Cricinfo: ICC Intercontinental Cup 2007
Cricinfo

Cricinfo Desktop Alerts

home


Cricinfo 3D

Audio

Stats

Fantasy

Slogout

Video

Help and Feedback



ICC Intercontinental Cup


News and Features

Photos

Fixtures and Results

Points Table

Squads

Scorecards

Statistics

Records

History




 





Live Scorecards
Fixtures | Results
3D Animation






England v South Africa
Sri Lanka v India
Bangladesh v Australia
County Cricket
ICC Intercontinental Cup

Current and Future Tours



News
Photos | Wallpapers




Cricinfo Magazine








Match/series archive
Records
Statsguru
Players/Officials
Grounds



Women's Cricket
ICC
Rankings/Ratings




Wisden Almanack



Games
Fantasy Cricket
Slogout



Daily Newsletter
Desktop Alerts
Toolbar
Widgets







Ireland v Scotland, ICC Trophy final, Dublin

Scotland begin as slight favourites

Edward Craig

July 12, 2005

The final of the ICC Trophy looks more like a rugby fixture than anything to do with cricket: Ireland take on Scotland at Clontarf in Dublin. Unlike any Six Nations clash, though, both teams have already won - qualification for the World Cup in 2007 and the ICC's increased grant ($500,000 over four years) is really what this event was all about.

Both sides have been selected from full squads - Ed Joyce is back for Ireland after a brief return to Middlesex, while Scotland's policeman-wicketkeeper, Colin Smith, is back on duty after the completion of the G8 conference in Gleneagles.

Scotland are narrow favourites. No side has yet troubled them in the tournament as they waltzed their way to the final. A combination of all-round depth and a trio of pace bowlers has ensured that no opposition has been allowed to get away. Dougie Brown, John Blain and Paul Hoffmann have taken 10, 11 and 15 wickets respectively while their top five individual scores in the tournament have come from five different players - without Brown yet firing.

A thumping win over Bermuda in the semi-final maintained their momentum. But Clontarf has happy memories for the Irish - the nearby Clontarf Castle is symbolic, for the venue is something of a home-side fortress. Ireland's most recent successes against English county opposition in the C&G Trophy (Middlesex in 1997 and Surrey in 2004) have two things in common: both were played at Clontarf and Mark Ramprakash was on the losing side on each occasion.

There is no denying that Ed Joyce is an essential ingredient. In his four knocks in the tournament so far he has scored two hundreds and one fifty in a total of 318 runs, double the next highest run-scorer for Ireland.

The Irish batting should be its strength, although it has not fired quite at they would have hoped. A humdinger of a semi-final (intriguingly at Clontarf again) against Canada ended when Andrew White smashed a six with four needed off three balls. Their progress has not been smooth.

That said, around 1000 people are expected to cheer on the Irish at the picturesque seaside ground, where short boundaries and a true if slow wicket lead to high-scoring clashes. This should prove a fitting finale to an event that has received wide praise for its organisation and professionalism, even if the teams won't mind too much about defeat.

Edward Craig is deputy editor of The Wisden Cricketer

 
Post this story on your favourite website Email this page to a friend Print this page Feedback
Live scores, results, news, features and more - a click away
Download the Cricinfo Toolbar
    Watch our daily Cricinfo SportsCenter news round-ups
Available on Cricinfo.tv
    Live scores, news & ball-by-ball commentary on your phone
Cricinfo Mobile

Cricinfo Mobile


Related Links



Players/Umpires

Teams

Grounds






Cricinfo Products
Our daily SportsCenter news round-up
Watch on Cricinfo.tv
Scores, text comms & news on your phone
Cricinfo Mobile
Play Slogout - our cricket action simulation game
Two formats to choose from
Add a Cricinfo Widget to your website now
Portable apps for your site

Sponsored Links
The story of the 1983 World Cup (DVD)
Available now at Cricshop
Follow the new 2008/09 Premier League season
On ESPNsoccernet
2008 Tri-Nations rugby coverage at Scrum.com
Live scores, news & more



 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories