The Post

England crowned T20 kings

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England stamped themselves cricket’s white-ball kings after withstandi­ng Pakistan’s fearsome pace attack to win the T20 World Cup final by five wickets at the MCG.

Star allrounder Ben Stokes once again proved himself the ultimate big-game player, steering England home with six balls to spare in the face of Pakistan’s fastbowlin­g brilliance.

Stokes hit the winning run to finish unbeaten on 51 and ensure England claimed their second T20 World Cup title and first since 2010.

They are the first team to hold the ODI and T20 World Cups at the same time after their memorable win over New Zealand in the 2019 50-over final at Lord’s.

Predicted rain failed to arrive and interrupt Sunday night’s blockbuste­r decider as 80,462 fans turned out for a rematch of the 1992 ODI World Cup final at the same venue.

England were in the box-seat after captain Jos Buttler won the toss and elected to field first, restrictin­g Pakistan to just 137-8.

An explosive spell from tearaway quick Haris Rauf threatened to put Pakistan back in the contest as he dismissed No 3 Phil Salt and Buttler in quick succession to have the MCG rocking.

Shaheen Afridi took a superb catch to dismiss Harry Brook and have England reeling at 84-4 but the star Pakistani quick hurt himself in the process and was unable to bowl his crucial remaining two overs.

Momentum swung back towards England when Afridi went off the field, as Stokes played the starring role just like he did in the ODI final three years ago.

Moeen Ali (19) played a vital cameo role with Stokes but was bowled within five runs of victory.

Earlier, left-arm seamer Sam Curran put in a crucial spell of 3-12 from his four overs, continuing an impressive tournament for the 24-year-old Englishman.

Curran was able to remove the composed Shan Masood, forcing the middle-order batter into a rash shot when caught on the boundary for 38.

He also claimed Mohammad Rizwan (15), bowling the explosive opener for England’s first wicket of the match.

Legspinner Adil Rashid was equally influentia­l, finishing with 2-22 including the vital wicket of Mohammad Haris with his first ball.

Rashid’s next scalp was even more important, as he dismissed dangerous Pakistan captain Babar Azam (32) during an over that turned out to be a wicket-maiden.

Stokes endured a nervous start with the new ball, sending down a no-ball and a wide with the first two deliveries of the game.

But it was all England after that, silencing the pro-Pakistan crowd by taking regular wickets and limiting their ability to find the boundary.

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