International cricket in 2009

(Redirected from 2009 in cricket)

International cricket in 2009 is defined as the season of international cricket between May and August 2009 in all cricket playing countries, as well as all international matches scheduled for the 2009 English cricket season.[1][2] Matches between September 2008 and March 2009 are defined as belonging to the 2008–09 season, while matches between September 2009 and March 2010 will fall under the 2009–10 season.

Season overview

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International tours
Start date Home team Away team Results [Matches]
Test ODI T20I
22 April 2009   Pakistan   Australia 2–3 [5] 1–0 [1]
6 May 2009   England   West Indies 2–0 [2] 2–0 [3]
26 June 2009   West Indies   India 1–2 [4]
4 July 2009   Sri Lanka   Pakistan 2–0 [3] 3–2 [5] 0–1 [1]
8 July 2009   England   Australia 2–1 [5] 1–6 [7] 0–0 [2]
9 July 2009   West Indies   Bangladesh 0–2 [2] 0–3 [3] 1–0 [1]
9 August 2009   Zimbabwe   Bangladesh 1–4 [5]
18 August 2009   Sri Lanka   New Zealand 2–0 [2] 0–2 [2]
27 August 2009   Ireland   England 0–1 [1]
28 August 2009   Scotland   Australia 0–1 [1]
International tournaments
Start date Tournament Winners
5 June 2009   ICC World Twenty20   Pakistan
8 September 2009   Compaq Cup (Tri-Series)   India
Minor tours
Start date Home team Away team Results [Matches]
First-class ODI
2 July 2009   Scotland   Canada 1–0 [1] 1–1 [2]
3 July 2009   Ireland   Kenya 0–0 [1] 3–0 [3]
11 July 2009   Netherlands   Canada 0–0 [1] 1–0 [2]
14 August 2009   Canada   Kenya 0–1 [1] 1–0 [4]
14 August 2009   Zimbabwe   Afghanistan 0–0 [1]
17 August 2009   Scotland   Ireland 0–0 [1] 0–1 [2]
24 August 2009   Netherlands   Afghanistan 0–1 [1] 1–1 [2]
Minor tournaments
Start date Tournament Winners
1 April 2009   ICC World Cup Qualifier   Ireland
17 May 2009   ICC World Cricket League Division Seven   Bahrain
29 August 2009   ICC World Cricket League Division Six   Singapore

Pre-season rankings

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ICC Test Championship 16 April 2009
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   Australia 37 4765 128
2   Sri Lanka 31 3875 125
3   South Africa 41 4951 121
4   India 38 4446 117
5   Pakistan 24 2197 92
6   England 52 4624 88
7   New Zealand 27 2164 80
8   West Indies 27 2090 77
9   Bangladesh 23 0 0
Reference: ICC Official Rankings List, 30 April 2009
ICC ODI Championship 20 April 2009
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   South Africa 34 4245 125
2   Australia 37 4573 124
3   India 50 6088 122
4   New Zealand 35 3918 112
5   Pakistan 31 3446 111
6   England 33 3610 109
7   Sri Lanka 43 4508 105
8   West Indies 28 2521 90
9   Bangladesh 38 1731 46
10   Zimbabwe 32 736 23
11   Ireland 10 190 19
12   Kenya 12 0 0
Reference: ICC Official Rankings List, 20 March 2009

April

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ICC World Cup Qualifier

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The 2009 ICC World Cup Qualifier is a cricket tournament that took place in April 2009 in South Africa. It was the final qualification tournament for the 2011 Cricket World Cup.[3]

The top four teams (Ireland, Canada, Kenya and Netherlands) qualified for the 2011 Cricket World Cup, and Scotland retained the One-day international, meanwhile Afghanistan gained the ODI status for the following four years and also automatically qualify for the ICC Intercontinental Cup. The bottom two teams was relegated to 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Three. The final and the play-offs for third and fifth place was official ODIs.

Group stage

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Group A
Pos Team Pld W L T NR Pts NRR
1   Ireland 5 5 0 0 0 10 1.492
2   Canada 5 4 1 0 0 8 1.490
3   Scotland 5 3 2 0 0 6 −0.318
4   Namibia 5 1 4 0 0 2 −0.506
5   Uganda 5 1 4 0 0 2 −0.928
6   Oman 5 1 4 0 0 2 −1.144
Source: [citation needed]

Group B
Pos Team Pld W L T NR Pts NRR
1   Kenya 5 4 1 0 0 8 1.683
2   Netherlands 5 4 1 0 0 8 0.557
3   United Arab Emirates 5 4 1 0 0 8 −0.131
4   Afghanistan 5 2 3 0 0 4 −0.278
5   Bermuda 5 1 4 0 0 2 −0.441
6   Denmark 5 0 5 0 0 0 −1.341
Source: [citation needed]

  Team qualifies for Super Eights
  Team moves into the 9th Place Playoff Semifinals

