View Full Version : Irish Cricket 2007
Sheridan
26/01/2007, 12:58 PM
About time this thread was established with the biggest season in the history of Irish cricket almost underway. The World Cup begins in the West Indies in March and will naturally monopolise media interest, but Ireland's participation in Division One of the World Cricket League (which begins in Kenya on Monday) is arguably more significant to the development of the game in this country.
All games are designated full One Day Internationals and Ireland stand a reasonable chance of consolidating their position as the best of the associate nations, although Kenya start as favourites. Both finalists will also qualify for this year's inaugural Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa and receive handsome remuneration from the ICC.
Thereafter, Ireland take on Zimbabwe, Pakistan and the West Indies in Jamaica. Although Zimbabwe (depleted by politically-motivated defections) are eminently beatable, only a seismic upheaval of unprecedented scale will allow Ireland to qualify from Group D.
In between, Ireland defend their ICC Intercontinental Cup (the First Class, four-day competition for Associate nations) title against the United Arab Emirates, needing an outright victory to overtake Scotland and qualify for the final (where Group B winners Canada await.)
And that's all before the commencement of the domestic season and the national team's entry into the English ECB Trophy.
Recent results/upcoming fixtures
23rd Jan (Port Elizabeth, South Africa)
Warm-up game
Ireland: 133 (Bray 43, Gillespie 13)
Eastern Province XI: 135/8 (Johnston 4-42, Langford-Smith 2-42, P Mooney 1-18, Rankin 1-28)
Eastern Province won by 2 wickets
24th Jan (Port Elizabeth, South Africa)
Warm-up game
Ireland: 279/3 (Carroll 100, Bray 89, Morgan 43, N O' Brien 24*, White 9*)
Eastern Province XI: 219 (Johnston 4-34, Langford-Smith 3-39, Rankin 2-37, McCallan 1-35, J Mooney 0-17, White 0-19, P Mooney 0-33)
Ireland won by 60 runs
25th Jan (Port Elizabeth, South Africa)
Warm-up game
Eastern Province Amateur XI: 304-3 (Langford-Smith 1-51, Rankin 0-50, K O’Brien 1-61, J Mooney 1-49, Johnston 0-22, McCallan 0-38, White 0-32)
Ireland: 304-8 (Porterfield 2, Bray 89, Morgan 13, N O'Brien 50, K O'Brien 13, Gillespie 33, J Mooney 51*, McCallan 0, White 4)
Match tied
30th Jan (Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Ireland vs. Scotland
31st Jan (Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Bermuda vs. Ireland
2nd Feb (Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Kenya vs. Ireland
4th Feb (Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Canada vs. Kenya
5th Feb (Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Ireland vs. Netherlands
Competition final - 7th Feb (Nairobi, Kenya.)
10th-13th Feb (Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates)
Intercontinental Cup, Group A
United Arab Emirates vs. Ireland
16th Feb (50-over match)
United Arab Emirates vs. Ireland
I'll post squad profiles and further updates in the coming days.
Andrew White's World Cup Diary. (http://www.cricketeurope4.net/CRICKETEUROPE/GENERAL/BLOGS/cwcwhiteandy.shtml)
Sheridan
27/01/2007, 12:32 PM
Ireland won their final warm-up fixture against an Eastern Province XI this morning, although, worryingly, captain Trent Johnston was rested after sustaining heavy contusions to the finger he broke in 2005's Intercontinental Cup final. Jeremy Bray, who evinced none of the rustiness which has afflicted his team-mates due to a summer spent playing club cricket in Australia, was also rested. Both teams fielded weakened XIs in this morning's game. Ireland's premier allrounder, André Botha, made his first appearance of the tour.
27th Jan (Port Elizabeth, South Africa)
Eastern Province XI: 111 (McCallan 4-24, K O'Brien 3-4, J Mooney 1-19, Botha 1-20, White 0-3, Rankin 0-17, P Mooney 0-22.)
Ireland XI: 112-2 (Porterfield 44*, Carroll 30, Morgan 0, Botha 13*.)
Ireland XI won by eight wickets
Does anyone know if we have a new replica jersey on sale for the World Cup?
It would be great to have.
Sheridan
29/01/2007, 3:04 PM
The kit is manufactured and distributed by Kukri Sports (http://www.kukrisports.com/), I presume you can get it off them.
