Wednesday, 15 June 2022

Bairstow stokes the fire for recovering England


ENGLAND v NEW ZEALAND • ENGLAND WON THE SERIES 3-0
2-6 June1 England 141 & 279-5 beat New Zealand 132 & 285 by five wicketsLord's
10-14 June2 England 539 & 299-5 beat New Zealand 553 & 284 by five wicketsTrent Bridge
23-27 June3 England 360 & 296-3 beat New Zealand 329 & 326 by seven wicketsHeadingley

JONNY BAIRSTOW obliterated New Zealand on the final day of the second Test at Trent Bridge yesterday as England secured a first Test series victory for 17 months. 

Bairstow struck 136 off 92 balls and, along with new skipper Ben Stokes, launched a ferocious attack on the Black Caps' bowlers.

England resumed after tea on the final day requiring 160 off 38 overs - and, at this stage, a win for either side was still possible.

Perhaps, instead, the match would drift towards the draw to which it had appeared to be meandering for most of the first four days on a pitch which played true throughout.

Immediately, though, that concept was dismissed by Bairstow and Stokes - though especially Bairstow.

Sixes and fours, fours and sixes. England smashed 59 runs off the first 24 balls after the interval - but this was no short-term assault.

In the first over after tea, the required rate fell below four per over for the first time. 

Fours and sixes, sixes and fours. By 4.22pm, only 22 minutes after the break, the requirement was below three per over. 

Even then, when "normal" Test batting might have sufficed, England did not let up - and this match set a Test record for the most boundaries with 250 in total.

There was an unexpected interruption to this complete battering in the 46th over when Bairstow was caught behind having earlier missed the opportunity to become the fastest Test century scorer for England by a single ball.

Gilbert Jessop - who still holds that record after his ton off 75 balls against Australia at the Oval in 1902 - will sleep easily tonight... particularly as he died in 1955.

In the absence of Bairstow, Stokes himself stepped up and ended up hitting an unbeaten 75 off 70 balls.

Indeed, at 5.06pm - just an hour after tea - the required rate had been reduced, rather ridiculously, to below one run per over. 

During the closing stages of this incredible chase, England remained fluent, if not quite as fierce as when Bairstow was at the crease - and wi
cketkeeper Ben Foakes played calmly in protection of England's long tail. 

Appropriately, though, it was skipper Stokes - with a magnificent cut through extra cover - who secured successive excellent wins under his short tutelage.

Of course, Bairstow will get the plaudits - and deservedly so for his unforgettable knock.

But, while former captain Joe Root is still a massive key part to this team with the bat, there is little chance under his leadership that England will have made such a concerted effort to go after 299 in 72 overs.

The evidence of that came just 12 months ago in June 2021, also against New Zealand, when England crawled to 170-3 off 70 overs having been set a target of 273.

Former skipper Nasser Hussain bemoaned the total lack of intent shown from England who failed to win either home series last year.

Hard on the back of a difficult summer came another away Ashes mauling - and a miserable series defeat in the West Indies when, after two draws, England were bowled out for 120 in their second innings in Barbados.

Consequently, ahead of the first Test at Lord's in this series, England had won only one of their past 17 Test matches in a sequence dating back to February 2021.

Root, with huge regret and frustration, stepped down from the position of skipper - and he can be forever proud that he never let his own standards drop. Ever.

The 31-year-old regularly produced his best with the bat while captain - a rare thing indeed, considering many of his predecessors have struggled with the additional pressure automatically piled upon them by the position.

Moreover, Root was badly undermined by a lack of support from the English Cricket Board (ECB) which, quite frankly, fell apart during his period as captain. 

By the end of the tour of the Caribbean in the spring, rudderless England were without
a full-time chairman, a full-time director of cricket, or a full-time head coach. 

Furthermore, Root had to deal with COVID-19 bubbles - months of uncomfortable isolation as international cricket did its best to stage matches in an alien world.

In short, although the Yorkshireman clearly lacked a killer instinct tactically, he also got a pretty raw deal - and it was perhaps little wonder that his tenure finished on a low ebb.

By contrast, New Zealand came into this series as the current World Test champions after beating India in the Final in June 2021.

However, the Black Caps played nothing like world champions with the bat in the first Test as Durham fast-bowler Matty Potts took 4-13 on debut in their first-innings total of 132.

