Lasith Malinga dismisses Alex Hales
World T20 cricket: England are knocked out, Sri Lanka go through
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ICC World Twenty20 Super Eights, Pallekele: |
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Sri Lanka 169-6 beat England 150-9 by 19 runs |
Defending champions England have been knocked out of the World Twenty20 after being overpowered by hosts Sri Lanka in their final Super Eights match.
Chasing Sri Lanka's 169-6, Samit Patel scored a classy 67 but England finished on 150-9 to lose by 19 runs.
Stuart Broad's side slumped to 18-3 after fast bowler Lasith Malinga took three wickets in an over on his way to figures of 5-31 in Pallekele.
Sri Lanka join West Indies, who ended New Zealand's hopes, in the last four.
Making history
Lasith Malinga becomes the fourth bowler in history to take a five-wicket haul in Test, one-day and T20 cricket - emulating Pakistan's Umar Gul, New Zealander Tim Southee and his compatriot Ajantha Mendis. His haul puts him second in the list of leading wicket-takers for the tournament.
As in previous games in the tournament, notably against India and West Indies, England were let down by their top order batsmen.
India's slow bowlers skittled England for 80 in the group stages and, with so-called mystery spinners Ajantha Mendis and Akila Dananjaya in the Sri Lankan line-up, it was expected to be another trial by spin.
However, it was fiery fast bowler Malinga who blew England's top order away with a devastating burst in the third over of their reply.
Luke Wright, promoted to opener in place of the dropped Craig Kieswetter, was first to go when he cut straight to Tillakaratne Dilshan at point.
Jonny Bairstow, who also kept wicket, followed two balls later when he skied a slower ball to Nuwan Kulasekara at mid off before Alex Hales was out lbw, pinned in front by a yorker.
That third wicket was unfortunate for England, with replays suggesting the ball was going to miss leg stump, and it was left to Samit Patel and Eoin Morgan to repair the damage.
Patel, enjoying the responsibility of batting at number four, looked England's most comfortable batsman as he flayed Angelo Mathews for a massive six, got stuck into Kulasekera, and then plundered 14 runs from Ajantha Mendis's first over.
Analysis
"Patel played the spinners so well he's got to be earmarked for a high batting position in the one-dayers in India. It was a brave effort considering he's had so little batting on this tour. Malinga conceded a few runs but he got five wickets."
Indeed, if England can take any consolation from this defeat it was the performance of Patel ahead of this winter's Test tour to India.
The Notts all-rounder dominated Mendis, who had recorded figures of 6-8 against Zimbabwe in the group stages, and cruised to 67 by mixing class with controlled aggression.
He remained unperturbed by wickets falling at the other end, with Morgan missing a reverse sweep to Dananjaya and being given out leg before, and a woefully out of form Ravi Bopara scratching around for six balls before being bowled by Jeevan Mendis.
When Swann added some late impetus with a counter-attacking 34 from 22 balls, England sensed the improbable was possible but Malinga ended those hopes when he came back to bowl Patel in the penultimate over before Kulasekera took care of Swann.
Malinga was brutally effective with the ball, but it was the elegance of Mahela Jayawardene that got Sri Lanka off to a good start with the bat.
The opener defied the early loss of Dilshan to stroke 42 before becoming the first of two wickets in as many balls for Swann.
Jayawardene holed out to Morgan at midwicket before Sangakkara was given out caught behind, despite replays suggesting he had not touched the ball.
Angelo Mathews went on the counter with a quickfire 28, but Broad stalled any momentum by dismissing him and Jeevan Mendis in consecutive deliveries.
Thisara Perera powered 26 crucial runs, including two sixes, in the closing overs before Malinga took over with the ball.
Comments
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Comment number 215.
Tom_in_Exeter2nd October 2012 - 23:58
Before everyone gets too petulant about this, not only are England out, but so too are India and SA, and Australia are only through by the skin of their teeth! Easily the best teams in this competition have been Sri Lanka and, particularly in these conditions, the hugely talented Pakistan. I'm backing the latter to win - to trash Australia using only spin was audacious - and they love the game so!
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Comment number 214.
kungfu cantona2nd October 2012 - 22:00
Anyone else think that Broad was lucky to be in the side?
Why was he made captain, particularly when you consider how injury-prone he has been?
Swann would have been the correct choice to follow Collingwood. The extra responsibility may have encouraged a more mature approach from him too...
When he underperforms like this, Broad's unsavoury and petulant antics annoy me even more.
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Comment number 213.
Camargue20002nd October 2012 - 21:49
No Cook, Bell, Trott, Peterson! and why take Lumb with his IPL experience and not play him. Why play Briggs, the best T20 spinner, only once. Cook should be captain in all forms of the game.
Early test series should be postponed till after IPL and tourists should start with T20 and one dayers (better with ur climate anyway) with 8 tests in June - August
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Comment number 212.
terry2nd October 2012 - 19:09
Bowlers choice is also to blame, economy been more important in T20 than wickets.Swann, Finn Broad and Bopara did their job properly. But Patel's economy rate was 13.5 and Dernbach's 10.5.
If they had done better England would have probably won.
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Comment number 211.
Tony W2nd October 2012 - 17:46
World champions with KP not in top four without, well deserved exit
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Comments 5 of 215