Kenya and Bermuda began the World Cricket League today. Bermuda were skittled out for 133, a target Kenya chased down within nineteen overs and without disturbace for an easy ten-wicket victory. Ireland open their campaign against Scotland in Nairobi tomorrow.
bennocelt
29/01/2007, 7:48 PM
just curious but when does the world cup start?
and doesnt ireland have a b itch of a group, and england got an easy enuff one, typical!!!
will there a fantasy league thingy on for the world cup, as i have one done for the football and the rugby, and i like these things!
Thanks Sheridan. Good round-up. Keep it up.
just curious but when does the world cup start?
and doesnt ireland have a bitch of a group, and england got an easy enuff one, typical!!!It all starts on March 13th.
We've got Zimbabwe, Pakistan and the West Indies.
England have New Zealand, Canada and Kenya.
However easy your group is is relative to how good you are and England, despite playing rubbish right now are better than us.
Follow our Scotland game here (http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/worldcricketleague/engine/current/match/267380.html)
We won the toss, elected to bat and are 192/5
Does anyone know if we have a new replica jersey on sale for the World Cup?
It would be great to have.
Elvereys (Suffolk Street) had a few of the one day shirts before christmas, i asked if they'd be getting more in before the WC & was told they should have them in February!
Sheridan
30/01/2007, 9:25 AM
Ireland made 280-7 off their 50 overs, opener Jeremy Bray top scoring with with what was by all accounts a classy knock of 116. Trent Johnston, batting eight, was 45 not out upon the completion of Scotland's allotted overs. Eoin Morgan made 41 in quick time, but, of Ireland's remaining batsmen, only he and McCallan (22) passed 14.
280 looks an imposing total, although Scotland have already chased down some improbable targets on this tour. Ireland's spinners McCallan and White are typically economical, but the pacemen have a big responsibility to suffocate Scotland's reply.
Sheridan
30/01/2007, 12:05 PM
In reply, Scotland are 144-4 off 32 overs, still quite a bit short of the required run-rate but with plenty of wickets in hand. This will be hairy.
Update: As I write, Scotland lose another crucial wicket, Carroll (substitute fielder, not sure who's gone off) catching Brown off McCallan. Another one gone three balls later! Hoffmann run out on 1. With the required run-rate climbing above eight an over, Ireland are on top now.
Neglected to mention earlier that Jeremy Bray's century was the first by an Irish player in a recognised ODI (Morgan was run out on 99 against Scotland last year.)
Schumi
30/01/2007, 12:34 PM
Scotland have lost 6 wickets now and need 127 off the last 14 overs (9 an over). Looks good for Ireland, fingers crossed.
Sheridan
30/01/2007, 12:37 PM
They're 200-6 off 41 now. 81 required off 9 overs, but McCallum is scoring ominously quickly and the short boundaries (Johnston hit four sixes for Ireland) mean it's still somewhat in the balance. Smith batting with a runner, Ireland could use a wicket soon. Hasn't been a great bowling performance.
EDIT: 228-6 off 44 overs now. 53 required at 8.83 per over.
Sheridan
30/01/2007, 1:02 PM
Botha gets McCallum for 102 (caught White) and Scotland require 26 off 2.3 overs. 255-7 off 47.3, standby for a slog-fest.
Sheridan
30/01/2007, 1:13 PM
Scores are tied, one ball remaining.
Sheridan
30/01/2007, 1:15 PM
Four off the last ball, Scotland win by three wickets.
30th Jan (Nairobi Gymkhana, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Ireland: 280-7 (Bray 116, Johnston 45*, Morgan 41) off 50 overs.
Scotland: 284-7 (bowling figures not yet available) off 50 overs.
Scotland won by three wickets
The Netherlands recorded an easy eight-wicket victory over Canada at Ruaraka Sports Club.
Ireland play Bermuda tomorrow and should take the points comfortably.
Did Scotland up the run rate a lot near the end?
What kind of cheers do they have in cricket? Come on you chaps in green? :D
kingdom hoop
30/01/2007, 8:08 PM
very disappointing result today, i thought we'd take the jocks.all is not lost though, hopefully we'll finish top two still.
good man sheridan for setting up the thread, there are plenty of irish sports fanatics out there who would even cheer our baton twirling team! i'd like to see cricket get going again, as it seems to be, like it was 30/40 years ago when there were teams in most towns around the country. there arent that many great teams out there but i'm sure it would be very difficult to reach test level. kids probably wouldnt think its 'kewl' enough though for it to catch on, but at least ed joyce has shown that irishmen are congenitally capable of playing the game. by the way, does anyone know if we can get him for the WC??is it a matter that if england dont pick him he will, or that now that he's played for england he cant play for us?
