Great stuff. Who cares about the group...
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Great stuff. Who cares about the group...
Stirling was magnificent and despite his erratic play in the beginning of his time at the crease Wilson played well.
Delighted for the lads.
Much happier with a group containing Australia and Windies than India and England.
Why?
We'll never win the thing...
Well not this one;give it a few years/decades.
Call me crazy, but I'd be strangely optimistic of us upsetting anyone in a 20/20 game. Anything can happen in the short format and I'd fancy Ireland to at least come out of the group and possibly reach a semi final.
Completely agree Nigel. Barring the opening abominations against Namibia and Italy we are by far and away the best Associate Nation. Id wager now at this stage that we would be better than Zimbabwe and the Bengals.
Training starts back in Monday night. Can't bloody well wait.
A few headed over to it, great trip.
Roll on Sri Lanka.
Would love to make it over to the 20/20 World Cup. The craic would be unreal. Know a few who headed over to the last one and said was absolutely class.
IRELAND is ready to compete against the world at Test level.
That is according to Franklyn A Rose, a former West Indies international cricketer, who is based in Auckland.
“They are far more better than lots of teams that are playing test cricket at the moment,” Rose told the Irish Champion.
“I do think it’s time for Ireland to receive test status. Ireland have a lot of world class players. They have proven to the world that could beat any other team on a given day.”
The right arm fast bowler feels former team-mate Phil Simmons is the man to continue leading Ireland on the right track.
“Phil Simmons is the right person for the development role. He has the cricketing knowledge, the skills and not to mention his cricketing background. I think he is a true role model for the future of Ireland’s cricket.”
Rose’s encouragement forcomes following the January declaration by Cricket Ireland chief executive, Warren Deutrom that will be playing Test cricket by 2020.
“I think the ireland cricket board need to put a lot of pressure on the ICC, letting them know that they are ready to compete against the world at test level. Hopefully they will be granted test status soon.” Rose concluded.
Rose made his debut for Jamaica in 1993 against Barbados and first played for the West Indies against India at Sabina Park in 1997. He took 53 wickets in his 19 Tests, returning seven wickets for 84 runs against South Africa in 1999.
Ireland’s desire to reach test status is in part to stem the tide of Irish players using residency rules to switch to playing for England in order to play at full international test match level.
Ireland are currently preparing to play host to Australia and Afghanistan in June and July before beginning their Twenty20 World Cup campaign in Sri Lanka in September.
http://www.irishchampion.co.nz/irela...f-test-status/
It's just one West Indian backing another I think. I don't believe we'll be granted test status. Ok we might be better than Zimbabwe at the moment but that's about it and we know their issues.. Clontarf isn't test standard either.
Malahide is the long-term aim, as a purpose built ground?
Anyway, Stormont beckons with Australia in town.
Gutted so soon after Euros but here's to a better show than Polska or in NZ...
:(
After 3 balls what were you thinking?
That it's happened to better sides than us...
Anyway, we got the 'No result'.
;)
Eoin Morgan destroying the Aussies at the minute. Imagine if he was still with Ireland. Shameful loss really to Irish cricket.
What's the format of the ODI World Cup qualification series? Ireland is top of the table and plays Afghanistan again this week (4 times?). Please explain!
I'm sorry I missed this on radio 4 this morning, a 30 minute documentyary on Irish Cricket. Unfortunately it's not on playback so if anyone can somehow get a copy I'd love to hear it.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01ks2yp
Kevin O Brien's century for Ireland against England in the 2011 World Cup was the fastest of all time. Irish cricket fans had waited at least a hundred years to celebrate such a victory.
Before the game there had been precious few victories, but also precious few supporters and players to celebrate them. But after the match cricket fans in Ireland slowly started a whispering chorus of texts, tweets and emails, as the enormity of their team's achievement spread from the few who understood, to the masses who didn't.
On the state broadcaster RTE's main tea time show, their chief political correspondent finished a very serious report about the ongoing coalition talks and suddenly broke into an impassioned monologue to listeners:
'I don't know if you remember the Norwegian commentator the night when Norway beat England? He started shouting 'are you listening Maggie Thatcher?'. Well -.are you listening Geoffrey Boycott? Are you listening Mick Jagger? Are you listening Oliver Cromwell? Our boys just thrashed you at cricket!'
It was an extraordinary moment. Cricket had crashed into the national consciousness.
Ireland may have the third oldest cricket club in the world - Phoenix cricket club in Dublin - but in the centuries since it was established, there have been concerted efforts to ban it and relegate it to the bottom of Ireland's sporting fixtures. Viewed as unpatriotic and a colonial imposition, the GAA - the national sporting association - banned its members from playing or watching 'foreign sports'. Playing cricket became a political decision.
In Over the Boundary, Kevin Connolly tells the story of how cricket batted its way into Ireland's sporting arena.
Producer: Rachel Hooper
A Falling Tree Production for BBC Radio 4
World Twenty20 starting tomorrow... WHOOP!
Ireland warm-up with another victory.
http://www.rte.ie/sport/cricket/2012...st-bangladesh/
Seriously... we're not a test nation why?
And as luck would have it I will be relaxing with my post-All-Ireland hangover with Ireland v Windies. CMON!
Aye, I'm quite looking forward to this. Pity the groups weren't of four teams instead of three.
Ireland won't get test status mainly because there isn't a domestic four-innings (aka first class) competition, and secondly due to lack of political clout like Bangladesh's.
On the other hand, test cricket is declining pretty much everywhere bar England, Australia and up to a point South Africa. So limited overs may eventually become dominant anyway.
It's partly because too many Irish cricketers are happy to go off to play for Eng.& Wales with all their multinational mercenaries.
More importantly, is the W.Indies game at 1500 hrs. IST today.
Rate our chances as 40-60 at best...
live stream anyone.........please
Match abandoned so Windies go through, though we fell short anyway I think.
Didn't we go out of the last T20 WC in the same way? England had set us a beatable score but we never got to bat. Something like that anyway.
It's a sh*te concept anyway...
Review of 2012, belatedly.
http://www.cricketeurope4.net/DATABA...6/002610.shtml
Ireland almost certain victors in the UAE - 589/7 against the hosts current total of 56/1.
You mean in terms of being not able to play Tests?
Played in a game last weekend. We made 99 ao. The opposition made 100 for 9 wickets off the last ball. Never played in a game like that before. When we totted their book though at the end it only came to 99 but we gave them the win because they probably could have made 2 off the last ball. Very few sports can actually come to ends like that (the miscounting aside).