Group Stage
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
Match 1 1 April   Denmark Freddie Klokker   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal Isak Steyl Stadium, Vanderbijlpark   Afghanistan by 5 wickets
Match 2 1 April   Bermuda Irving Romaine   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan Fanie du Toit Sports Complex, Potchefstroom   United Arab Emirates by 4 wickets
Match 3 1 April   Canada Ashish Bagai   Oman Hemal Mehta LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Canada by 103 runs
ODI 2830 1 April   Scotland Ryan Watson   Ireland William Porterfield Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Ireland by 7 wickets
ODI 2831 1 April   Kenya Steve Tikolo   Netherlands Jeroen Smits Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   Netherlands by 7 wickets
Match 6 1 April   Uganda Junior Kwebiha   Namibia Louis Burger Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   Uganda by 6 runs
Match 7 2 April   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal   Bermuda Irving Romaine Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   Afghanistan won by 60 runs
Match 8 2 April   Uganda Junior Kwebiha   Canada Ashish Bagai Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Canada won by 5 wickets
Match 9 2 April   Netherlands Jeroen Smits   Denmark Freddie Klokker Fanie du Toit Sports Complex, Potchefstroom   Netherlands won by 7 wickets
Match 10 2 April   Ireland William Porterfield   Oman Hemal Mehta Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   Ireland won by 116 runs
Match 11 2 April   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan   Kenya Steve Tikolo Isak Steyl Stadium, Vanderbijlpark   Kenya by 9 wickets
Match 12 2 April   Scotland Ryan Watson   Namibia Louis Burger LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Scotland by 70 runs
Match 13 4 April   Kenya Steve Tikolo   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal Fanie du Toit Sports Complex, Potchefstroom   Kenya by 107 runs
Match 14 4 April   Denmark Freddie Klokker   Bermuda Irving Romaine Isak Steyl Stadium, Vanderbijlpark   Bermuda by 9 wickets
Match 15 4 April   Canada Ashish Bagai   Namibia Louis Burger LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Canada by 141 runs
Match 16 4 April   Uganda Junior Kwebiha   Ireland William Porterfield Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   Ireland by 6 wickets
Match 17 4 April   Netherlands Jeroen Smits   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   United Arab Emirates by 2 wickets
Match 18 4 April   Scotland Ryan Watson   Oman Hemal Mehta Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Scotland by 9 runs
Match 19 6 April   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal   Netherlands Jeroen Smits Isak Steyl Stadium, Vanderbijlpark   Netherlands by 5 wickets
ODI 2835 6 April   Kenya Steve Tikolo   Bermuda Irving Romaine Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   Kenya by 7 wickets
ODI 2836 6 April   Canada Ashish Bagai   Ireland William Porterfield Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Ireland by 6 wickets
Match 22 6 April   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan   Denmark Freddie Klokker Fanie du Toit Sports Complex, Potchefstroom   United Arab Emirates by 112 runs
Match 23 6 April   Namibia Louis Burger   Oman Hemal Mehta Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   Namibia by 119 runs
Match 24 6 April   Scotland Ryan Watson   Uganda Junior Kwebiha Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Scotland by 45 runs
Match 25 8 April   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan Isak Steyl Stadium, Vanderbijlpark   United Arab Emirates by 5 wickets
ODI 2837 8 April   Netherlands Jeroen Smits   Bermuda Irving Romaine Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   Netherlands by 64 runs
ODI 2838 8 April   Canada Ashish Bagai   Scotland Ryan Watson Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Canada by 148 runs
Match 28 8 April   Denmark Freddie Klokker   Kenya Steve Tikolo Fanie du Toit Sports Complex, Potchefstroom   Kenya by 9 wickets
Match 29 8 April   Ireland William Porterfield   Namibia Louis Burger Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Ireland by 7 wickets
Match 30 8 April   Oman Hemal Mehta   Uganda Junior Kwebiha LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Oman by 1 wicket

9th Place Playoffs

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9th Place Playoff Semifinals
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
Semifinal 11 April   Uganda Junior Kwebiha   Denmark Freddie Klokker Fanie du Toit Sports Complex, Potchefstroom   Uganda by 62 runs
Semifinal 11 April   Oman Hemal Mehta   Bermuda Irving Romaine Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   Bermuda by 8 wickets
11th Place Playoff
11th Place Playoff 13 April   Denmark Freddie Klokker   Oman Hemal Mehta Fanie du Toit Sports Complex, Potchefstroom   Oman by 5 wickets
9th Place Playoff
9th Place Playoff 13 April   Uganda DK Arinaitwe   Bermuda Irving Romaine Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   Bermuda by 8 wickets

Super Eights

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Pos Team Pld W L T NR Pts NRR
1   Ireland 7 5 2 0 0 10 0.689
2   Canada 7 4 3 0 0 8 0.687
3   Kenya 7 4 3 0 0 8 0.035
4   Netherlands 7 4 3 0 0 8 0.025
5   Scotland 7 3 4 0 0 6 −0.140
6   Afghanistan 7 3 4 0 0 6 −0.209
7   United Arab Emirates 7 3 4 0 0 6 −1.080
8   Namibia 7 2 5 0 0 4 −0.079
Source: [citation needed]

  Team qualifies for 2011 Cricket World Cup and gains ODI status
  Team gains ODI status
  Team plays in the 7th place playoff