Sheridan
31/01/2007, 9:44 AM
Another poor performance by Ireland's bowlers allowed Bermuda to amass an imposing total of 275-8 off 50 overs this morning. Ireland have yet to begin their response but are up against it. Highly disappointing considering Bermuda were rated the weakest team in the competition.
Sheridan
31/01/2007, 2:35 PM
Ireland reached their target in the penultimate over to win by four wickets. William Porterfield carried his bat for 112*, Kevin O'Brien compensated for yesterday's wild final over with the ball by scoring a crucial 54. Yesterday's centurion Jeremy Bray, undoubtedly Ireland's form player, didn't play. Whether he was injured or rested I have yet to ascertain.
Ireland's bowlers contributed a monstrous 35 extras to Bermuda's total; the Bermudans returned the favour with 31 of their own.
31st Jan (Jaffreys, Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Bermuda: 275-8 (Botha 3-74, K O'Brien 2-38, White 2-44, McCallan 1-37, P Mooney 0-17, Rankin 0-25, Johnston 0-35) from 50 overs
Ireland: 276-6 (Porterfield 112*, Carroll 28, Morgan 0, N O'Brien 25, K O'Brien 54, Botha 9, McCallan 4, Johnston 14*) from 48.4 overs.
Ireland win by four wickets
Porterfield was ajudged man of the match. Elsewhere, Scotland eked out another narrow victory, this time by seven runs over Canada. Kenya trounced the Netherlands by 7 wickets. Neither result favours Ireland.
Ireland face hosts Kenya on Friday.
Sheridan
02/02/2007, 10:03 AM
A superb partnership of 227 between William Porterfield and Kevin O'Brien gave Ireland a fighting chance of defeating Kenya in this morning's fixture at Ruaraka. Porterfield contributed his second century of the tournament, once again carrying his bat for 104*. O'Brien passed his brother Niall (dismissed for 9) as he strode out to bat with Ireland wobbling on 57-3 and bludgeoned 142 off 124 balls, a new Irish ODI record which included six sixes. He was run out off the final ball of the innings. Jeremy Bray didn't feature once again and is presumably unfit (though hopefully not suffering from typhoid, which has forced one Scottish player to return home.)
Kenya's response to Ireland's total of 284-4 will begin imminently. I have a feeling that the bowlers will once again betray a superb batting performance, but Ireland have made a very creditable start against the former World Cup semi-finalists. Uniquely, RTÉ Sport chose to lead with cricket; Ed Joyce's match-winning century for England against Australia. This country gives banana republics a bad name.
Sheridan
02/02/2007, 2:53 PM
As I predicted, Ireland's errant bowlers contrived to p1ss away a commanding position. Kenya were on the brink of defeat at 231-9. but tail-ender Thomas Odoyo blasted 61 off 36 balls to guide Kenya home with one over to spare. Once again, the batsmen are left in the lurch by an indisciplined bolwing performance which included 23 extras.
Scotland recorded another narrow victory, this time over the Netherlands, a result which effectively ends Ireland's chances of reaching the final.
2 Feb 2006 (Ruaraka, Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Ireland: 284-4 (Porterfield 104*, Carroll 2, Morgan 11, N O'Brien 9, K O'Brien 142) from 50 overs.
Kenya: 286-9 (Botha 4-42, McCallan 4-36, Langford-Smith 1-60, Johnston 0-76, K O'Brien 0-25, White 0-38) off 49 overs.
Kenya won by 1 wicket.
Sheridan
04/02/2007, 4:50 PM
Same old story today, almost too monotonous to recount. Ireland, batting first, posted 308-7 off their fifty overs, enough to win most one-day games comfortably. Morgan hit 115 from 106 balls, Kevin O'Brien 52 and Trent Johnston a rapid 44 from just 27 balls faced. Johnston, however, sustained an injury (presumably aggravating the repeatedly broken and useless finger which will probably be amputated once he retires) and was unable to bowl.
