Rohit Sharma is captain of the squad that includes four other Indians—Virat Kohli, Ravindra Jadeja, Mohammed Shami and Jasprit Bumrah. World Cup winners, Australia's Glenn Maxwell and Adam Zampa, also make the cut
A 46-day cricketing extravaganza came to an end in Ahmedabad on Sunday with Australia lifting their sixth ODI (one-day international) World Cup. The 10-team event hosted by India witnessed some extraordinary performances—many records were broken, and several milestones achieved during the tournament.
Fans in huge numbers thronged to almost every venue, making it an exciting World Cup at a time when there are questions about the survival of ODI cricket. It helped that India had a brilliant performance with 10 victories on the trot going into the final.
From the highest run-getter to the top wicket-taker, Indians led from the front till Australia beat them in the final. We look at players who stood out from the rest in the tournament.Â
The Indian skipper defined what ‘leading from the front’ means during the World Cup. He took the toughest job of getting his team off to a good start in every game. It meant that the rest of the batters had no pressure of the scoring rate—a primary reason why India out-batted most of the teams. Sharma finished as the second-highest run-getter in the tournament with 597 runs in 11 matches at a staggering strike rate of 125.94, the highest for any opener in the tournament. His captaincy was also on point. He ensured the team was in the right spirits and took many strategically correct decisions.Â
Playing his last ODI World Cup, the South African wicketkeeper was exceptional both in front and behind the stumps. He hit four hundreds—the most in the tournament—playing a vital role in leading South Africa to the semi-finals. De Kock also didn’t miss much with the gloves. He had the most dismissals for a wicketkeeper apart from scoring 594 runs with the bat.