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ICC Awards 2006

Twizzle

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ICC Awards 2006
Ponting secures major honours at ICC Awards

Cricinfo staff
November 3, 2006
spacer.gif

http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/inline/content/current/image/266803.jpg?alt=1
A delighted Ricky Ponting shows off his two trophies © Cricinfo
Ricky Ponting, Australia's captain, picked up both major honours at the annual ICC Awards in Mumbai, being named Player of the Year and Test Player of the Year.
Ponting was also named on both the ICC ODI and Test Teams of the Year which were selected by a five-man selection panel consisting of Sunil Gavaskar, Ian Healy, Arjuna Ranatunga, Waqar Younis and Allan Donald.
Australia's Michael Hussey was named as the winner of the ODI Player of the Year. During the voting period Hussey played 25 ODIs and enjoyed a spectacular level of success. In those matches he scored 769 runs at an average of 64.80. He beat off the challenge of Ponting, India's Yuvraj Singh and Sri Lanka's Mahela Jayawardene to secure the award.
Jayawardene was named Captain of the Year. He beat off competition from Ponting, Michael Vaughan, England's Ashes-winning skipper, and India's captain Rahul Dravid.
Dravid was named captain of the World Test Team of the Year. Six teams were represented in the 12-man line-up, four of which - Ponting, Andrew Flintoff, Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath - were also named in the World Test Team of the Year in 2005.
Jayawardene was chosen to lead the ODI Team of the Year and five countries were represented in the 12-man line-up. But only three players - Adam Gilchrist, Flintoff and Andrew Symonds - also appeared in the World ODI Team of the Year in 2005. Indeed, Gilchrist and Flintoff also appeared in the 2004 line-up.
England batsman Ian Bell was picked as as Emerging Player of the Year. During the voting period between August 1, 2005 and August 8, 2006, Bell played 13 Tests, scoring 958 runs at an average of 41.65. He hit four centuries and five fifties in that time.
Australia's captain Karen Rolton won the inaugural Women's Player of the Year award and Simon Taufel was named Umpire of the Year for the third successive time.
The England team won the Spirit of Cricket Award for the second year running. The award is given to the side which, in the opinion of the Elite Panel of Umpires and Referees and the captains of the ten Test teams, has best conducted itself on the field within the spirit of the game.
World Test Team of the Year 1 Matthew Hayden, 2 Michael Hussey, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Rahul Dravid (capt), 5 Mohammed Yousuf, 6 Kumar Sangakkar (wk), 7 Andrew Flintoff, 8 Shane Warne, 9 Makhaya Ntini, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Glenn McGrath. 12th man: Brett Lee.
World ODI Team of the Year 1 Adam Gilchrist (wkt), 2 MS Dhoni, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 Michael Hussey, 7 Andrew Flintoff, 8 Irfan Pathan, 9 Brett Lee, 10 Shane Bond, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan. 12th man: Andrew Symonds.
© Cricinfo
 

Twizzle

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well done to punter and the rest of the aussies, including Hussey being named ODI player of the year, and also in both test and ODI teams

and lets not forget Di Ralton and Simon Taufell

:clap: :clap: :clap:
 

Hutty1986

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Mahela Jayawardene? AND as captain :lol: :lol:

Fantastic effort, although Ponting should have been a shoe in for ODI captain
 

JJ

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Winners seem well-deserved IMO

I'd have Symonds in the XI for Yuvraj

Surprised, quite frankly, that Hayden and Lee are in the test squads - outside of Aust Hayden's been ordinary, and Lee has just been solid IMO

Why laughing at Jayawardene - do you actually watch the game??? Seriously :roll: Jayawardene is a very fine player. Ponting is a great, but he's an abysmal captain
 

JJ

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Taufel named top umpire for a third time

Cricinfo staff

November 3, 2006



'Winning this for the third time is possibly even more special for me because it tells me that what I am doing is along the right lines' © Getty Images




Simon Taufel was named as Umpire of the Year for the third successive time at the ICC Awards in Mumbai. Taufel, was picked by the ten Test captains as well as the eight-man Elite Panel of ICC Referees.

