Saturday, 22 June 2013

England can end trophy drought - Cook

Venue: EdgbastonDate: Sunday, 23 JuneStart: 10:30 BSTCoverage: Ball-by-ball Test Match Special commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Radio 4 and via BBC Sport website & BBC iPlayer Radio app; live text commentary on BBC Sport website, mobile devices and app

Captain Alastair Cook hopes England can end a 38-year wait for a major 50-over trophy when they play India in Sunday's Champions Trophy final at Edgbaston.

England have never won a World Cup or Champions Trophy and will face an unbeaten India.

"It's very important for us, one of our major goals this summer was to try and win the Champions Trophy," Cook said.

"Not only will it break that duck of 38 years but prepare us well for the World Cup [in 2015], looking long-term."

1979 World Cup: Lost to West Indies by 92 runs

1987 World Cup: Lost to Australia by seven runs

1992 World Cup: Lost to Pakistan by 22 runs

2004 Champions Trophy: Lost to West Indies by two wickets

2010 World Twenty20: Beat Australia by seven wickets

England have won only one ICC global event but that was in the Twenty20 format in 2010.

They have lost three World Cup finals, the last of which was in 1992, and also lost the 2004 Champions Trophy final to West Indies.

They opened their 2013 Champions Trophy campaign with a 48-run victory over Australia before losing to a Kumar Sangakkara-inspired Sri Lanka, meaning they needed to beat New Zealand in their final group game to reach the final four.

They did so, by 10 runs, in a match reduced to 24 overs per side following rain at Cardiff, and then defeated South Africa by seven wickets in the semi-final at The Oval.

"It took a very good hundred from a world-class player [Sangakkara] to beat us so apart from that we can't really have too many complaints," Cook said.

England swing bowler James Anderson is second in the leading wicket-taker table with 10 scalps, only one behind New Zealand's Mitchell McClenaghan.

Spinner James Tredwell has four wickets in three matches at a cost of 24.25 each and an economy rate of 4.61 per over deputising for Graeme Swann, who took 1-50 from 10 overs in his one match against the Sri Lankans.

Cook gave no indication as to who would play in the final but said: "We're very lucky to have two off-spinners who are outstanding, when one doesn't play the other one does well and puts pressure on the other guy so Tredders has been given an opportunity and he has taken it just like we knew he would."

Tim Bresnan, who has taken four wickets in three matches, is available for selection having missed the semi-final following the birth of his son, Max Geoffrey.

"It's great to have him back in the squad, the whole squad gets a good feeling when something special like that happens to one of your members so he's another in the selection mix," Cook said.

"We're very excited about what lies ahead, we don't know what the weather is going to do or what the game is going to be like but if we focus on what we've done well in this tournament we're going to give ourselves a very good chance."

2009: Australia

2006: Australia

2004: West Indies

2002: Sri Lanka & India

2000: New Zealand

1998: South Africa

Bad weather is expected at Edgbaston on Sunday and Cook is prepared for a shortened contest.

"They've got a wealth of Twenty20 experience, they play a lot more than we do but I wouldn't doubt anyone in our team - we've had these shortened games before and adjusted well so if it happens in the final there will be no reason why we can't adjust," added Cook.

"We've got an opportunity to win a major global trophy, which as a squad doesn't come around often, so we're desperate to take it."

Thirty years ago this month India won their first World Cup and they won the competition again when it was last held in 2011. They are yet to win the Champions Trophy outright, having shared the trophy with Sri Lanka in 2002, and have lost in the first round in each of the last three events but beat England 3-2 when the teams last met in a one-day series in India in January.

Skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni said: "It's a very important game, but in this tournament you only face the best of teams, so I think it will be a very good contest. England are a very good side, they know the conditions quite well so I think it will be very good for the spectators - that's what we want to do, entertain the crowd."

Asked about the measured style of batting favoured by England's top three, he said: "They play proper cricket and often you need to see how things are progressing.

"We have not seen too many scores in excess of 300 runs [India's 331-7 against South Africa's 305 at Cardiff the only two] maybe because of the weather and maybe because of how the bowlers are bowling, whether their approach was right is not for me to decide.

"You want to hit sixes and fours but first and foremost you want to win the game and that's what they have been doing."

With no reserve day scheduled for the final the tie must be decided on Sunday, meaning an abandonment would result in the teams sharing the trophy.

England (from): A Cook (capt), J Anderson, J Bairstow, I Bell, R Bopara, T Bresnan, S Broad, J Buttler (wkt), S Finn, E Morgan, J Root, G Swann, J Tredwell, I Trott, C Woakes.

India (from): M Dhoni (capt & wkt) R Ashwin, S Dhawan, R Jadeja, K Karthik (wkt), V Kohli, B Kumar, A Mishra, I Pathan, S Raina, I Sharma, R Sharma, M Vijay, R Vinay Kumar, U Yadav.

Umpires: K Dharmasena (Sri) & R Tucker (Aus)

TV umpire: B Oxenford (Aus)


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