Old habits die hard for England, though - and the hosts were bowled out themselves for 141 before lunch on the second day for a meagre lead of nine runs.

Just after lunch, New Zealand were 56-4 in their second innings and a two-day Test became a distinct possibility.

But Daryl Mitchell (108) and wicketkeeper Tom Blundell (96) combined in a stand of 195 for the fifth wicket and, at 251-4, the match had threatened to drift away from England.

Then Stuart Broad produced one of *those* special overs to account for Mitchell and bowl Kyle Jamieson for a golden duck.

In between, the hapless Colin de Grandhomme - who would later dismiss Root off a no-ball and suffer an injury - was also out from his first ball, run out by Ollie Pope after dozing outside of his crease following a lbw appeal. It was a team hat-trick, if you like. 

All of a sudden, New Zealand had gone from 251-4 to 251-7 and, although the evergreen Tim Southee attempted to hold England up for a bit, the Kiwis' tail was wrapped up by lunch.

Faced with a fourth-innings target of 277, this looked like a stern task for an England team so prone to collapsing under pressure - and they swiftly fell to 69-4.

By then, though, the irrepressible Root was at the crease and set about constructing a match-winning innings of 115 which brought him his 10,000th Test run and his 26th Test century.

Root was ably assisted by Stokes (54) and Foakes (32 not out) as England ended up making remarkably light work of the chase, especially considering this is a team which is not used to winning.

In the second Test this week, England again won in the second half of the match after both teams' first innings were pretty much even - but the similarities ended there.

New Zealand, in fact, carried a narrow lead of 14 runs after their mammoth total of 553 in which Mitchell (190) and Blundell (106) again did the damage.

In reply, the struggling Zak Crawley was out to a beauty of a ball from Trent Boult - but the rest of the England top order stood firm.

Alex Lees saw off the new ball and made 67 while new number three Pope made a magnificent 145 in a stand of 187 with Root for the third wicket.

Stokes thumped 46 off 33 balls before a more considered approach by Root, with an outstanding 176, and Foakes (56) pushed England beyond 500.

Their two wickets left the tail exposed - and, having resumed on 473-5, England added only 66 more runs before being dismissed for 539.

Usually 553 against 539 on first innings would have signalled a certain draw - but both teams had batted so positively that there was still the best part of two days to play.

New Zealand did not exactly struggle in their second innings of 284 - seven players made double figures - but, critically, none of them managed to progress to a three-figure score.

In reply, England initially struggled to combine keeping up with the required rate and keeping wickets - and looked in trouble at 56-3 when Root gave a caught-and-bowled to Boult with a leading edge for just three.

But then Bairstow came to the fore to win match and series with one of most magnificent innings in Test history.


THE 10000 CLUB

Runs100s50sAvg.
1Sachin Tendulkar1989-2013 India15,9215168 53.78
2Ricky Ponting1995-2012Australia13,378416251.85
3Jacques Kallis1995-2013South Africa 13,289455555.37
4Rahul Dravid1996-2012India13,288366352.31
5Alastair Cook2006-2018England12,472335745.35
6Kumar Sangakkara2000-2015Sri Lanka12,400385257.40
7Brian Lara1990-2006West Indies11,953344852.88
8Shivnarine Chanderpaul1994-2015West Indies11,867306651.37
9Mahela Jayawardene1997-2014Sri Lanka11,814345049.84
10Allan Border1978-1994Australia11,174276350.56
11Steve Waugh1985-2004Australia10,927325051.06
12Joe Root2012-2022* England10,194*275349.97
13Sunil Gavaskar1971-1987India10,122344551.12
14Younis Khan2000-2017Pakistan10,099343352.05

Tuesday, 7 June 2022

Wales end 64-year World Cup wait against weary Ukraine



WALES ended 64 years of World Cup pain with a narrow victory over Ukraine in their qualifying playoff at the Cardiff City Stadium.

Inevitably, Gareth Bale was involved in the goal which sent the Welsh to a first World Cup finals since 1958 with his free-kick diverted via a flying header by Andriy Yarmolenko into the back of his own net.

Now, as well as the nature of the Welsh goal being a painful way to go out, Ukraine can consider themselves unfortunate not to have scored given their far greater share of the possession and chances in the match.

