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Small teams eye big impact in England

Associated Press

Posted: Jun 02, 2009 at 1525 hrs IST
      

London: Ireland, Scotland or the Netherlands are unlikely to win the Twenty20 World Cup, but anyone tempted to dismiss them as easy opponents needs only look at the impact lower-profile teams have had in recent 50-over tournaments.

Ireland reached the Super Eight stage at the 2007 World Cup after tying with Zimbabwe and beating Pakistan. In 2003, Kenya reached the semi-finals after defeating Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe on their way to the last four. Of the three teams, Ireland have the best chance of reaching the Super Eights here, thanks to a kind draw. Few expect the Irish to beat India, but Bangladesh can be beaten, according to Ireland batsman Kevin O’Brien.

“(Bangladesh’s) best chance to win a game in the group and get through to the Super 8s, and it’s our best chance as well,” O’Brien said. “We’ll go out there and do what we did, and hopefully we can get a few more games out of it. Bangladesh and India are in our group and they bring such great crowds and such a noise, we have to just live for those two games because you might never play in front of 28,000 again.”

The perennial problem for all associate nations is being unable to field their best players. With no opportunities to play professional cricket domestically, Ireland’s best players like Ed Joyce and Eoin Morgan gravitate toward the county circuit, and Morgan has opted to play for England this time round.

Yet the associate nations also benefit from a trickle of players discarded by the Test-playing nations. Scotland are captained by former England international Gavin Hamilton, while the Netherlands’ include Victoria fast bowler Dirk Nannes, who was overlooked by Australia. It will take a major upset for either the Netherlands or Scotland to progress. The Dutch, who open the tournament against England at Lord’s on Friday, will have to beat either the hosts or Pakistan.

Scotland have a similarly daunting task to get out of Group D, where they meet New Zealand and South Africa.

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