"On behalf of the ICC I would like to congratulate Simon on this award," said Percy Sonn, the ICC president. "He is a brilliant umpire and it is good to see that he is being recognised as such. It is clear that the players and the referees have enormous confidence in him and rightly so. He has once again had an outstanding year making decisions in pressure situations all over the world and this award reflects the fact he has got the vast majority of those decisions right.

"Mind you, it should be pointed out that the competition for this award was very tough because all the members of the Elite Panel of ICC Umpires are excellent decision-makers in both ODIs and in the longer form of the game."

Taufel, 35, made his first-class debut as an umpire in 1994-95 and joined the Elite Panel in 2003.

"It is good to win an individual award but really it should be remembered that umpiring is a team sport," Taufel told the audience. "There are two guys out there in the middle, one in the box and a fourth umpire too so although it's great to win this, it's not an individual effort.

"Winning this for the third time is possibly even more special for me because it tells me that what I am doing is along the right lines and it inspires me to keep improving in what I am doing. It is also a tribute to my coaches and family who have been supporting to me for so long. "It can be a tough existence at times and it's not easy to keep at the top of your game but it is events like this that make a difference to us. Perhaps the ICC Awards will inspire other people to choose umpiring as a possible career path and that can only be good for the game."

3 times - not bad for a 35 year-old
 

aussies1st

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Now if only our selectors would see the light Ponting is not a great captain.
 

Hutty1986

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JJ said:
Winners seem well-deserved IMO

I'd have Symonds in the XI for Yuvraj

Surprised, quite frankly, that Hayden and Lee are in the test squads - outside of Aust Hayden's been ordinary, and Lee has just been solid IMO

Why laughing at Jayawardene - do you actually watch the game??? Seriously :roll: Jayawardene is a very fine player. Ponting is a great, but he's an abysmal captain

:roll: :roll: Do you even watch the game?

Abysmal captain, that is a very very harsh call

Jayawardene is a good player but as I said, he didnt deserve the captaincy of such a brilliant side
 

gregstar

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20,504
i think it's pure racism that australia got so many awards.

the sub continent got ripped.

where's the parasite to back me up?
 

sanjane

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Twizzle said:
ICC Awards 2006
Ponting secures major honours at ICC Awards
Cricinfo staff
November 3, 2006
spacer.gif

http://content-aus.cricinfo.com/inline/content/current/image/266803.jpg?alt=1
A delighted Ricky Ponting shows off his two trophies © Cricinfo
Ricky Ponting, Australia's captain, picked up both major honours at the annual ICC Awards in Mumbai, being named Player of the Year and Test Player of the Year.
Ponting was also named on both the ICC ODI and Test Teams of the Year which were selected by a five-man selection panel consisting of Sunil Gavaskar, Ian Healy, Arjuna Ranatunga, Waqar Younis and Allan Donald.
Australia's Michael Hussey was named as the winner of the ODI Player of the Year. During the voting period Hussey played 25 ODIs and enjoyed a spectacular level of success. In those matches he scored 769 runs at an average of 64.80. He beat off the challenge of Ponting, India's Yuvraj Singh and Sri Lanka's Mahela Jayawardene to secure the award.
Jayawardene was named Captain of the Year. He beat off competition from Ponting, Michael Vaughan, England's Ashes-winning skipper, and India's captain Rahul Dravid.
Dravid was named captain of the World Test Team of the Year. Six teams were represented in the 12-man line-up, four of which - Ponting, Andrew Flintoff, Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath - were also named in the World Test Team of the Year in 2005.
Jayawardene was chosen to lead the ODI Team of the Year and five countries were represented in the 12-man line-up. But only three players - Adam Gilchrist, Flintoff and Andrew Symonds - also appeared in the World ODI Team of the Year in 2005. Indeed, Gilchrist and Flintoff also appeared in the 2004 line-up.
England batsman Ian Bell was picked as as Emerging Player of the Year. During the voting period between August 1, 2005 and August 8, 2006, Bell played 13 Tests, scoring 958 runs at an average of 41.65. He hit four centuries and five fifties in that time.
Australia's captain Karen Rolton won the inaugural Women's Player of the Year award and Simon Taufel was named Umpire of the Year for the third successive time.
The England team won the Spirit of Cricket Award for the second year running. The award is given to the side which, in the opinion of the Elite Panel of Umpires and Referees and the captains of the ten Test teams, has best conducted itself on the field within the spirit of the game.
World Test Team of the Year 1 Matthew Hayden, 2 Michael Hussey, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Rahul Dravid (capt), 5 Mohammed Yousuf, 6 Kumar Sangakkar (wk), 7 Andrew Flintoff, 8 Shane Warne, 9 Makhaya Ntini, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Glenn McGrath. 12th man: Brett Lee.
World ODI Team of the Year 1 Adam Gilchrist (wkt), 2 MS Dhoni, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 Michael Hussey, 7 Andrew Flintoff, 8 Irfan Pathan, 9 Brett Lee, 10 Shane Bond, 11 Muttiah Muralitharan. 12th man: Andrew Symonds.
© Cricinfo