Earlier, last Wednesday, the dangerous Ukrainians had outclassed Scotland at Hampden Park, meaning the Scots' own wait for a World Cup finals appearance will extend to 28 years at least.

Callum McGregor gave some hope to Steve Clarke's side by pulling the score back to 2-1 after Ukraine goals from Yarmolenko and Roman Yaremchuk, either side of half time, had deservedly put the visitors in control.

John McGinn then missed a big chance to equalise by sending a header wide from just six yards out.

But, as the Scots frantically searched for an equaliser through the bizarre tactic of playing Grant Hanley up front, Artem Dovbyk killed off the remaining hopes of the Tartan Army with the last kick of the game.

As such, it was merely another case of so near yet so far away for Scotland in the World Cup qualifiers in the 21st Century - which will be more than quarter of the way through by the end of the next edition.

Back to the present - and, in the final in Cardiff on Sunday, the threat of Ukraine was again immediately apparent.

Only four minutes were on the clock when Manchester City left-back Oleksandr Zinchenko hit the back of the net with a quick free-kick - taken too quickly as far as Spanish referee Antonio Mateu Lahoz was concerned.

The Ukrainians then had a succession of corners before Yaremchuk beat the offside trap but failed to beat Wayne Hennessey in a series of early efforts on the Welsh goal.

Consequently, Wales' goal on 34 minutes came rather out of the blue - and unsurprisingly from a Bale set-piece.

Even then, Rob Page's men had another scare to survive before half time when Joe Allen appeared to catch Yarmolenko on the foot after being dispossessed in the box by the West Ham United winger.

Yarmolenko certainly did not help his cause by the dramatic nature of his tumble - but there were more than a few sighs of relief among the capacity crowd of 33,280 when the Video Assistant Referee opted not to make any intervention.

In fairness, there was also hope that the Welsh might use the confidence gained from their hard-won advantage by improving their general performance in the second half.

But this Ukraine outfit were never going to go away quietly - and only they will know how they did not score early in the second half through Yaremchuk on the rebound after Hennessey had saved from Viktor Tsygankov.

Or just how Tottenham Hotspur defender Ben Davies managed to get across to block Yarmolenko from eight yards out - on two separate occasions.

It was not all completely one-way traffic, of course. Nottingham Forest winger Brennan Johnson hit the base of the post for Wales - and, shortly afterwards, Aaron Ramsey linked up with Bale whose cushioned volley was well-stopped.

For the last 10 minutes or so, though, it really was just one-way traffic as Ukraine set up camp inside the Wales half.

With six minutes left, the pressure almost paid off - but Hennessey made a flying save to deny a powerful header from substitute Artem Dovbyk.

It was truly a match-winning stop by the Burnley goalkeeper as, bar a couple more efforts which cleared the Welsh goal by some distance, weary Ukraine had nothing more to give thereafter.

In keeping with our expectations of this proud nation, it was a brave effort by Ukraine - but it was also an emotional occasion for Wales.

So often the headlines for the Welsh go to Bale or Ramsey. This time, though, it was undoubtedly Hennessey and Davies who got their team over the line.

Now, finally, the older Wales fans can banish the painful memories of defeat in playoff matches against Scotland in 1977 and 1985 - and the cold sweat-inducing flashback to 1993 of Paul Bodin's last-minute penalty miss against Romania.

Cymru have qualified again at last - and, except for hosts Qatar, who will be the sole debutants, Wales will have waited the longest time of any of the 31 returning qualifiers.

At this point in time, there are still two finals places left to be decided through the intercontinental playoffs in Qatar this month.

Australia became the representative from the Asian Confederation after beating the United Arab Emirates thanks to Ajdin Hrustic's deflected volley.

Graham Arnold's Socceroos will now face Peru in a one-off match on 13 June for the penultimate World Cup finals place.

On the following day, the outcome of the 32nd - and last - World Cup finals entrant will be known after Costa Rica take on New Zealand.

Therefore, it is only on 14 June - 161 days ahead of the opening match on 21 November - that the World Cup line-up will finally be completed.

Additionally, that night - only 46 days before the 2022-23 Football League season begins - the 2021-22 season of club and international football will have finished at last, ending with a series of UEFA Nations League fixtures.

