Mmegi

Australia, England meet on World Cup precipice

- (The Guardian).

As Friday evening approaches, bringing on the middle of the T20 World Cup group stage, the sense increases that this is the contest that both the English and Australian teams have been waiting for.

India and Pakistan may have surpassed this rivalry for freneticis­m, ferocity, and sheer population, as shown by the crowd of more than 90,000 that sold out the Melbourne Cricket Ground for their own group stage bout.

England and Australia won’t get quite that many through the gates, but their rivalry will always be cricket’s original. The game is now even spicier, though, by effectivel­y becoming an early knockout for both teams.

Australia’s loss to New Zealand can’t strictly be classed as an upset – the Kiwis have made the finals of the last two 50-over World Cups, the last T20 World Cup, and are current holders of the World Test Championsh­ip. But even these consistent­ly successful New Zealanders have still been consistent­ly poor when meeting Australia, so a barnstormi­ng win on these shores was a surprise.

A more genuine upset was Ireland downing England at the MCG on Wednesday afternoon. The Irish win in Bengaluru during the 2011 World Cup may be the stuff of legend, but it remains one of only two times they have beaten England in 50-over cricket, and this was the first instance in T20s. While batting, they bossed proceeding­s for half the innings and then let the ascendancy slip.

While bowling, they bossed proceeding­s for half the innings and then had rain arrive before England got back on top. There was fortune in the manner of the win but it was set up by quality play.

All of which means that England and Australia have each banked one win, one loss, and cannot afford to lose another, with only two teams able to qualify for the semi-finals and New Zealand already having a mortgage on one spot.

Assuming that those three teams can take care of their various assignment­s against Afghanista­n, Ireland and Sri Lanka – an assumption that recent results has shown should have a caveat – an England loss to Australia would see them knocked out.

An Australian loss would leave them needing England to lose to New Zealand, in order to tussle with England on net run rate. It’s not where either side would have expected to be only a few days ago, comfortabl­y placed as the big dogs in their group. But neither has produced a convincing performanc­e so far.

The Australian­s were entirely out of sorts against New Zealand, ambushed by Finn Allen’s opening batting and never recovering from there. Their huge run chase was off the rails before it started. Against Sri Lanka, some good individual performanc­es still felt against the odds in a team that looked like it might be beaten at several points during the encounter.

England meanwhile stumbled to an opening win against Afghanista­n while chasing a minor-league 112, and similarly got jumped by Ireland’s bowlers at the top of the innings in Melbourne.

A position of 29-3 in the sixth over was what slowed England’s progress so markedly that they were still five runs short of the rain adjustment target when the match was abandoned in the 15th over. Earlier, their bowlers had been taken down by Ireland’s top order to the tune of 92-1 after 10 overs, despite losing the power of Paul Stirling early

 ?? PIC: AFP ?? Under-fire: The reaction from UK scribes after England suffered its latest T20 World Cup humiliatio­n has been predictabl­y savage
PIC: AFP Under-fire: The reaction from UK scribes after England suffered its latest T20 World Cup humiliatio­n has been predictabl­y savage

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