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The 2017 ICC Champions Trophy was the eighth ICC Champions Trophy, a cricket tournament for the eight top-ranked One Day International teams in the world. It was held in England and Wales from 1 to 18 June 2017. [1] Pakistan won the competition for the first time with a 180-run victory over India in the final at The Oval. [2]
No. Player [2] Date of birth ODIs Batting Bowling style List A team ; 2: Mashrafe Mortaza () 5 September 1983 (aged 33)175: Right: Right arm fast medium: Khulna Division: 45: Imrul Kayes 2 February 1987 (aged 30)
The first Cricket World Cup was held in 1975 and then every four years since. The tournament was usually played by full ICC member nations. The ICC conceived the idea of the Champions Trophy – a short cricket tournament to raise funds for the development of the game in non-test playing countries, with the first two tournaments being held in Bangladesh and Kenya.
The final of the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy was played on 18 June 2017 between Pakistan and India at The Oval in London, to determine the winner of the eighth edition of the ICC Champions Trophy. [1] Pakistan qualified for the final by defeating the hosts England by 8 wickets in the first semi-final at Cardiff in Wales on 14 June, and reached ...
At the ICC Chief Executives' meeting in April 2012, it was confirmed that the ICC Champions Trophy would be last held in 2013 with the inaugural Test Championship play-offs being scheduled for June 2017. [13] The ICC said that there would be only one trophy for each format of the game, which meant that the Champions Trophy would no longer take ...
India is one of the full members of the International Cricket Council (ICC), the governing body of cricket. There have been eight editions of the tournament and India has participated in every edition.
2017 ICC Champions Trophy warm-up matches This page was last edited on 13 June 2017, at 16:08 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
The ICC Champions Trophy is a One Day International (ODI) tournament organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC), [2] and is considered the second most significant after the World Cup. [3] Originally inaugurated as the "ICC KnockOut Trophy" in 1998 , the tournament is organised every four years, though it had been organised every two ...