Seren Waters, Alex Obanda, David Obuya, Collins Obuya, Steve Tikolo, Tamnay Mishra, Rakep Patel, Maurice Ouma, Thomas Odoyo, Nehemiah Odhiambo, Elijah Otieno, Peter Ongondo, Shem Ngoche, James Ngoche.