IMO,

Ponting deserved his awards, although I think Murali and Yousuf had very strong claims for test player of the year. Congrats also to well deserving recipients of their respective awards, Hussey and Mahela. I have very little doubt that he is the best captain in the world.

I also believe that Mohd Asif would've gotten the emerging players award if not 4 the recent controversy. Mind you, Ian Bell is not a bad replacement. He played pretty poorly when England regained the Ashes. Watch him play brilliantly when they (hopefully) retain them....

What I am surprised about is:

* Mahela not being in the test side. His numbers clearly point to him being around there
* Hussey being in the test side and that too as an opener. Sure, he's great but surely there have been better openers over that period.
* Chris Gayle not being in the ODI side. Clearly the best ODI all-rounder in the game. And I'm sure he was during that period too.
* Shane Bond and Andrew Flintoff's names making the teamsheets. Weren't they injured for most of the period considered?
* Makhaya Ntini and Ian Bradshaw not being in the ODI team
* Muttiah Muralidaran being in the ODI team. Hasn't been great, but if you want a specialist spinner, noone better in the business I guess. For the period considered, maybe Harbhajan Singh or Dan Vettori should have made it.
* Andrew Symonds not being in the ODI team. Joke
* Two wicket-keepers in the ODI team. I couldn't pick one over the other, but the selectors had to.
* Glenn McGrath and Lee making the test XII. Again Asif would have been a shoe-in but for the controversy. Akhtar would have also been a chance, but he was injured for a fair period also.

In summary, I would have had:

World Test Team of the Year 1 Matthew Hayden, 2 Chris Gayle, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Rahul Dravid, 5 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 6 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 7 Mohd Yousuf, 8 Shane Warne, 9 Makhaya Ntini, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Mohd Asif/Lasith Malinga. 12th man: Dwayne Bravo.
World ODI Team of the Year 1 Adam Gilchrist/MS Dhoni (wkt), 2 Chris Gayle, 3 Ricky Ponting, 4 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 Andrew Symonds 7 Michael Hussey, 8 Irfan Pathan, 9 Brett Lee, 10 Ian Bradshaw, 11 Makhaya Ntini. 12th man: Michael Clarke/Dwayne Bravo.
 
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Hutty1986 said:
:roll: :roll: Do you even watch the game?

Abysmal captain, that is a very very harsh call

Jayawardene is a good player but as I said, he didnt deserve the captaincy of such a brilliant side

Ponting isn't the best captain going around, he sent England into bat in the ashes when his best quick had just pulled out. One of the worst decisions I have ever seen.
 

lockyno1

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53,782
Marshall_magic said:
Ponting isn't the best captain going around, he sent England into bat in the ashes when his best quick had just pulled out. One of the worst decisions I have ever seen.

Disgraceful decision I agree.
 

hineyrulz

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Marshall_magic said:
Ponting isn't the best captain going around, he sent England into bat in the ashes when his best quick had just pulled out. One of the worst decisions I have ever seen.
i think it was the worst decsion i've ever seen by a captain,even worse than nasser sending us in to bat in the first test in brisbane 4yrs ago.
 

hineyrulz

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156,822
El Diablo said:
worse than Inzy deciding to forfeit a test match?

i think not
i was talking from a tatics point of view. i wasn't talking about big sooks that won't finish games of cricket.
 
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