Super Eights
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
Match 1 11 April   Kenya Steve Tikolo   Canada Ashish Bagai Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Canada by 7 wickets
Match 2 11 April   Namibia Louis Burger   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Namibia by 49 runs
Match 3 11 April   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal   Ireland William Porterfield Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   Afghanistan by 22 runs
Match 4 11 April   Scotland Ryan Watson   Netherlands Jeroen Smits Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Scotland by 26 runs
Match 5 13 April   Namibia Louis Burger   Netherlands Jeroen Smits Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Netherlands by 2 wickets
Match 6 13 April   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal   Canada Ashish Bagai LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Canada by 6 wickets
Match 7 13 April   Kenya Steve Tikolo   Scotland Ryan Watson Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   Kenya by 24 runs
Match 8 13 April   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan   Ireland William Porterfield Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Ireland by 8 wickets
Match 9 15 April   Scotland Ryan Watson   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Afghanistan by 42 runs
Match 10 15 April   Ireland William Porterfield   Netherlands Jeroen Smits LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Ireland by 6 wickets
Match 11 15 April   Canada Ashish Bagai   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   United Arab Emirates by 5 wickets
Match 12 15 April   Namibia Louis Burger   Kenya Steve Tikolo Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Namibia by 201 runs
Match 13 17 April   Scotland Ryan Watson   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Scotland by 22 runs
Match 14 17 April   Ireland William Porterfield   Kenya Steve Tikolo LC de Villiers Oval, Pretoria   Kenya by 6 wickets
Match 15 17 April   Namibia Louis Burger   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   Afghanistan by 21 runs
Match 16 17 April   Canada Ashish Bagai   Netherlands Jeroen Smits Walter Milton Oval, Johannesburg   Netherlands by 6 wickets

Playoffs

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No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
7th Place Playoff
7th Place Playoff 19 April   Namibia Louis Burger   United Arab Emirates Khurram Khan Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp   United Arab Emirates by 4 wickets
5th Place Playoff
ODI 2842 19 April   Afghanistan Nowroz Mangal   Scotland Ryan Watson Willowmoore Park, Benoni   Afghanistan by 89 runs
3rd Place Playoff
ODI 2844 19 April   Kenya Steve Tikolo   Netherlands Jeroen Smits Senwes Park, Potchefstroom   Netherlands by 6 wickets
Final
ODI 2843 19 April   Canada Ashish Bagai   Ireland William Porterfield SuperSport Park, Centurion   Ireland by 9 wickets

Final standings

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Position Team Status
1st   Ireland Qualified for the 2011 World Cup, the 2009–10 Intercontinental Cup and gained
ODI status until 2014
2nd   Canada
3rd   Netherlands
4th   Kenya
5th   Afghanistan Qualified for the 2009–10 Intercontinental Cup and gained ODI status until 2014
6th   Scotland
7th   United Arab Emirates Relegated to Division Two and the 2009–10 Intercontinental Shield
8th   Namibia
9th   Bermuda
10th   Uganda
11th   Oman Relegated to 2011 Division Three.
12th   Denmark

Pakistan vs Australia in the United Arab Emirates

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No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI series[4]
ODI 2845 22 April Younis Khan Michael Clarke Dubai Sports City Cricket Stadium, Dubai   Pakistan by 4 wickets
ODI 2846 24 April Younis Khan Michael Clarke Dubai Sports City Cricket Stadium, Dubai   Australia by 6 wickets
ODI 2847 27 April Younis Khan Michael Clarke Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi   Australia by 27 runs
ODI 2848 1 May Younis Khan Michael Clarke Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi   Australia by 8 wickets
ODI 2849 3 May Younis Khan Michael Clarke Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi   Pakistan by 7 wickets
Only T20I
T20I 89 7 May Misbah-ul-Haq Brad Haddin Dubai Sports City Cricket Stadium, Dubai   Pakistan by 7 wickets

West Indies in England

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No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
Test Series[6]
Test 1919 6–10 May Andrew Strauss Chris Gayle Lord's, London   England by 10 wickets
Test 1920 14–18 May Andrew Strauss Chris Gayle Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street   England by an innings and 83 runs
ODI series
ODI 2849a 21 May Andrew Strauss Chris Gayle Headingley, Leeds Match abandoned
ODI 2850 24 May Andrew Strauss Chris Gayle County Ground, Bristol   England by 6 wickets
ODI 2851 26 May Andrew Strauss Chris Gayle Edgbaston, Birmingham   England by 58 runs

ICC World Cricket League Division Seven

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Group stage

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The 2009 ICC World Cricket League Division Seven will be held in May 2009 in Guernsey. The two leading teams of the tournament will be promoted to Division Six later the same year.[7]

