You can keep your carrying your bat and your miserly 10-over spells, what the World Cup is really all about is that bloke who for five minutes plays like he’s Bradman reincarnate. We present some of the top performances that do justice to the term ‘short and sharp’.

First published in 2014

10) Collis King’s regal romp

West Indies v England, Lord’s, Final, 1979

It takes an inspired man to upstage Viv Richards, but at Lord’s in midsummer 1979, as the second World Cup final reached boiling point, a hat-less, bottom-handed hitter from Barbados did just that. Collis King would flicker only briefly, but this was his day. Joining Richards after England had reduced the West Indies to 99-4, he immediately loosened the noose with a couple of bunts through mid-wicket, before turning to Geoff Boycott’s ‘right- arm-round-the-wicket-in-my-bloody-cap’ medium-pacers. Seizing the match for his side, King blazed to 86 from 66 balls, “in no uncertain terms” according to Viv, and when Richards scooped the last ball of the innings into the Mound Stand, the West Indies had enough to secure a second World Cup victory.

9) Kapil’s grab

India v West Indies, Final, Lord’s, 1983

It looked like a Windies cakewalk. Lord’s again, where the boys from the Caribbean had won the last two finals, and with India having just limped to 183 all out. Greenidge, Haynes, Lloyd, Richards, the rest. No drama. But they were complacent. After all, this was quaint, unthreatening India. Early wickets were lost to casual shots, and even Viv was constricted by India’s medium-pacers. Eventually a short delivery from the moustachioed smiler Madan Lal saw Richards spoon a catch over mid-wicket’s head. There lurked Kapil Dev, India’s skipper and star. It was a horrible steepler, swirling and spinning out of the sky. It finally dropped 10 yards in from the boundary, over Kapil’s shoulder and into his outstretched buckets. Richards was gone, and Kapil had claimed the catch that would change history. An indifferent nation was roused, and cricket has never been the same since.

8) V for Veletta

Australia v England, Final, Kolkata, 1987

It’s often the fate of the cameo specialist that he gets forgotten, as Mike Veletta’s trophy-clinching walk-on part in the 1987 final shows. The stories of that Ashes-redux thrash – David Boon’s 75, Steve Waugh’s second-last over, Mike Gatting’s infamous reverse-sweep – are the stuff of legend, but it was Veletta’s impudent yet largely overlooked 45 not out from 31 balls in the closing overs which made Australia’s seven-run victory possible. Waugh described it later as “a gem of a cameo”, but aside from that byline the innings has sunk without trace. Veletta says he is happy with his place, but his role in elevating an unfancied Aussie side to their maiden world title – with all that flowed thereafter – should not be underestimated.

3) O’Brilliant O’Briens

Ireland v Pakistan, Group match, Kingston, 2007

Ireland’s first greatest cricketing moment came against Pakistan on St Patrick’s Day in 2007, when the O’Brien boys saw their country home by the width of a pressed shamrock. It began with Niall crafting a superb innings as wickets tumbled all around him, but when he went for 72, Ireland slid to 113-7 with 20 still needed. A few agricultural mows from big brother Kevin turned the match again, and with the Blarney Army now well past hysteria, one towering six from their fair dinkum skipper Trent Johnston finished it. Three great cameos, one great victory.

2) Ravi and Nico go close

England v Sri Lanka, Group Match, Antigua, 2007

The 2007 World Cup was to England fans what Stalin was to humanitarianism. From the disenfranchised locals to Fred’s pedalo, the whole thing seemed designed to make the Barmy Army weep. There was one glorious exception: the Super Eights dust-up with Sri Lanka, specifically the 87-run partnership between Ravi Bopara (52) and Paul Nixon (42). After their top-order had subsided to 133-6 chasing 236, the pair tore up the textbook in a flurry of paddles and reverse-sweeps to drag England back into contention before Nixon fell to leave Ravi to find 12 runs off the final over, and ultimately three off the last delivery. It wasn’t to be, an aborted run-up followed by a sucker ball on off-stump put paid to the fightback, but it was cracking drama in a campaign otherwise painfully devoid of it.

1) Malinga’s four of a kind

Sri Lanka v South Africa, Super Eights, Guyana, 2007

Another stunning spurt, this time from the jazziest slinger in town, Lasith Malinga [pictured above]. This group match had reached the stage when most neutrals had gone to the pub – South Africa were coasting, five wickets left, five needed from five overs. Game over. But Malinga suddenly found something. His first wicket was an unplayable slower ball that still registered 135 kph; his second was even slower and brought a looped catch; Kallis was the hat-trick ball, caught behind off a yorker, and when Ntini went to the fourth to make it four wickets in four balls, South Africa still needed three runs. The final ball of the 46th over missed the stumps by a whisker, and when he returned for the 48th, another bullet arrowed narrowly past the off pole. Eventually a squeezed edge past slip brought South Africa the winning runs, but Malinga had come within a fibre of completing the greatest of all World Cup smash-and-grabs.