🏏ICC WC 2023: M1 - England vs New Zealand at Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad on 05/10/2023 at 2 PM IST🏏
Tag Credit: Sutapasima
Much awaited ODI cricket world cup is finally here. 1st match will be played between the finalists of 2019 world cup New Zealand and England
England and New Zealand meet again, Super Over(s) from 2019 on many minds
Four years on from that mind-blowing World Cup final at Lord's, they raise the curtain on the 2023 edition, their ageing golden generations looking for one more chance to shine
Big Picture: … and so it goes on
So… where were we? July 14, 2019, that's where. At 7.35pm on a bright summer's evening at Lord's. Jofra Archer to Martin Guptill… Guptill to Jason Roy… Roy to Jos Buttler … Buttler to the stumps and English glory, in a finish too excruciatingly tight to create any scoreline separation across 102 overs all told.
Somewhere, in a parallel universe, that epic contest has perhaps still not reached a definitive conclusion. The playing conditions for the 2023 event stipulate that, in the event of a tie this time around, the two teams will contest as many Super Overs as it takes to separate the sides … which will be of scant consolation to New Zealand's 2019 veterans, at least six of whom are likely to line up in Ahmedabad on Thursday, but at least it will be hard for the fates to be quite so cruel again.
And so, here we are, four years later, with the 50-over World Cup picking up with a contest that, to all intents and purposes, never quite ended. Winner-takes-all it is not… but winner-takes-a-huge-stride-towards-their-endgame, it most certainly is. As England discovered in their error-strewn journey through the group stage in 2019, early losses in this round-robin format can crank up the jeopardy further down the line. Especially if you give a leg-up to one of your likeliest rivals for a top-four finish.
Either way, it's entirely fitting to begin the 2023 World Cup with this showdown, because much like that Lord's scoreline, the ODI narrative has been stuck in a stalemate since that momentous day. Does 50-over cricket even have a place in the modern world? The new president of cricket's ancient regime believes this stage is the only place for it, and, amid the T20 zeitgeist, the optional approach that many of the game's biggest stars have taken to the format in recent years (Ben Stokes and Trent Boult foremost among them) would appear to back up that assertion.
But it is still one hell of a stage - the biggest stage, quite literally, in the case of this curtain-raising contest at the Narendra Modi Stadium, where upwards of 120,000 people could yet cram in to watch the action unfold, although to judge by the current air of mild indifference permeating the tournament build-up, we might have to wait until October 14 to witness the venue in full flow.
Remarkably, it's not the first time that these two teams have opened a World Cup in Ahmedabad - way back in 1996, amid the earliest flexes of the BCCI's administrative muscle, Mike Atherton's England took on Lee Germon's New Zealand at the down-at-heel Sardar Patel Stadium (as it was known before its gigantic refit) in a contest that would retrospectively epitomise the sea-change that was slamming towards the sport.
Don't forget to send in your predictions by 2PM IST for Match One.
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