Pos Team Pld W L T NR Pts NRR
1   Bahrain 5 5 0 0 0 10 2.920
2   Guernsey 5 4 1 0 0 8 1.260
3   Japan 5 2 3 0 0 4 −0.501
4   Nigeria 5 2 3 0 0 4 −0.758
5   Gibraltar 5 1 4 0 0 2 −0.873
6   Suriname 5 1 4 0 0 2 −2.166
Source: [citation needed]
Group stage
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
1st 17 May   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Gibraltar Christian Rocca King George V Sports Ground, Castel No result
2nd 17 May   Japan   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost College Field, St Peter Port No result
3rd 17 May   Suriname Shazam Ramjohn   Nigeria Wale Adeoye Guernsey Rovers Athletic Club, Port Soif Abandoned without ball bowled
4th 18 May   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Suriname Shazam Ramjohn College Field, St Peter Port   Bahrain by 161 runs
5th 18 May   Gibraltar Christian Rocca   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost Guernsey Rovers Athletic Club, Port Soif   Guernsey by 4 wickets
6th 18 May   Japan Masaomi Kobayashi   Nigeria Wale Adeoye King George V Sports Ground, Castel   Nigeria by 2 wickets
1st (R) 19 May   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Gibraltar Christian Rocca King George V Sports Ground, Castel   Bahrain by 137 runs
2nd (R) 19 May   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost   Japan Masaomi Kobayashi College Field, St Peter Port   Guernsey by 7 wickets
3rd (R) 19 May   Suriname Shazam Ramjohn   Nigeria Wale Adeoye Guernsey Rovers Athletic Club, Port Soif   Suriname by 95 runs
7th 20 May   Nigeria Wale Adeoye   Gibraltar Christian Rocca College Field, St Peter Port   Nigeria by 88 runs
8th 20 May   Suriname Shazam Ramjohn   Japan Masaomi Kobayashi Guernsey Rovers Athletic Club, Port Soif   Japan by 8 wickets
9th 20 May   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Guernsey Styart Le Prevost King George V Sports Ground, Castel   Bahrain by 25 runs
10th 21 May   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Japan Masaomi Kobayashi Guernsey Rovers Athletic Club, Port Soif   Bahrain by 196 runs
11th 21 May   Gibraltar Christian Rocca   Suriname Shazam Ramjohn King George V Sports Ground, Castel   Gibraltar by 39 runs
12th 21 May   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost   Nigeria Wale Adeoye College Field, St Peter Port   Guernsey by 8 wickets
13th 23 May   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Nigeria Wale Adeoye Guernsey Rovers Athletic Club, Port Soif   Bahrain by 176 runs
14th 23 May   Gibraltar Christian Rocca   Japan Masaomi Kobayashi College Field, St Peter Port   Japan by 29 runs
15th 23 May   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost   Suriname Shazam Ramjohn King George V Sports Ground, Castel   Guernsey by 263 runs
  • (R)-replayed

Finals and play-offs

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No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
Final 24 May   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq King George V Sports Ground, Castel   Bahrain by 3 wickets
3rd Place 24 May   Nigeria Wale Adeoye   Japan Masaomi Kobayashi College Field, St Peter Port   Nigeria by 68 runs
5th Place 24 May   Suriname Shazam Ramjohn   Gibraltar Christian Rocca Guernsey Rovers Athletic Club, Port Soif   Suriname by 8 runs
Final Placings
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Pos Team Status
1st   Bahrain Promoted to Global Division Six for 2009
2nd   Guernsey
3rd   Nigeria Remain in Global Division Seven for 2011
4th   Japan
5th   Suriname Relegated to Global Division Eight for 2010
6th   Gibraltar

June

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ICC World Twenty20

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Group stage

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Group A
Team Pld W L T NR NRR Pts
  India (1) 2 2 0 0 0 +1.227 4
  Ireland 2 1 1 0 0 −0.162 2
  Bangladesh (9) 2 0 2 0 0 −0.996 0
Group B
Team Pld W L T NR NRR Pts
  England (5) 2 1 1 0 0 +1.175 2
  Pakistan (7) 2 1 1 0 0 +0.850 2
  Netherlands 2 1 1 0 0 −2.025 2
Group C
Team Pld W L T NR NRR Pts
  Sri Lanka (3) 2 2 0 0 0 +0.626 4
  West Indies (8) 2 1 1 0 0 +0.715 2
  Australia (2) 2 0 2 0 0 −1.331 0
Group D
Team Pld W L T NR NRR Pts
  South Africa (4) 2 2 0 0 0 +3.275 4
  New Zealand (6) 2 1 1 0 0 +0.309 2
  Scotland 2 0 2 0 0 −5.281 0
Group Stage
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
T20I 90 5 June   England Paul Collingwood   Netherlands Jeroen Smits Lord's, London   Netherlands by 4 wickets
T20I 91 6 June   New Zealand Brendon McCullum   Scotland Gavin Hamilton Kennington Oval, London   New Zealand by 7 wickets
T20I 92 6 June   Australia Ricky Ponting   West Indies Chris Gayle Kennington Oval, London   West Indies by 7 wickets
T20I 93 6 June   Bangladesh Mohammad Ashraful   India Mahendra Singh Dhoni Trent Bridge, Nottingham   India by 25 runs
T20I 94 7 June   Scotland Gavin Hamilton   South Africa Graeme Smith Kennington Oval, London   South Africa by 130 runs
T20I 95 7 June   England Paul Collingwood   Pakistan Younis Khan Kennington Oval, London   England by 48 runs
T20I 96 8 June   Bangladesh Mohammad Ashraful   Ireland William Porterfield Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Ireland by 6 wickets
T20I 97 8 June   Australia Ricky Ponting   Sri Lanka Kumar Sangakkara Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Sri Lanka by 6 wickets
T20I 98 9 June   Netherlands Jeroen Smits   Pakistan Younis Khan Lord's, London   Pakistan by 82 runs
T20I 99 9 June   New Zealand Brendon McCullum   South Africa Graeme Smith Lord's, London   South Africa by 1 run
T20I 100 10 June   Sri Lanka Kumar Sangakkara   West Indies Denesh Ramdin Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Sri Lanka by 15 runs
T20I 101 10 June   India Mahendra Singh Dhoni   Ireland William Porterfield Trent Bridge, Nottingham   India by 8 wickets

