Sports
No Indian among top six scorers at World Cup
Kolkata, March 16
In a testimony to the
collective effort that has marked India's all-conquering show in the
cricket World Cup so far, no Indian batsman features among the top six
run scorers though pacer Mohammad Shami occupies the second spot among
the top wicket-takers with 15 victims.
Known for producing a
steady flow of top batting performers over the years, it is a rare sight
not to find an Indian batsman in the top six list despite the team
being in sublime form.
However, the battling burden has been
shared between the likes of Shikhar Dhawan, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina
and captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni.
Dhawan is seventh among the top
run-getters of the quadrennial event with 337 runs from six innings at
an average of 56.16 and has become the fourth Indian after Sachin
Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly to score two hundreds in the
same World Cup.
Kohli is at No.11 with 301 runs. But his splendid
average of 75.25 is the fifth best among batsmen, who have scored 300
or more in the pool stage.
Leading the pack is Sri Lankan veteran
Kumar Sangakkara, who has so far amassed 496 runs from six knocks at an
astonishing average of 124. He has also hit four consecutive centuries
-- a world record.
When it comes to bowling, India's pace attack
is headed by the 25-year-old Shami, who has swung his way to the second
spot in the list of highest wicket-takers with 15 wickets from five
outings.
The right-arm seamer has picked a wicket every 12.6 runs and has an excellent economy rate of 4.39 per over.
Australia's
lanky left-arm pacer Mitchell Starc leads the table with 16 wickets
from five contests at a fantastic average of 8.5, giving away just 3.57
runs an over.
The record for the highest individual score in
World Cups, previously held by South African Gary Kirsten (188 not out),
was demolished by a brutal Chris Gayle, who bludgeoned his way to 215
in a match for the West Indies against Zimbabwe at Canberra on February
24.
Zimbabwe's Sean Williams and Pakistan's Misbah-ul-Haq have hit most number of 50s in the group stages (four each).
England's Steven Finn has got the only hat-trick of the mega event, against Australia at Melbourne.
New
Zealand pacer Tim Southee was at his lethal best when he
single-handedly took apart the English batting line-up on a lively strip
at the Wellington Regional Stadium on February 20, pocketing figures of
7/33, the third best in Cup history after two Australians -- Glenn
McGrath's 7/15 and Andy Bichel's 7/20 in the 2003 edition.
Credit
also goes to South Africa's talismanic skipper AB de Villiers, who now
has the most sixes in the event (36) and the most in this year's edition
too (20).
The lowest score in the group stages was posted by the
United Arab Emirates (UAE) against India at Perth where they were
skittled out for a paltry 102 at the WACA.