512 wickets in 334 matches.
Bowler: M Muralitharan Country: Sri Lanka Span: 1995-2010 Matches: 23 Overs: 220.2 Madens: 13 Runs: 831 Wickets: 30 Best: 5/31 Average: 27.70 Economy: 3.77 Strike: 44.0 4 Wickets: 1 5 Wickets: 1
Muttiah Muralidaran who took 4 wickets in 8 out overs with economy rate of 3.12
team b by the d/l method
Vernon Philander
Because the twenty20 matches are of 20 overs..
None for 16 runs in 4 overs.
In One-dayers (50 over matches), each bowler can bowl maximum of 10 overs. This only changes when the D/L (Duck worth Lewis system) is applied is which case the number of overs decrease according to how many overs the game is changed to. In test matches there is no limit. In T20 (20 over matches) a bowler can bowl maximum 4 overs.
The Duckworth–Lewis method is a statistical formulation which calculates the target score for the team batting second in a limited overs cricket match interrupted by weather.The method is based on the premise that any team has two resources: the number of wickets remaining and the number of overs to be played. However, when some overs are lost, setting an appropriate target is not as simple as reducing the number of runs required in proportion to the proportionate loss of overs. This is because a team with ten wickets in hand and 25 overs to bat can be expected to play more aggressively than if they had ten wickets and a full 50 overs. The Duckworth–Lewis method is an attempt to set a statistically fair target for the second team's innings, based on the score achieved by the first team, taking their wickets lost and overs played into account.The exact calculations are complicated by differences in which team lost overs, and so forth. For examples, see the Wikipedia entry at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duckworth%E2%80%93Lewis_method#Example_Standard_Edition_calculations
I would guess it would be 'Phil Simmons'. He bowled 8 maiden overs (out of 10) in an ODI against Pakistan. His bowling figures for that match was 10-8-3-4 (10 overs, 8 maiden, 3 runs and 4 wickets).
Ravinder Jadeja(CSK) 5-16 in 4 overs
Shahid Afridi (Pakistan) ,he took 4 wickets to 34 in 10 overs
The first Cricket World Cup competition in which matches were played to a maximum length of 50 overs per side was in 1987 - previously, the matches had been 60 overs long.