Super Eights

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Group E
Team Pld W L T NR NRR Pts
  South Africa 3 3 0 0 0 +0.787 6
  West Indies 3 2 1 0 0 +0.063 4
  England 3 1 2 0 0 −0.414 2
  India 3 0 3 0 0 −0.466 0
Group F
Team Pld W L T NR NRR Pts
  Sri Lanka 3 3 0 0 0 +1.267 6
  Pakistan 3 2 1 0 0 +1.185 4
  New Zealand 3 1 2 0 0 −0.232 2
  Ireland 3 0 3 0 0 −2.183 0
Super 8's
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
T20I 102 11 June   New Zealand Brendon McCullum   Ireland William Porterfield Trent Bridge, Nottingham   New Zealand by 83 runs
T20I 103 11 June   England Paul Collingwood   South Africa Graeme Smith Trent Bridge, Nottingham   South Africa by 7 wickets
T20I 104 12 June   Pakistan Younis Khan   Sri Lanka Kumar Sangakkara Lord's, London   Sri Lanka by 19 runs
T20I 105 12 June   India Mahendra Singh Dhoni   West Indies Chris Gayle Lord's, London   West Indies by 7 wickets
T20I 106 13 June   South Africa Graeme Smith   West Indies Chris Gayle Kennington Oval, London   South Africa by 20 runs
T20I 107 13 June   New Zealand Daniel Vettori   Pakistan Younis Khan Kennington Oval, London   Pakistan by 6 wickets
T20I 108 14 June   Ireland William Porterfield   Sri Lanka Kumar Sangakkara Lord's, London   Sri Lanka by 9 runs
T20I 109 14 June   India Mahendra Singh Dhoni   England Paul Collingwood Lord's, London   England by 3 runs
T20I 110 15 June   Pakistan Younis Khan   Ireland William Porterfield Kennington Oval, London   Pakistan by 39 runs
T20I 111 15 June   England Paul Collingwood   West Indies Chris Gayle Kennington Oval, London   West Indies by 5 wickets (D/L)
T20I 112 16 June   Sri Lanka Kumar Sangakkara   New Zealand Daniel Vettori Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Sri Lanka by 48 runs
T20I 113 16 June   India Mahendra Singh Dhoni   South Africa Graeme Smith Trent Bridge, Nottingham   South Africa by 9 runs

Knockout stage

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No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
Semifinals
T20I 114 18 June   Pakistan Younis Khan   South Africa Graeme Smith Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Pakistan by 7 runs
T20I 115 19 June   Sri Lanka Kumar Sangakkara   West Indies Chris Gayle Kennington Oval, London   Sri Lanka by 57 runs
Final
T20I 116 21 June   Pakistan Younis Khan   Sri Lanka Kumar Sangakkara Lord's, London   Pakistan by 8 wickets

India in the West Indies

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series[8]
ODI 2852 26 June Chris Gayle Mahendra Singh Dhoni Sabina Park, Kingston   India by 20 runs
ODI 2853 28 June Chris Gayle Mahendra Singh Dhoni Sabina Park, Kingston   West Indies by 8 wickets
ODI 2854 3 July Chris Gayle Mahendra Singh Dhoni Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet   India by 6 wickets (D/L)
ODI 2855 5 July Chris Gayle Mahendra Singh Dhoni Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet No result

July

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Pakistan in Sri Lanka

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
Test Series[9]
Test 1921 4–8 July Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan Galle International Stadium, Galle   Sri Lanka by 50 runs
Test 1924 12–16 July Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan P. Sara Oval, Colombo   Sri Lanka by 7 wickets
Test 1927 20–24 July Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan SSC Ground, Colombo Match drawn
ODI
ODI 2864 30 July Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla   Sri Lanka by 36 runs
ODI 2866 1 August Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla   Sri Lanka by 6 wickets
ODI 2867 3 August Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla   Sri Lanka by 6 wickets
ODI 2868 7 August Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   Pakistan by 146 runs
ODI 2870 9 August Kumar Sangakkara Younis Khan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   Pakistan by 132 runs
T20I
T20I 118 12 August Kumar Sangakkara Shahid Afridi R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   Pakistan won by 52 runs

Canada in Scotland

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2856 7 July Gavin Hamilton Ashish Bagai Mannofield Park, Aberdeen   Canada by 6 wickets
ODI 2857 8 July Gavin Hamilton Ashish Bagai Mannofield Park, Aberdeen   Scotland by 5 wickets

Scotland and Canada also played an Intercontinental Cup match. See main article.

Kenya in Ireland

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2858 9 July William Porterfield Morris Ouma Clontarf Cricket Club Ground, Dublin   Ireland by 3 wickets
ODI 2860 11 July William Porterfield Morris Ouma Clontarf Cricket Club Ground, Dublin   Ireland by 52 runs (D/L)
ODI 2861 12 July William Porterfield Morris Ouma Clontarf Cricket Club Ground, Dublin   Ireland by 4 runs (D/L)

Kenya and Ireland also played an Intercontinental Cup match. See main article.

Australia in England

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
Test Series (The 2009 Ashes)
Test 1922 8–12 July Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Sophia Gardens, Cardiff Match drawn
Test 1925 16–20 July Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Lord's Cricket Ground, London   England won by 115 runs
Test 1928 30 July–3 August Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Edgbaston Cricket Ground, Birmingham Match drawn
Test 1929 7–11 August Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Headingley Cricket Ground, Leeds   Australia won by an innings and 80 runs
Test 1931 20–24 August Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting The Oval, London   England won by 197 runs
T20I Series
T20I 119 30 August Paul Collingwood Michael Clarke Old Trafford Cricket Ground, Manchester No result
T20I 119a 1 September Paul Collingwood Michael Clarke Old Trafford Cricket Ground, Manchester No result
ODI series
ODI 2882 4 September Andrew Strauss Michael Clarke The Oval, London   Australia won by 4 runs
ODI 2883 6 September Andrew Strauss Michael Clarke Lord's Cricket Ground, London   Australia won by 39 runs
ODI 2885 9 September Andrew Strauss Michael Clarke Rose Bowl, Southampton   Australia by 6 wickets
ODI 2888 12 September Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Lord's Cricket Ground, London   Australia by 7 wickets
ODI 2890 15 September Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Australia by 4 wickets
ODI 2891 17 September Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Australia by 111 runs
ODI 2892 20 September Andrew Strauss Ricky Ponting Riverside Ground, Durham   England by 4 wickets

Bangladesh in the West Indies

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No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
Test series[10]
Test 1923 9–13 July Floyd Reifer Mashrafe Mortaza Arnos Vale Stadium, Kingstown, Saint Vincent   Bangladesh by 95 runs
Test 1926 17–21 July Floyd Reifer Shakib Al Hasan Cricket National Stadium, St. George's, Grenada   Bangladesh by 4 wickets
ODI series
ODI 2862 26 July Floyd Reifer Shakib Al Hasan Windsor Park, Roseau, Dominica   Bangladesh by 52 runs
ODI 2863 28 July Floyd Reifer Shakib Al Hasan Windsor Park, Roseau, Dominica   Bangladesh by 3 wickets
ODI 2865 31 July Floyd Reifer Shakib Al Hasan Warner Park Sporting Complex, Basseterre, St. Kitts   Bangladesh by 3 wickets
Only T20I
T20I 117 2 August Floyd Reifer Shakib Al Hasan Warner Park Sporting Complex, Basseterre, St. Kitts   West Indies by 5 wickets

Canada in the Netherlands

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2859 11 July Jeroen Smits Ashish Bagai VRA Ground, Amstelveen, Netherlands   Netherlands by 50 runs
ODI 2860a 12 July Jeroen Smits Ashish Bagai VRA Ground, Amstelveen, Netherlands Match Abandoned

Canada and the Netherlands also played an Intercontinental Cup match. See main article.

New Zealand in Zimbabwe

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New Zealand were due to tour Zimbabwe for a series of three One Day Internationals in 2009 but the tour was cancelled due to political and security reasons, and the New Zealand Cricket discussed possible fixtures in 2010 but made no definitive decisions.[11]

August

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Bangladesh in Zimbabwe

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2869 9 August Prosper Utseya Shakib Al Hasan Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo   Bangladesh by 8 wickets
ODI 2871 11 August Prosper Utseya Shakib Al Hasan Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo   Bangladesh by 49 runs
ODI 2872 14 August Prosper Utseya Shakib Al Hasan Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo   Zimbabwe by 69 runs
ODI 2873 16 August Prosper Utseya Shakib Al Hasan Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo   Bangladesh by 4 wickets
ODI 2874 18 August Prosper Utseya Shakib Al Hasan Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo   Bangladesh by 5 wickets

Kenya in Canada

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2875 19 August Ashish Bagai Morris Ouma Maple Leaf Cricket Club, King City   Canada won by 9 wickets
ODI 2875a 21 August Ashish Bagai Morris Ouma Maple Leaf Cricket Club, King City Match abandoned without a ball bowled
ODI 2877 21 August Ashish Bagai Morris Ouma Maple Leaf Cricket Club, King City No result
ODI 2877b 23 August Maple Leaf Cricket Club, King City Match abandoned without a ball bowled

Kenya and Canada also will play an Intercontinental Cup match. See main article.

