International cricket tournament
Cricket tournament
The 1997 'Friendship Cup' , also known as the 1997 Sahara 'Friendship Cup' for sponsorship reasons was a One Day International cricket series which took place between 13 and 21 September 1997.[1] The tournament was held in Canada, which was seen as perfect neutral territory for India and Pakistan to play each other. The tournament was won by India 4–1. The matches were played in white clothing and a red ball was used.
Teams
Squads
Warm-up match
India won by 6 wickets Ajax Cricket Club, Ajax Umpires: Nizam Baksh, Colin Harvey and Ken Patel
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- India won the toss and elected to field.
- The match was reduced to 35 overs per side due to rain.
ODI series
1st ODI
2nd ODI
- Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat.
- Crowd trouble and Inzamam-ul-Haq's (Pak) scuffle with the crowd delayed play by 40 minutes after 16th over of India's innings.
3rd ODI
- India won the toss and elected to field.
- Rain reduced Pakistan innings to 31.5 overs and India's target was set to 141 runs in 25 overs by Parabola method.[2]
- Subsequent rain led to abandoning of the match and called for a replay.
Replay
- Pakistan won the toss and elected to field.
4th ODI
- India won the toss and elected to field.
- The match was reduced to 28 overs per side due to rain; India innings limited to 26 overs due to their slow over rate.
5th ODI
- Pakistan won the toss and elected to field.
- Pakistan innings limited to 48 overs due to slow over rate.
Statistics
Spectator incident
During the 2nd ODI, spectator Shiv Kumar Thind, an Indian living in Toronto, used a megaphone to shout abuse at Pakistan batsman Inzamam-ul-Haq. Thind likened Inzamam's physical size to that of several kinds of potato and Buddha (an old man). Inzamam took offense to this and proceeded to enter the crowd and challenge Thind. When Thind threw his megaphone at him, ul-Haq borrowed a cricket bat from a teammate and attempted to attack Thind with it. The event subsequently caused a 37-minute delay in the game and later resulted in both men filing charges of assault against one another. Thind and ul-Haq later withdrew the charges, although the Pakistan Cricket Board banned Inzamam for two matches.[4]
References
External links