Robin Uthappa Relives 2007 T20 WC Glory & Iconic Bowl-Out vs Pakistan

Former Indian cricketer Robin Uthappa, currently in Durban for the SA20, revisited memories of India's 2007 T20 World Cup campaign. He specifically recalled his match-winning fifty and participation in the iconic bowl-out against Pakistan in the group stage. Uthappa revealed that the Indian team had done extensive, unspoken preparation for the bowl-out, which gave them an edge. India's victory in that match was a key step towards eventually winning the inaugural T20 World Cup title.

Key Points: Uthappa Recalls 2007 T20 WC Bowl-Out Win vs Pakistan

  • Uthappa top-scored with 50 vs Pakistan in 2007
  • Match tied, decided by a historic bowl-out
  • India was specially prepared for the bowl-out
  • India went on to win the 2007 T20 World Cup
3 min read

Uthappa reminisces on T20 WC 2007 memories, India-Pakistan clash at Durban; speaks on iconic 'bowl out' against rivals

Former India cricketer Robin Uthappa reminisces about the 2007 T20 World Cup, his fifty, and the historic bowl-out victory against Pakistan in Durban.

"We did a lot of preparation for it... I think we were better prepared than the opposition team on that night. - Robin Uthappa"

Durban, January 9

Former Indian cricketer Robin Uthappa, currently in South Africa for commentating season four of SA20, reminisced on memories he created in the rainbow nation during the title-winning 2007 ICC T20 World Cup campaign, especially his knock and the 'bowl out' against Pakistan in the group stage.

Uthappa was speaking to the media in Durban on the sidelines of SA20, the same place where the India-Pakistan group-stage clash at the T20 WC took place in 2007. During that match, Robin top-scored for India with a brilliant 39-ball fifty, taking India to 141/9. After the match ended in a tie, a 'bowl out' was held to decide the winner, where the players were supposed to bowl and hit at stumps without any batters occupying the crease. Uthappa had also featured in the bowl out, successfully hitting the stumps and celebrating it by bowing down to the crowd while moving around in a circular way.

Speaking to the reporters about the memories from that tournament, Uthappa said, "Durban brings back a lot of memories. I go back to 2007 all the time. Every time I come here, I look at that dressing room on the other side, and I just think of all the wonderful things that we created here, the wonderful memories we created here. It was a special time."

Talking about the bowl-out against Pakistan, he said that before the SA20 clash scheduled for Thursday, he had looked at the pitch before the pitch report and was reminiscing about that iconic 'bowl out', a short-lived concept now replaced by a Super Over, and pointed out how prepared Team India was for it.

"Well, obviously, I was on the pitch today just having a look before the pitch report and obviously reminiscing about the time when I actually bowled there (bowl out against Pakistan). It was certainly a lot of fun. We did a lot of preparation for it, which we do not really talk about. But I think we were better prepared than the opposition team on that night," he added.

During the T20 WC, he scored 113 runs in six innings at an average of 18.83 and a strike rate of 113, including this fifty against Pakistan. India won the tournament by beating Pakistan in the finals in a nail-biter. Uthappa played 13 T20Is for India, scoring 249 runs in 12 innings at an average of 24.90, with a strike rate of 118.00 and a fifty. In his short career for India from 2006-15, he featured in 46 ODIs as well, scoring 934 runs in 46 matches and 42 innings at an average of 25.94, a strike rate of over 90 with six fifties and a best score of 86.

Despite not getting enough chances with India, he carved out an identity for himself as a great IPL player, scoring 4,952 runs in 205 matches at an average of 27.51, a strike rate of 130 and 27 fifties, with a best score of 88. He won an IPL title each with Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) and Chennai Super Kings (CSK), scoring 660 runs in 16 matches with five fifties in KKR's title-winning season, earning him the 'Orange Cap'.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As a cricket fan living abroad, that 2007 tournament was how I got my family here hooked on the sport! The bowl-out was such a quirky, tense moment. Super Overs are more dramatic, but there was a charming simplicity to that method.
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Vikram M
Uthappa was a solid player, always felt he was underrated. His IPL career speaks for itself. That 2007 win changed Indian cricket's approach forever. Beating Pakistan in the group stage AND the final? That tournament was destiny.
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Priya S
Nostalgia hitting hard! I was in school during that WC. The whole nation celebrated like crazy. It's nice to hear these behind-the-scenes details now. Makes you appreciate the preparation that goes into even the seemingly random tie-breakers.
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Rohit P
Respect to Uthappa for his contributions. However, I do feel the article glosses over his inconsistent international numbers. He was a T20 pioneer for India, but his average of 18 in that WC shows it was truly a team effort with heroes like Yuvi and Bhajji stepping up bigger.
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Karthik V
The bowl-out was hilarious and brilliant. Pure street-cricket style to decide an international match! Dhoni's calm leadership even in that chaos was something else. Those memories are golden for any cricket lover.

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