New Zealand in Sri Lanka

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
Test Series[12]
Test 1930 18–22 August Kumar Sangakkara Daniel Vettori Galle International Stadium, Galle   Sri Lanka by 202 runs
Test 1932 26–30 August Kumar Sangakkara Daniel Vettori SSC Ground, Colombo   Sri Lanka by 96 runs
T20I Series
T20I 120 2 September Kumar Sangakkara Daniel Vettori R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   New Zealand by 3 runs
T20I 121 4 September Kumar Sangakkara Daniel Vettori R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   New Zealand by 22 runs

Sri Lanka, New Zealand, and India will play in a tri-series during this time.

In the T20I No. 120 Jacob Oram took the second hat-trick in Twenty20 International[13]

Afghanistan in Zimbabwe

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Afghanistan and Zimbabwe XI played an Intercontinental Cup match. See main article.

Ireland in Scotland

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2876 22 August William Porterfield Gavin Hamilton Mannofield Park, Aberdeen   Ireland won by 96 runs
ODI 2877a 23 August Mannofield Park, Aberdeen Match abandoned without a ball bowled

Ireland and Scotland also played an Intercontinental Cup match. See main article.

England in Ireland

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series[14]
ODI 2878 27 August William Porterfield Paul Collingwood Civil Service Cricket Club, Belfast   England by 2 runs (D/L)

Australia in Scotland

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2879 28 August Gavin Hamilton Michael Clarke Raeburn Place, Edinburgh   Australia by 189 runs

Afghanistan in the Netherlands

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No. Date Home Captain Away Captain Venue Result
ODI series
ODI 2880 30 August Jeroen Smits Nowroz Mangal VRA Cricket Ground, Amstelveen   Netherlands win by 8 runs
ODI 2881 1 September Jeroen Smits Nowroz Mangal VRA Cricket Ground, Amstelveen   Afghanistan won by 6 wickets

Afghanistan and the Netherlands also played an Intercontinental Cup match. See main article.

ICC World Cricket League Division Six

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Group stage

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The 2009 ICC World Cricket League Division Six will be held in August and September 2009 in Singapore. The two leading teams of the tournament will be promoted to Division Five in 2010.

Pos Team Pld W L T NR Pts NRR
1   Singapore 5 5 0 0 0 10 1.045
2   Bahrain 5 3 2 0 0 6 0.909
3   Malaysia 5 3 2 0 0 6 0.467
4   Guernsey 5 2 3 0 0 4 −0.326
5   Botswana 5 1 4 0 0 2 −0.250
6   Norway 5 1 4 0 0 2 −1.746
Source: [citation needed]
Group Stage
Match No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
1st match 29 August   Botswana Omar Ali   Norway Zaheer Ashiq Kallang, Central Region, Singapore   Norway by 19 runs
2nd match 29 August   Singapore Chetan Suryawanshi   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost The Padang, Central Region, Singapore   Singapore by 7 wickets
3rd match 29 August   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore   Bahrain by 2 runs
4th match 30 August   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost Kallang, Central Region, Singapore Match abandoned without a ball bowled
5th match 30 August   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam   Norway Zaheer Ashiq The Padang, Central Region, Singapore Match abandoned without a ball bowled
6th match 30 August   Botswana Omar Ali   Singapore Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore Match abandoned without a ball bowled
4th Match(R) 31 August   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost Kallang, Central Region, Singapore   Bahrain by 62 runs
5th match(R) 31 August   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam   Norway Zaheer Ashiq The Padang, Central Region, Singapore   Malaysia by 9 wickets
6th match(R) 31 August   Botswana Omar Ali   Singapore Chetan Suryawanshi Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore   Singapore by 55 runs
7th match 1 September   Botswana Omar Ali   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam Kallang, Central Region, Singapore No result
8th match 1 September   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Singapore Chetan Suryawanshi The Padang, Central Region, Singapore   Singapore by 7 wickets (D/L)
9th match 1 September   Norway Zaheer Ashiq   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore No result
10th match 2 September   Norway Zaheer Ashiq   Singapore Chetan Suryawanshi Kallang, Central Region, Singapore   Singapore by 8 wickets
11th match 2 September   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Botswana Omar Ali The Padang, Central Region, Singapore   Botswana by 69 runs
12th match 2 September   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore   Malaysia by 4 wickets
7th match(R) 3 September   Botswana Omar Ali   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam Kallang, Central Region, Singapore   Malaysia by 8 wickets
9th match(R) 3 September   Norway Zaheer Ashiq   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore   Guernsey by 47 runs
13th match 4 September   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam   Singapore Chetan Suyawanshi Kallang, Central Region, Singapore   Singapore by 4 wickets
14th match 4 September   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost   Botswana Omar Ali The Padang, Central Region, Singapore   Guernsey by 25 runs
15th match 4 September   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq   Norway Zaheer Ashiq Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore   Bahrain by 232 runs
  • (R)-replayed

