Cricket at the Pacific Games

A cricket tournament at the Pacific Games, previously the South Pacific Games, was introduced in 1979 and was played intermittently at games in the 1980s and 1990s, depending on the facilities of the host nation. Since 2003, cricket has featured at every Pacific Games. Detailed records of the tournaments prior to 2003 have not been kept and beyond knowing what teams won the gold and silver medals at each Games, little is known with certainty of the first three tournaments.[1]

Cricket at the Pacific Games
AdministratorICC
FormatT20, T20I, WT20I
First edition1979 (men)
2015 (women)
Latest edition2019 (men)
2019 (women)
Tournament formatRound-robin and playoffs
Current champion Papua New Guinea (men) (7th title)
 Samoa (women) (2nd title)
Most successful Papua New Guinea (men) (7 titles)
 Samoa (women) (2 titles)

Performance by team

Legend
  • 1st – Gold
  • 2nd – Silver
  • 3rd – Bronze
  • GS – Group stage
  • Q – Qualified
  •      Hosts

Men's tournament

Team* Games Total

1979

1987

1991

2003

2007

2011

2015

2019
 Cook Islands 3rd1
 Fiji 3rd2nd2nd2nd2nd2nd6
 New Caledonia 6th4th4–6th6th5th4th4th4th8
 Papua New Guinea 1st1st1st1st1st1st2nd1st8
 Samoa 5th4th3rd3rd4
 Solomon Islands 4–6th1
 Tonga 4th3rd4th3rd3
 Tuvalu 7th1
 Vanuatu 2nd3rd4–6th5th3rd1st2nd7

Women's tournament

Team* Games Total

2015

2019
 Cook Islands 5th1
 Fiji 3rd4th2
 New Caledonia 6th1
 Papua New Guinea 2nd2nd2
 Samoa 1st1st2
 Vanuatu 4th3rd2

Results

1979

Venue: Suva, Fiji

Seven teams contested the first cricket tournament at the South Pacific Games:[2]

Rank Team Refs
 Papua New Guinea a
New Hebrides
 Fiji
4  Tonga
5  Western Samoa b
6  New Caledonia
7  Tuvalu

1987

Venue: Nouméa, New Caledonia

Rank Team Refs
 Papua New Guinea c
 Fiji
 Vanuatu
4  New Caledonia

1991

Venue: Port Moresby/Lae, Papua New Guinea

Rank Team Refs
 Papua New Guinea [3] d
 Fiji
 Tonga
4/5/6  New Caledonia
 Solomon Islands
 Vanuatu

2003

Venue: Suva, Fiji

Rank Team Refs
 Papua New Guinea [4] [5]
 Fiji
 Tonga
4  Samoa
5  Vanuatu
6  New Caledonia

2007

Venue: Apia, Samoa

Round robin tournament of limited overs cricket (maximum 50 overs per side).

Rank Team Refs
 Papua New Guinea [6]
 Fiji
 Samoa
4  Tonga
5  New Caledonia

2011

Venue: Noumea, New Caledonia

In 2011 the format was switched to the shorter Twenty20 game instead of the previous 50 over cricket. A round-robin stage was played before the two top teams met in the final.

Rank Team Refs
 Papua New Guinea [7]
 Fiji
 Vanuatu
4  New Caledonia

2015

Venue: Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea

In 2015, a women's tournament was held for the first time alongside the men's tournament. The 20-over format was retained.

Men

Rank Team
 Vanuatu
 Papua New Guinea
 Tonga
4  New Caledonia

Women

Rank Team
 Samoa
 Papua New Guinea
 Fiji
4  Vanuatu
5  Cook Islands
6  New Caledonia

2019

Venue: Apia, Samoa

Tonga included both men's and women's cricket in its successful bid for the 2019 Pacific Games, to be held in Nukuʻalofa.[8] However, Tonga withdrew from hosting in May 2017 and was replaced by Samoa.