Ahead of that, for the record, here is a list of winners (and losers) from another long domestic campaign:

ENGLAND
Premier League
ChampionsManchester City
Runners-upLiverpool
Champions LeagueChelsea (third place), Tottenham Hotspur (fourth place)
Europa LeagueArsenal (fifth place), Manchester United (sixth place)
Europa ConferenceWest Ham United (seventh place)
RelegationBurnley, Watford, Norwich City

Championship
ChampionsFulham
Runners-upBournemouth
Playoff winnersNottingham Forest 1-0 Huddersfield Town
RelegationDerby County*, Peterborough United, Barnley
Derby County were deducted 12 points for entering administration on 22 September and a further nine points for financial irregularities on 16 November.

League One
ChampionsWigan Athletic
Runners-upRotherham United
Playoff winnersSunderland (won 2-0 v Wycombe Wanderers)
RelegationGillingham, Doncaster Rovers, AFC Wimbledon, Crewe Alexandra

League Two
ChampionsForest Green Rovers
Runners-upExeter City
Also promotedBristol Rovers
Playoff winnersPort Vale (won 3-0 v Mansfield Town)
RelegationOldham Athletic, Scunthorpe United

National League Premier
ChampionsStockport County
Playoff winners
Grimsby Town (won 2-1 v Solihull Moors, after extra time)
RelegationKing's Lynn Town, Weymouth, Dover Athletic*
Dover Athletic were deducted 12 points for failing to complete their fixtures in the 2020-21 season.

National League North
ChampionsGateshead
Playoff winners
York City (won 2-0h v Boston United)
RelegationGuiseley

National League South
ChampionsMaidstone United
Playoff winners
Dorking Wanderers (won 3-2h v Ebbsfleet United, after extra time)
RelegationBillericay Town

Domestic Cup Finals

FA Cup FinalLiverpool 0-0 Chelsea, after extra time. Liverpool won 6-5 on penalties.
League Cup FinalLiverpool 0-0 Chelsea, after extra time. Liverpool won 11-10 on penalties.
FA Community ShieldLeicester City 1-0 Manchester City
EFL Trophy
Rotherham United 4-2 Sutton United, after extra time.
FA Trophy
Bromley 1-0 Wrexham
FA Vase
Newport Pagnell Town 3-0 Littlehampton Town



SCOTLAND
Premiership
ChampionsCeltic
Runners-upRangers
Europa LeagueHeart of Midlothian (third place)
Europa ConferenceDundee United (fourth place), Motherwell (fifth place)
RelegationDundee

Championship
ChampionsKilmarnock
Runners-upArbroath (not promoted)
RelegationDunfermline Athletic, Queen of the South

League One
ChampionsCove Rangers
Runners-upAirdrieonians (not promoted)
Playoff winnersQueen's Park (won 3-2 on agg v Airdrieonians (1-1h, 2-1a))
RelegationDumbarton, East Fife

League Two
ChampionsKelty Hearts
Runners-upForfar Athletic (not promoted)
Playoff winnersEdinburgh City (won 3-2 on agg v Annan Athletic (2-0h, 1-2a))
RelegationCowdenbeath (lost 0-4 on agg v Cove Rangers (0-3a, 0-1h))

Domestic Cup Finals
FA Cup Final
Rangers 2-0 Heart of Midlothian, after extra time
League Cup FinalCeltic 2-1 Hibernian
Challenge Cup FinalRaith Rovers 3-1 Queen of the South



WALES
Cymru Premier
ChampionsThe New Saints
Europa ConferenceBala Town (runners-up), Newtown (third place)
RelegationBarry Town United, Cefn Druids

Welsh Cup Finals
FA Cup FinalThe New Saints 3-2 Penybont
League Cup Final

Connah's Quay Nomads 0-0 Cardiff Metropolitan University
Connah's Quay Nomads won 10-9 on penalties.



NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Premiership
ChampionsLinfield
Europa ConferenceCliftonville (runners-up), Larne (playoff winners), Crusaders (cup winners)
RelegationWarrenpoint Town

Irish Cup Finals

IFA Cup FinalCrusaders 2-1 Ballymena United, after extra time
League Cup FinalCliftonville 4-3 Coleraine, after extra time.