Langford-Smith, who can count himself fortunate to still be in the team, took the new ball and showed his best form of the tournament, taking 1-40 off ten overs. Mooney went 1-62 off eight overs, gushing runs at an average of 7.75 per over, Botha was no more economical and there were still six deliveries available when Canada scored their 312th and winning runs. Canada's 312-4 is the 14th highest run-chase ever achieved in One Day Internationals and the largest by an Associate nation. Ireland are thereby eliminated from the competition with one fixture remaining, against the Netherlands.
4 Feb 2006 (Jaffrey's Sports Club, Nairobi, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Ireland: 308-7 (Porterfield 21, Bray 35, Morgan 115, N O'Brien 0, K O'Brien 52, Johnston 44, McCallan 5*, Langford-Smith 0, J Mooney 8.)
Canada: 312-4 (Langord-Smith 1-40, K O'Brien 1-37, Botha 1-67, White 0-50, McCallan 0-55, Mooney 1-62.)
Canada won by 6 wickets
Scotland beat Kenya with surprising ease to reach the final. The Netherlands defeated Bermuda handsomely at Ruaraka.
Looks like you picked the wrong week to start this thread Sheridan. Thanks for the updates though
Sheridan
05/02/2007, 6:04 PM
Usual drill today, Ireland lost narrowly in their final game of the competition against the Netherlands. The match was reduced to 46 overs per side by heavy overnight rain which seeped through the covers. Kyle McCallan captained Ireland in the absence of regular skipper Trent Johnston (stricken by the ubiquitous stomach bug) and watched Zuiderent and Reekers amass 114 for the first wicket. Reekers eventually made 104, but was dropped four times in the process.
The Netherlands recorded 260-7 from their 46 overs, an adequate score in the circumstances, but little more than that. The Irish bowling was marginally more economical than heretofore, although disastrous spells from both Mooney brothers (Paul opened the bowling with Langford-Smith but was yanked out of the attack after surrendering 26 runs off three overs) in retrospect cost Ireland the match.
Despite the early loss of Jeremy Bray, Ireland were crusing at 195-1 when Morgan was caught on 94, ending a partnership of 153 with William Porterfield. Niall O'Brien, Porterfield and Kevin O'Brien then fell in quick succession, however, to place the Dutch back in command. McCallan and John Mooney offered sterling resistance but couldn't score quickly enough to drag Ireland over the line. The Dutch displayed a mastery of death bowling which has eluded Ireland throughout the tournament, and the Irish were six runs short of victory upon completion of their allotted overs.
Only now are detailed reports beginning to emerge from Kenya. By all accounts the umpiring has been diabolical (not just on judgement calls, but rudimentary aspects of the game such as accurately counting the number of balls in an over), illness rife and the pitches excessively biased in favour of batsmen, but none of these factors exculpate the ineptitude of Ireland's bowling. Irish conditions and pitches tend to favour mediocre medium pace bowlers, and until better wickets are produced and this anomaly rectified, the national team will continue to struggle against top-class batting.
While the likes of Porterfield and Morgan will leave Kenya with their reputations enhanced, overall this entire enterprise has been deeply dispiriting for Irish cricket. Despite the glamour and hype which will attend Ireland's participation in the World Cup, be in no doubt that this was the big one, and they blew it. The squad (an eminently talented one, despite recent results) will have numerous opportunities to atone in the coming months, but one wonders how deep the scars inflicted by this failure will run.
5 Feb 2006 (Nairobi Gymkhana, Kenya)
World Cricket League Division One
Netherlands: 260-7 (Langford-Smith 0-32, P Mooney 0-26, K O'Brien 2-58, Botha 2-49, McCallan 1-48, J Mooney 0-23, White 0-18) from 46 overs.
Ireland: 254-8 (Bray 8, Porterfield 84, Morgan 94, N O'Brien 1, K O'Brien 3, McCallan 25, White 2, J Mooney 18*, Langford-Smith 0, P Mooney 1*) from 46 overs.
Netherlands won by 6 runs
In today's other games, Kenya trounced Canada to reach the final, where they'll play Scotland, despite the latter surprisingly losing to Bermuda in the final round of matches. Both Kenya and Scotland qualify for the Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa. Ireland's fifth-placed finish was a travesty given the quality of the team's batting.
