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Preety Shah
<h1>Kumar Sangakkara and Josh Davey - Top of The ICC Cricket World Cup Tables</h1>

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The achievements of two players with endlessly diverse stories went to the fore during Wednesday's conflict between Sri Lanka and Scotland at Bellerive Oval.

On one hand, there was Kumar Sangakkara. Without a doubt one of the best players ever, the Sri Lanka veteran proceeded with his rich vein of structure and set a World Record while he was grinding away, turning into the first player to score four one-day global hundreds of years consecutively.


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He caught up by taking his 53rd and 54th World Cup releases, moving in front of Adam Gilchrist into the lead position, turning into the first man to pass 500 ODI rejections all the while.

Then again, there was Josh Davey, the Scotland allrounder whose name would be new to most yet who has made a World Record the greater part he could call his own not long from now.

Toward the end of the Hobart match, Davey was driving the wicket taker count for the competition, his 14 scalps putting him in front of any semblance of Trent Boult and Tim Southee.

His 124 off 95 balls against Scotland took after scores of 105* against Bangladesh, 117* against England and 104 against Australia.

Sri Lanka's next diversion will be a quarter-last in Sydney and its trusts of progressing deeper into the finals would be essentially helped if Sangakkara had the capacity include a fifth century.

Josh Davey, the 2015 competition is his first. He has played 23 ODIs since 2010 however in January, made history when he turned into the first Associate player to take six wickets and score a fifty in the same match.


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Josh Davey is one of just five players to accomplish the accomplishment close by Lance Klusener, Shahid Afridi, Paul Collingwood and Scott Styris.

Josh Davey 3-63 against Sri Lanka moved him to the highest point of the wicket count, in front of any semblance of Mitchell Starc, Trent Boult and Tim Southee.

The 24-year-old, who made a province debut for Middlesex as a youngster and now plays for Somerset, got the great scalps of Sangakkara himself, nearby Tillakaratne Dilshan and Mahela Jayawardene.
 
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