EUROPE
UEFA Finals
Champions LeagueReal Madrid 1-0 Liverpool
Europa League

Eintracht Frankfurt 1-1 Rangers, after extra time. 
Eintracht Frankfurt won 5-4 on penalties
Europa Conference
Roma 1-0 Feyenoord
Super Cup

Chelsea 1-1 Villarreal, after extra time.
Chelsea won 6-5 on penalties.

Major European league champions
SpainReal Madrid
ItalyAC Milan
GermanyBayern Munich
France Paris Saint-Germain
PortugalFC Porto
NetherlandsAjax Amsterdam
BelgiumClub Brugge
GreeceOlympiacos
TurkeyTrabzonspor



Here also, for reference, is the World Cup draw and match schedule in full:


(Q) WORLD CUP 2022 QUALIFIERS (Q)
Qatar, Germany, Denmark, Brazil, Belgium, France, Croatia, Spain, Serbia, Switzerland, England, Netherlands, Argentina, Iran, South Korea, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Ecuador, Uruguay, Canada, Ghana, Senegal, Portugal, Poland, Tunisia, Morocco, Cameroon, Mexico, United States, Wales, Australia, Costa Rica [32/32]

GROUP A QATAR - ECUADOR - SENEGAL - NETHERLANDS

DateVenue
ITVMon 21-Nov 10amSENEGAL v NETHERLANDSAl Thumama Stadium, Doha
BBCMon 21-Nov 4pmQATAR v ECUADORAl Bayt Stadium, Al Khor
BBCFri 25-Nov 1pmQATAR v SENEGALAl Thumama Stadium, Doha
ITVFri 25-Nov 4pmNETHERLANDS v ECUADORKhalifa International, Al Rayyan
ITVTue 29-Nov 3pmECUADOR v SENEGALKhalifa International, Al Rayyan
ITVTue 29-Nov 3pmNETHERLANDS v QATARAl Bayt Stadium, Al Khor

GROUP B ENGLAND - IRAN - UNITED STATES - WALES

Date
Venue
BBCMon 21-Nov 1pmENGLAND v IRANKhalifa International, Al Rayyan
ITVMon 21-Nov 7pmUNITED STATES v WALESAhmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
BBCFri 25-Nov 10amWALES v IRANAhmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
ITVFri 25-Nov 7pmENGLAND v UNITED STATESAl Bayt Stadium, Al Khor
BBCTue 29-Nov 7pmWALES v ENGLANDAhmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
BBCTue 29-Nov 7pmIRAN v UNITED STATESAl Thumama Stadium, Doha

GROUP C ARGENTINA - SAUDI ARABIA - MEXICO - POLAND

Date
Venue
ITVTue 22-Nov 10amARGENTINA v SAUDI ARABIALusail Iconic, Lusail
BBCTue 22-Nov 4pmMEXICO v POLANDStadium 974, Doha
ITVSat 26-Nov 1pmPOLAND v SAUDI ARABIAEducation City, Al Rayyan
ITVSat 26-Nov 7pmARGENTINA v MEXICOLusail Iconic, Lusail
BBCWed 30-Nov 7pmPOLAND v ARGENTINAStadium 974, Doha
BBCWed 30-Nov 7pmSAUDI ARABIA v MEXICOLusail Iconic, Lusail

GROUP D FRANCE - AUSTRALIA - DENMARK - TUNISIA

Date
Venue
ITVTue 22-Nov 1pmDENMARK v TUNISIAEducation City, Al Rayyan
BBCTue 22-Nov 7pmFRANCE v AUSTRALIAAl Janoub, Al Wakrah
BBCSat 26-Nov 10amTUNISIA v AUSTRALIAAl Janoub, Al Wakrah
ITVSat 26-Nov 4pmFRANCE v DENMARKStadium 974, Doha
BBCWed 30-Nov 3pmAUSTRALIA v DENMARKAl Janoub, Al Wakrah
BBCWed 30-Nov 3pmTUNISIA v FRANCEEducation City, Al Rayyan

GROUP E SPAIN - COSTA RICA - GERMANY - JAPAN

Date
Venue
ITVWed 23-Nov 1pmGERMANY v JAPANKhalifa International, Al Rayyan
ITVWed 23-Nov 4pmSPAIN v COSTA RICAAl Thumama Stadium, Doha
ITVSun 27-Nov 10amJAPAN v COSTA RICAAhmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
BBCSun 27-Nov 7pmSPAIN v GERMANYAl Bayt Stadium, Al Khor
ITVThu 01-Dec 7pmJAPAN v SPAINKhalifa International, Al Rayyan
ITVThu 01-Dec 7pmCOSTA RICA v GERMANYAl Bayt Stadium, Al Khor

