Event | 2016 ICC World Twenty20 | ||||||||
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West Indies won by 4 wickets | |||||||||
Date | 3 April 2016 | ||||||||
Venue | Eden Gardens, Kolkata | ||||||||
Player of the Match | Marlon Samuels (WI) | ||||||||
Umpires |
Rod Tucker (On-field umpire) Kumar Dharmasena (On-field umpire) Marais Erasmus (TV umpire) Bruce Oxenford (Reserve umpire) |
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Attendance | 66,000 | ||||||||
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The 2016 ICC World Twenty20 Final was played at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata on 3 April 2016 to determine the winners of the 2016 ICC World Twenty20 between England and West Indies. West Indies won the match by 4 wickets, thus becoming the first team to win the ICC World Twenty20 twice.
Prior to the tournament, there were concerns that some of the West Indies players may withdraw from the tournament with a dispute over pay, with a possibility of a second-string team being sent. West Indies captain Darren Sammy had exchanged letters with the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) expressing his concerns regarding the payment players were due to receive for taking part in the tournament. Sammy went on to say that "...we want to play and will represent the West Indies to the best of our abilities".
Before this match England and the West Indies had played each other in two ICC finals - the final of the 1979 World Cup at Lord's and the final of the 2004 Champions Trophy final at the Oval - both of which the West Indies won. This was also the first final between two previous champions - England won the 2010 World T20 for their first ICC world championship while the West Indies won the 2012 World T20.
Both teams were drawn into Super 10s Group 1 alongside Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and South Africa. They played each other in their opening game on 16 March at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai, with the West Indies winning by six wickets with 11 balls to spare. West Indian opener Chris Gayle scored an unbeaten 100 runs off 47 balls, including 11 sixes, becoming the first player to hit two T20 International centuries.
In addition, immediately before the men's final, the West Indies also won the women's tournament with an eight-wicket victory over three-time defending champions Australia, also at Eden Gardens, which gave them the chance to be the first to win both the men's and women's World Twenty20 on the same day.