Sheridan
07/02/2007, 4:53 PM
Kenya cantered to victory in the World Cricket League final, reaching their target for the loss of just two wickets having dismissed Scotland for 155.
Canada's wicketkeeper/batsman Ashish Bagai was named player of the tournament, with Ireland's William Porterfield in second place.
It was announced today that Stormont will host a three-match One Day International series between Australia and India this summer, after venues in the USA and Canada were deemed unsuitable for the fixtures. The games will take place on the 27th and 29th of June, with the final fixture on the 1st of July. The Belfast venue's greater capacity of 9,000 won it the nod over Clontarf.
The generally high runs scored and rubbish bowling figures can partly be put down to the fact that the boundaries in the tourament were a lot shorter than regulation boundaries.
It seemed like the teams didn't have much between them. It's a pity we don't have one of those teams in our world cup group as it would give us a great chance of getting a win.
As it stands we have Zimbabwe as the "weak" team in our group and as bad as they are at the moment it will still take an immense effort for us to beat them.
Irelans vs Pakistan on Paddys day in Montego Bay should be some occasion.
Sheridan
10/02/2007, 10:16 AM
Ireland are cruising along nicely against the UAE at Abu Dhabi on day one of their Intercontinental Cup fixture. Ireland must win the game to progress to the final and currently stand at 314-2 off 71 overs. Eoin Morgan is 93 not out, with André Botha also undefeated on 85. Porterfield and Bray are back in the hut, having scored 46 and 82 respectively.
Sheridan
10/02/2007, 5:18 PM
Ireland closed day one on 461-2, thanks largely to a national record partnership (as yet unbroken) of 325 between Morgan and Botha. Morgan, unbeaten on 182 at close play, is encroaching upon Ivan Anderson's Irish record of 198*, the pair upon the tournament partnership record of 331, and the team upon the Irish record total of 462, set against WH Laverton's XI in 1893.
Given this formidable start, Ireland presumably will hope to avoid batting again by declaring in the 600s and then bowling the UAE out twice over the coming 2 and a half day. The maddeningly innocuous nature of Ireland's bowling in Kenya, however, suggests that nothing can be taken for granted.
onceahoop
10/02/2007, 7:00 PM
I think it was recognised by management that the bowling was weak before they went out and they hoped the fulltime coaching would help. Doesn't seem to have happened. Don't know if the great Matt Dwyer is still involved with the coaching but we could do with someone as economical as him now. It's infuriating for batsmen having posted big scores to see the bowlers let them down. In fairness to our lads though they seem to have hung in there. Great stuff from Morgan and Botha
MariborKev
11/02/2007, 1:11 AM
Did Scotland up the run rate a lot near the end?
What kind of cheers do they have in cricket? Come on you chaps in green? :D
Pete,
Go and see any game with the Aussies involved and there is plenty of chanting. Was at the MCG on Friday to see England win a game:eek:
Any eL heads heading out to the WC? Me da and wee brother are heading out.
Sheridan
11/02/2007, 12:36 PM
Ireland declared at 531-5 early on day two, having broken numerous records along the way. The total itself was Ireland's highest ever in 155 years of representative cricket. Botha's and Morgan's partnership of 360 (eventually broken when Botha was caught at mid-off on 157) was a record for both the national team and the Intercontinental Cup. Morgan went on to surpass Ivan Anderson's 33-year-old record by scoring 209*, the first double century ever recorded by an Irish batsmen. Trent Johnston, having promoted himself up the order in the hope of clobbering some quick runs, declared the innings closed when he was caught by Ahmed Raza for 11.
Ireland's bowlers, as per usual, did their utmost to undermine their batsmen's efforts, Langford-Smith leaking 12 runs off the first over. Thereafter, he and Rankin manage to staunch their early largesse, but nonetheless, the UAE's openers had put 75 on the board before Silva was caught by White off Rankin for 25. Ireland's experienced off-spinner Kyle McCallan was entrusted with the ball after just 18 overs and suffocated the UAE batsmen; seven of the nine overs he bowled before tea were maidens.