GROUP F BELGIUM - CANADA - MOROCCO - CROATIA

Date
Venue
ITVWed 23-Nov 10amMOROCCO v CROATIAAl Bayt Stadium, Al Khor
BBCWed 23-Nov 7pmBELGIUM v CANADAAhmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
BBCSun 27-Nov 1pmBELGIUM v MOROCCOAl Thumama Stadium, Doha
BBCSun 27-Nov 4pmCROATIA v CANADAKhalifa International, Al Rayyan
BBCThu 01-Dec 3pmCROATIA v BELGIUMAhmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
BBCThu 01-Dec 3pmCANADA v MOROCCOAl Thumama Stadium, Doha

GROUP G BRAZIL - SERBIA - SWITZERLAND - CAMEROON

Date
Venue
ITVThu 24-Nov 10amSWITZERLAND v CAMEROONAl Janoub, Al Wakrah
BBCThu 24-Nov 7pmBRAZIL v SERBIALusail Iconic, Lusail
ITVMon 28-Nov 10amCAMEROON v SERBIAAl Janoub, Al Wakrah
ITVMon 28-Nov 4pmBRAZIL v SWITZERLANDStadium 974, Doha
ITVFri 02-Dec 7pmSERBIA v SWITZERLANDStadium 974, Doha
ITVFri 02-Dec 7pmCAMEROON v BRAZILLusail Iconic, Lusail

GROUP H PORTUGAL - GHANA - URUGUAY - SOUTH KOREA

Date
Venue
BBCThu 24-Nov 1pmURUGUAY v SOUTH KOREAEducation City, Al Rayyan
ITVThu 24-Nov 4pmPORTUGAL v GHANAStadium 974, Doha
BBCMon 28-Nov 1pmSOUTH KOREA v GHANAEducation City, Al Rayyan
ITVMon 28-Nov 7pmPORTUGAL v URUGUAYLusail Iconic, Lusail
BBCFri 02-Dec 3pmGHANA v URUGUAYAl Janoub, Al Wakrah
BBCFri 02-Dec 3pmSOUTH KOREA v PORTUGALEducation City, Al Rayyan

SECOND ROUND
TimeDate
Venue
3pmSat 03-Dec(1) WINNER A v RUNNER-UP BKhalifa International, Al Rayyan
7pmSat 03-Dec(2) WINNER C v RUNNER-UP DAhmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan
3pmSun 04-Dec(3) WINNER D v RUNNER-UP CAl Thumama Stadium, Doha
7pmSun 04-Dec(4) WINNER B v RUNNER-UP AAl Bayt Stadium, Al Khor
3pmMon 05-Dec(5) WINNER E v RUNNER-UP FAl Janoub, Al Wakrah
7pmMon 05-Dec(6) WINNER G v RUNNER-UP HStadium 974, Doha
3pmTue 06-Dec(7) WINNER F v RUNNER-UP EEducation City, Al Rayyan
7pmTue 06-Dec(8) WINNER H v RUNNER-UP GLusail Iconic, Lusail

QUARTER FINALS
TimeDate
Venue
3pmFri 09-DecWINNER (5) v WINNER (6)Education City, Al Rayyan
7pmFri 09-DecWINNER (1) v WINNER (2)Lusail Iconic, Lusail
3pmSat 10-DecWINNER (7) v WINNER (8)Al Thumama Stadium, Doha
7pmSat 10-DecWINNER (3) v WINNER (4)Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor

SEMI FINALS
TimeDate
Venue
7pmTue 13-DecWINNER QF1 v WINNER QF2Lusail Iconic, Lusail
7pmWed 14-DecWINNER QF3 v WINNER QF4Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor

THIRD PLACE PLAYOFF
TimeDate
Venue
3pmSat 17-DecLOSER SF1 v LOSER SF2Khalifa International, Al Rayyan

WORLD CUP FINAL
TimeDate
Venue
4pmSun 18-DecWINNER SF1 v WINNER SF2Lusail Iconic, Lusail