World Cup takeaways: India dominates, England flops, Afghanistan arrives and Kohli shines

India's Virat Kohli (2R) celebrates with Shubman Gill (L), captain Rohit Sharma (2L) and KL Rahul after taking the wicket of Netherlands' captain Scott Edwards during the 2023 ICC Men's Cricket World Cup one-day international (ODI) match between India and Netherlands at the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru, India, on November 12, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 13 November 2023
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World Cup takeaways: India dominates, England flops, Afghanistan arrives and Kohli shines

  • India, New Zealand, South Africa and Australia are the four teams who have made it to the semifinals 
  • Defending champions England fared poorly throughout the tournament, winning only three matches

After 39 days and 45 matches, the long group stage of the Cricket World Cup is over and four teams remain in the running for the title.

It’s India vs. New Zealand and South Africa vs. Australia in the semifinals this week.

Before that, it’s time to have a look at the big storylines to emerge from the tournament:

HOME ADVANTAGE

Playing at home has never been so important in 50-over World Cups. The nation that was host or co-host has won the last three tournaments — India in 2011, Australia in 2015 and England in 2019 — and the Indians have swept through the group stage of this edition with nine straight wins in front of their own fans. They knew the conditions the best, they are most aware of the benefits of batting first or chasing in all venues, and are most comfortable in the environment. Before 2011, only once had a host nation won the event — Sri Lanka in the 1996 tournament it co-hosted with Pakistan and India, and the Sri Lankans only staged two games in total amid security concerns.

ENGLAND NEEDS REVAMP

The English arrived as the premier team in white-ball cricket, given their status as the World Cup holders in the Twenty20 and 50-over formats. The team that helped to revolutionize the ODI game with an ultra-aggressive approach has grown old, though, and English cricket authorities have taken their eye off the 50-over game in favor of focusing on a red-ball reset of the test team and introducing The Hundred, a contentious new domestic tournament. Together with the players maybe believing their own hype, as well as an unlikely downturn in form, England has put in one of the worst title defenses imaginable, winning three games and finishing in seventh place. England moved out of last spot by winning its last two games. So it’s back to the drawing board for the English, who’ll need to develop a fresh young team for the 2027 World Cup.




England's cricketers stand for their national anthem at the start of the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup match between Pakistan and England in Kolkata, India, on November 11, 2023. (AP)

AFGHANISTAN ARRIVES
Looking at the big picture, the story of this World Cup has to be the coming-of-age displays of Afghanistan, for so long an easy-beat in international cricket and now a team widely admired because of its journey to the elite. Beating England in week two shook the tournament but wins over Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Netherlands have proved that it was no fluke, and a sensational victory over Australia appeared to be on the cards before Glenn Maxwell’s astonishing exploits. This, remember, is a team that has come a long way quickly in the face of many challenges such as security threats, ruined infrastructure and persistent poverty. It’s an inspirational story in a sport that can often cut off access for low-ranking teams to the top events and a sixth-place finish will be celebrated by many.

ENDURING KOHLI

No cricketer plays with more pressure on his shoulders than former India captain Virat Kohli. You wouldn’t know it from his performances at this World Cup. This might ultimately go down as Kohli’s World Cup, with “The King” — as he is sometimes referred — hitting two unbeaten hundreds and five half-centuries, including a 95 against New Zealand that saw him fall going for a match-clinching six. He averaged 99 and led the scoring list with 594 runs in the group stage and that takes in a duck against England. He even took a wicket — his first in ODIs since 2014 — in the last league game against Netherlands. At 35, approaching 300 ODIs and freed from the captaincy, Kohli might never have been so good and that’s saying something for a player selected by the ICC as the best men’s cricketer of the 2010s. Watch out Sachin Tendulkar — your record for most runs in ODIs (18,426) is not safe.

STAR PERFORMERS
Aside from Kohli, there have been a number of star performers. South Africa opener Quinton de Kock has been the most devastating batter with 591 runs, 23-year-old New Zealand allrounder Rachin Ravindra has been a revelation as the first batter to score three centuries and 565 runs on his World Cup debut and Maxwell’s tournament-high 201 not out to lead Australia to victory over Afghanistan last week might be the greatest innings in any World Cup. Of the bowlers, Adam Zampa’s spin has been a comfort blanket for the Australians after a slow start, especially in his 3-21 against England, and he led the wicket tally with 22. For India, paceman Jasprit Bumrah has taken 17 wickets and Mohammed Shami has snared two five-wicket hauls and comfortably the best average among specialist bowlers in the tournament.


Japan take on resurgent China in U-23 final in Jeddah today

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Japan take on resurgent China in U-23 final in Jeddah today

  • China have defeated Australia and Uzbekistan and impressed defensively

JEDDAH: Chinese soccer faces its biggest match in more than 20 years on Saturday when it plays Japan in the final of the U-23 Asian Cup in Jeddah.

Despite never advancing past the group stage of the tournament, China is just 90 minutes away from its first continental title since 2004, when the U-17 team was crowned champion. That came two years after the senior team made its first, and so far only, World Cup appearance.
With such successes coming a generation ago, there is huge attention on the U-23 side. On the road to the final, China has defeated Australia and Uzbekistan and impressed defensively, not conceding a goal in five games.
In the first four games, the team scored only once. After eliminating Uzbekistan in a penalty shootout in the quarterfinals, however, China beat Vietnam 3-0 in the last four match.
“It’s important to enjoy this victory — not just for the players but also for the staff,” the team’s Spanish coach Antonio Puche said. “Moments like this are significant for football in China as we continue to work toward improving the game.”
Others have taken note of the new China.
Vietnam coach Kim Sang-sik praised China after his team’s defeat.
“This is my first time coaching a team against China, and their performance was truly outstanding, especially their defense, which was very impressive,” Kim said. “I believe they will perform even better, and Chinese soccer is indeed improving.”
Puche was tossed into the air by his players after the semifinal win. “I enjoyed this moment, I enjoyed the game. I’m so happy not just for myself or for the coaching staff, but for Chinese football as a whole.”
Defending champion Japan will present the toughest test yet.
“You know the Japanese team, I know the Japanese team, we all know the Japanese team,” Puche said. “They are a strong team. We will compete against them. We will fight.”
Japan has conceded just one goal in five games and scored 12. A deserved 1-0 win over South Korea in the semifinal was another impressive performance as it chases a second consecutive title and third overall.
“There are many great things we can take from the semifinal into the final,” Japan midfielder Ryunosuke Sato said. 
“We’re going to win with all 23 players, starters and subs. The subs have this in mind as well. All 90 minutes against Korea, we managed to defend and persevere, and that’s why we won ... Now we have to focus on the final.”