McCallan had Gayan Silva caught by White with the score on 98, and finished the day with the remarkably economical figures of 27-11-48-1. The strangehold he exerted over the batsmen was such that opportunities appeared for his supporting bowlers. Fellow spinner White bowled Saqib Ali for 26 in the course of an indifferent spell. Arshad Ali was eventually run out by McCallan having top-scored with 74. Kurram Khan soon followed, bowled by André Botha for 28 to make it 176-5. Botha then had Kashif Khan caught by Langford-Smith with the score on 186. Zubair was next to fall for the addition of just twelve runs, run out by a combination of Morgan and Bray. Johnston redeemed an undistinguished opening spell by removing Bari and Raza for ducks (caught Bray and O'Brien respectively) to reduce the UAE to 222-9.
Stumps were drawn with the United Arab Emirates 309 runs in arrears, with just one wicket standing and the new ball due in two overs. Separating the final pair shouldn't prove too arduous for Ireland's bowlers tomorrow morning. Johnston will presumably then enforce the follow-on as Ireland close in on the victory which will qualify for them for the tournament final against Canada.
bennocelt
11/02/2007, 8:58 PM
cheers for all these reports Sheridan, good stuff, get us in the mood for the world cup:)
Sheridan
12/02/2007, 9:31 AM
Ireland cruised into the final of the Intercontinental Cup with a day and a bit to spare, after running through the UAE's batting order like a dose of salts today. Some lusty early morning hitting added 14 to the hosts' overnight score, before Trent Johnston wrapped up the innings by trapping Raza lbw for 11.
With the UAE still 288 behind, Johnston exercised his prerogative to enforce the follow and captured three quick wickets (danger-man Arshad Ali lbw for 7, Asham caught Gillespie for 2, and Gayan Silva caught Bray for 1) to precipitate an outright collapse. Saqib Ali was next to go, lbw to O'Brien in his first over of the day. The UAE were 36-4 at lunch.
The carnage continued après le déjeuner with Kashif Khan falling lbw to Rankin (who'd bowled well but lucklessly on Sunday, by all accounts) and Shadeep Silva caught by Langford-Smith off McCallan. At that stage the score was 87-6.
Two further wickets had tumbled befor the UAE made it into three figures. Nadeem was caught behind by Bray off Rankin, before his fellow Northerner McCallan removed Khurram Khan lbw for 42. Rankin severed the last vertebrae of the tail, with Raza caught behind for 10 and Zubair clean bowled for the same score.
10-12 Feb (Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates)
ICC Intercontinental Cup, Group A
Ireland: 531-5 declared (Morgan 209*, Botha 157, Bray 82, Porterfield 46, K O'Brien 7, Johnston 11)
United Arab Emirates: 243 (Johnston 3-53, Botha 2-14, McCallan 1-48, Rankin 1-34, White 1-34, Langford-Smith 0-55.)
United Arab Emirates (following on): 118 (Rankin 4-56, Johnston 3-8, McCallan 2-21, K O'Brien 1-11, Botha 0-6, Langford-Smith 0-3.)
Ireland won by an innings and 170 runs
Ireland win Group A and will play Canada in the tournament final, at a date and venue to be determined.
endabob1
13/02/2007, 8:01 AM
Who's in our world cup group and is there any chance of us doing what Kenya did 4 years ago?
Sheridan
13/02/2007, 8:07 AM
Zimbabwe, Pakistan and the West Indies. No chance of making the semis like Kenya, who were aided by forfeitures. Could and arguably should beat Zimbabwe in the opening game. Ireland have beaten a full-strength West Indies team at Stormont in the recent past, but they'll be a different proposition at home. Pakistan are a cut above.
Gustavo - the UAE team is usually composed of subcontinental immigrants or the descendants thereof.
OwlsFan
13/02/2007, 1:04 PM
I saw Morgan when he was about 7 or 8 with a cricket bat and ball as he was watching his dad's team, Rush, playing against our club and he was tremendously gifted even then. Talent will always out in the end.
Anyone who has ever played cricket against the North County teams will realise how off the mark "Come on you chaps in green" comment made earlier is. It's very much a workingmans' game in Fingal.
OwlsFan
13/02/2007, 2:13 PM
The Irish cricket team competing at the World Cup in Jamaica in March will have a theme song to rival rugby's 'Ireland's Call', and it's been inspired by the biggest cricketing community in the country - Fingal.
This week sees the launch of a competition to come up with the perfect Irish cricket team anthem, and songwriters and performers have until Friday February 23, to get their entries in.
The winner will walk away for a cheque for a 1000 Euro courtesy of Seamus Murphy/Murphy Environmental.
"The World Cup is something totally new for Irish cricket, and it was felt by many that we needed an anthem to mark the occasion, and we'll be singing the winning song in Jamaica, " stated the man behind the project, local councillor David O' Connor.
The process is relatively simple. Singers and songwriters, (who can get somebody else to perform their song if they so wish), must get their entry on cassette or CD to Hubert Murphy in the Fingal Independent, 4 Main Street, Swords, Co Dublin, on or before February 23 at noon. The song must be their original work, and they should supply contact details.
Once all the entries are in, a panel of judges will decide on a shortlist for a gala night to be held at the Irish Cricket school of excellence, In Balrothery on Wednesday February 28.
Entrants must be available to perform their song on the night.
"The whole cricketing thing is gaining momentum by the day with the World Cup advancing, and we expect a good entry for this competition. Naturally the song won't be too long, and the chorus will be the key to the whole thing," Dave explains.
"This idea is coming from the grass roots of Irish cricket, and we think the players will love the idea too."
The 500 strong army of fans will depart for the West Indies on March 10, all armed with the words of a new song.
bennocelt
13/02/2007, 9:12 PM
The Irish cricket team competing at the World Cup in Jamaica in March will have a theme song to rival rugby's 'Ireland's Call', and it's been inspired by the biggest cricketing community in the country - Fingal.
.
god that wouldnt be hard:cool:
Ireland have no chance of getting out of the group but we may give Pakistan a better game than you'd imagine. Afridi is banned for the game, Gul is a major injury doubt and it's quite likely that Asif and Shaoib will be banned again after the PCB carry out their internal drugs tests on feb 17th. It's expected that the two will still have traces of the nandralone that showed up in the last tests. All a bit of a shambles and can pnly be good for us.
Rory H
15/02/2007, 9:02 AM
what will the tv coverage be like here..will game be on live?
endabob1
15/02/2007, 10:48 AM
I think Sky have the rights to it in the UK.
Sheridan
15/02/2007, 11:25 AM
All three of Ireland's group games are on Sky. RTÉ haven't broadcast a cricket match since the early eighties and I'm sure the government never thought to include the cricket World Cup on its list of public broadcasts.
Sky don't appear to be covering Ireland's warm-up games against Canada and South Africa.
Thurs 15-3-2007: Ireland vs. Zimbabwe (Sky Sports 1, 1 p.m.)
Sat 17-3-2007: Pakistan vs. Ireland (Sky Sports 2, 1 p.m.)
Fri 23-3-2007: West Indies vs. Ireland (Sky Sports 1, 1 p.m.)
The kit is manufactured and distributed by Kukri Sports (http://www.kukrisports.com/), I presume you can get it off them.Emailed these guys to see if a new jersey would be issued for the WC, they replied to say No and to inform me that all replica jerseys had sold out. More is expected mid to late March (By which time our lads should be on the way home).
They do a line in supporters gear too.
Here (http://www.cricketbatsetc.co.uk/index.cfm?do=category&action=listItems&category=17)
Sheridan
05/03/2007, 1:42 PM
Ireland are currently playing a warm-up game against South Africa in Trinidad. South Africa won the toss and opted to bat, but David Langford-Smith ran through their top order, removing Smith, De Villiers and Kallis, before Trent Johnston bowled Herschelle Gibbs for 21. After 14 overs, South Africa are 57-4.
Torn-Ado
05/03/2007, 1:43 PM
Three pages on cricket.
Jesus Christ.
Sheridan
05/03/2007, 2:42 PM
Ireland have now reduced the #1 ranked team in the world to 95-8. :eek:
osarusan
05/03/2007, 2:51 PM
Schedule for all the World Cup games (http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/cricket/4699023.stm) from the BBC.
Ireland vs Pakistan on St.Patrick's Day.
Jerry The Saint
05/03/2007, 3:11 PM
Scoreboard Updates (http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/wc2007/engine/current/match/247447.html) :)
Bowlers O M R W Econ
*DT Johnston (rfm) 7.0 2 26 4 3.71 (0nb, 0w)
swinfordfc
05/03/2007, 3:16 PM
Need to finish it off now to be honest but great bowling :eek:
gustavo
05/03/2007, 4:06 PM
Should Ed Joyce not be playing for Ireland in the WC at least?seems strange that he will be representing England
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