Men

Rank Team
 Papua New Guinea
 Vanuatu
 Samoa
4  New Caledonia

Women

Rank Team
 Samoa
 Papua New Guinea
 Vanuatu
4  Fiji

Pacific Mini Games

For the first time, Vanuatu included a men's cricket tournament in its successful bid for the 2017 Pacific Mini Games, to be held in Port Vila.[9] The cricket facilities near Korman Stadium are planned to be renovated before the tournament.[10] However, the effects of Cyclone Pam in 2015 have, according to some sources, cast doubt upon the country's ability to host the games.[11]

Records

As detailed results have not been kept for the first three tournaments,[1] it is not possible to present detailed records. What is known is that Papua New Guinea's total of 572/7 against New Caledonia is the highest team total in any international one-day match, along with the winning margin of 510 runs, and therefore also in the South Pacific Games.[12]

See also

Notes

^* The number of teams at the tournaments has varied – there were seven teams in 1979,[13] then four in 1987 and five in 1991.[1] When the sport resumed at the 2003 games, six teams contested,[14] but this number dropped to five in 2007 and four in 2011 and 2015 (for the men's tournament – the women's tournament had six teams).[6]

^† Samoa and Vanuatu competed as Western Samoa and the New Hebrides, respectively, at the 1979 games.[13]

^a 1979: Pacific Islands Monthly reported Papua New Guinea defeating New Hebrides in the final to win gold, passing the required total of 53 with the loss of only one wicket.[2] Fiji defeated Tonga in a much closer third place play-off to win bronze by two wickets, passing the formidable total set by Tonga of 183 for the loss of six wickets.[2]

^b 1979: Roy Morgan's Encyclopedia of World Cricket indicates that Western Samoa finished fifth at the 1979 South Pacific Games.[1] They played New Caledonia in the fifth place play-off so New Caledonia are assumed to have finished sixth. Tuvalu finished seventh.[1]

^c 1987: Roy Morgan's Encyclopedia of World Cricket indicates that Papua New Guinea defeated Fiji in the final to decide the gold and silver medals. The other three teams taking part were New Caledonia, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu. The same book indicates that New Caledonia have never won an international match, so they are assumed to have finished fifth with either the Solomon Islands or Vanuatu winning the bronze or finishing fourth.[1]

^d 1991: Results presented here are based on sparse records. The official results from the SPG website list PNG, Fiji and Tonga as the gold, silver and bronze medalists, respectively.[3] Roy Morgan's Encyclopedia of World Cricket indicates that Papua New Guinea defeated Fiji in the final to decide the gold and silver medals. However it did not mention Tonga, and noted only two other teams in the tournament, New Caledonia and Vanuatu. The same book indicates that New Caledonia have never won an international match, which might lend weight to the assumption that Vanuatu won the bronze medal. For this article, however, the official results are preferred.

References

  1. Encyclopedia of World Cricket by Roy Morgan, Sportsbooks Publishing, 2007
  2. "Last of the Super Games/The Medal Winners" (PDF). Pacific Island Monthly. 50 (10): 16. 1979. Archived from the original (PDF 0.8 MB) on 4 July 2016. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  3. 1991 South Pacific Games Results. Oceania Sport Information Centre (Report). Archived from the original on 31 October 2015. Retrieved 31 October 2015.
  4. name="SPG03Final">Scorecard of Fiji v Papua New Guinea, 9 August 2003 at tournament's official website
  5. Scorecard of Cook Islands v Samoa, 9 August 2003 at tournament's official website
  6. 2007 South Pacific Games Archived 2008-05-31 at the Wayback Machine at CricketEurope
  7. Sporting Pulse, 2011.
  8. Tongan bid for the 2019 Games, Pacific Games Council
  9. Republic of Vanuatu bid to host the Pacific Mini Games 2017. Retrieved from Sporting Pulse, 8 July 2015.
  10. (22 September 2014). "Vanuatu sports facilities set for an overhaul for 2017 Pacific Mini Games" – Radio Australia. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  11. (23 March 2015). "Cyclone Pam puts 2017 Vanuatu Mini Games in doubt" – Radio New Zealand International. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  12. Papua New Guinea run riot Archived 2008-11-20 at the Wayback Machine by Andrew Nixon, 1 September 2007 at CricketEurope
  13. 1979 South Pacific Games at CricketArchive
  14. 2003 South Pacific Games cricket tournament official website
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