Finals and play-offs

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Match No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
Final 5 September   Singapore Chetan Suryawanshi   Bahrain Yaser Sadeq Kallang, Central Region, Singapore   Singapore by 68 runs
3rd Place Playoff 5 September   Malaysia Suhan Alagaratnam   Guernsey Stuart Le Prevost The Padang, Central Region, Singapore   Guernsey by 2 runs
5th Place Playoff 5 September   Botswana Omar Ali   Norway Zaheer Ashiq Indian Association, Central Region, Singapore   Botswana by 23 runs
Final Placings
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After the conclusion of the tournament the teams were distributed as follows:

Pos Team Status
1st   Singapore Promoted to Division Five for 2010
2nd   Bahrain
3rd   Guernsey Remained in Division Six for 2011
4th   Malaysia
5th   Botswana Relegated to Division Seven for 2011
6th   Norway

Season summary

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Result Summary

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Test[15] ODI[16] T20I[17]
Matches Wins Loss Draw Tied Matches Wins Loss Tied No result Matches Wins Loss Tied No result
  Australia 5 1 2 2 0 13 10 3 0 0 4 0 3 0 1
  Bangladesh 2 2 0 0 0 8 7 1 0 0 3 0 3 0 0
  England 7 4 1 2 0 11 4 6 1 0 6 2 3 0 1
  India No Matches 4 2 1 0 1 5 2 3 0 0
  New Zealand 2 0 2 0 0 No Matches 6 3 3 0 0
  Pakistan 3 0 2 1 0 10 4 6 0 0 9 7 2 0 0
  South Africa No Matches No Matches 6 5 1 0 0
  Sri Lanka 5 4 0 1 0 5 3 2 0 0 9 6 3 0 0
  West Indies 4 0 4 0 0 9 1 7 0 1 7 4 3 0 0
First-class ODI[16] T20I[17]
  Zimbabwe 1 0 0 1 0 5 1 4 0 0 No Matches
  Afghanistan 2 1 0 1 0 3 2 1 0 0 No Matches
  Bermuda 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 0 No Matches
  Canada 3 0 0 1 0 8 3 4 0 1 No Matches
  Ireland 2 0 0 2 0 8 7 1 0 0 5 1 4 0 0
  Kenya 2 1 0 1 0 7 1 6 0 0 No Matches
  Netherlands 1 0 0 1 0 6 5 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 0
  Scotland 2 1 1 0 0 7 1 6 0 0 2 0 2 0 0
  Uganda 1 1 0 0 0 No ODI Status No T20I Status

Stats Leaders

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Test

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T20I

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Milestones

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Test

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References

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  1. ^ "Matches/Series Archive". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 27 April 2009.
  2. ^ "Season 2009". CricketArchive. Retrieved 10 October 2008.
  3. ^ "2009 ICC World Cup Qualifier". Yahoo Cricket. Archived from the original on 25 July 2009. Retrieved 20 April 2009.
  4. ^ "Australia v Pakistan ODI series, 2009". ESPNcricinfo.
  5. ^ "Australia and Pakistan to play five ODIs in UAE". ESPNcricinfo. 27 February 2009.
  6. ^ "West Indies tour of England, 2009". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 1 May 2009.
  7. ^ "World Cup 2015 qualification starts now". ESPNcricinfo. 22 April 2009.
  8. ^ "India tour of West Indies, 2009". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 28 April 2009.
  9. ^ "Pakistan tour of Sri Lanka". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 14 May 2009.
  10. ^ "Bangladesh tour of West Indies 2009". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 16 June 2009.
  11. ^ "New Zealand Tour of Zimbabwe Postponed To 2010". Cricket World. 25 February 2009. Archived from the original on 14 September 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2009.
  12. ^ "New Zealand tour of Sri Lanka 2009". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2009.
  13. ^ Alter, Jamie. "Fighting NZ overcome Dilshan blitz". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  14. ^ "England tour of Ireland 2009". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2009.
  15. ^ "Test: team records". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 30 August 2009.
  16. ^ a b "ODI: team records". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  17. ^ a b "Twenty20 Internationals: team records". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  18. ^ "Bermuda lose ODI status after defeat". ESPNcricinfo. 8 April 2009.
  19. ^ "Afghanistan achieve ODI status". ESPNcricinfo. 17 April 2009.
  20. ^ "Batting Records". ESPNcricinfo. 30 August 2009.
  21. ^ "Bowling Records". ESPNcricinfo. 30 August 2009.
  22. ^ "Batting Records". ESPNcricinfo. 22 September 2009.
  23. ^ "Bowling Records". ESPNcricinfo. 22 September 2009.
  24. ^ "Batting Records". ESPNcricinfo. 4 September 2009.
  25. ^ "Bowling Records". ESPNcricinfo. 4 September 2009.
  26. ^ "Netherlands take third, Afghanistan win again". ESPNcricinfo. 19 April 2009.
  27. ^ "Collingwood stars in comfortable win". ESPNcricinfo. 19 April 2009.
  28. ^ Oliver, Brett (9 July 2009). "Aussie batsmen dominate England". BBC Sport. Retrieved 9 July 2009.
  29. ^ "Records | Test matches | Batting records | Most runs in career | ESPNcricinfo.com". Stats.cricinfo.com. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
  30. ^ Jamie Alter (26 August 2009). "Vettori joins 300-wicket club". ESPNcricinfo.