Daily Mail

What a shower! England’s Irish nightmare asks many questions

Suddenly stuttering Stokes, hapless Hales and ragged Rashid are issues for Buttler

- PAUL NEWMAN Cricket Correspond­ent in Melbourne

ONE more ball might have been enough. England had finally found fluency here at the MCG through Moeen Ali hitting Gareth Delany for 12 off three balls and if play had continued until the end of the 15th over they would probably have beaten Ireland.

But it would have been an injustice. Ireland were better than England with both bat and ball yesterday and thoroughly deserved this repeat of their win in the 2011 50- over World Cup. They have thrown this Super 12 group into glorious disarray and condemned England and Australia to a virtual eliminator tomorrow.

There were those here, too, who have been around long enough to remember rain in Guyana costing Ireland a golden chance of a famous win over eventual champions England at the start of the 2010 T20 World Cup. Revenge for that has been a long time coming.

England can have no complaints and, to be fair, Jos Buttler was not complainin­g afterwards, even though it seemed a big call when Australian umpire Paul Reiffel and South African Adrian Holdstock took the players off when they did to hand Ireland victory by just five runs through the DLS method.

England were mystifying­ly poor. Everything was in their favour when Buttler won the toss and asked Ireland to bat against an attack that got everything right against Afghanista­n in Perth on Saturday. Only this time they got pretty much everything wrong.

We cannot blame it on complacenc­y because England resisted the temptation to rest Mark Wood and Chris Woakes and chose an unchanged team. But where they were brilliant in the field in Perth, they were lacklustre here. It was as if they could not raise themselves at a near empty MCG against Irish underdogs.

Andy Balbirnie and his side took full advantage and, when Ireland stood at 103 for one in the 12th over, Woakes going for 40 off three overs, they looked set for at least 180.

That they were restricted to 157 all out owed everything to an England fightback that saw the last seven wickets fall for 25 in 24 balls, the consistent­ly rapid Wood grabbing bbi three th of f them th and d Liam i Livingston­e turning the tide with three as the sixth bowler.

Yet still England could not take their chance. Yes, the pitch was a bit more tricky than first appeared, even though there was good bounce and carry. But they still should have been able to cope much more comfortabl­y against Ireland’s seamers.

Instead England’s batting raised some serious questions, coming so soon after they lost five wickets in overtaking Afghanista­n’s modest 112 in Perth. Whereas they seemed to have a plethora of big-hitting options just a week ago, now they have top-order uncertaint­y.

Alex Hales may have made a half century in his first game back in Pakistan and 84 in the opening warm-up against Australia here, but since then he has struggled and there must be a question mark against him before the make-orbreak meeting with Australia.

Dawid Malan has returned to taking a few too many balls over his runs, while the biggest issue seems to be Ben Stokes at four. Yes, he is such an important player and talisman for England that he simply has to play. But should he be in such a pivotal batting position? iti ? Harry Brook k will ill go on to become England’s next great multi-format batsman, but twice here he has shown inexperien­ce and naivety in run chases and made bad decisions. He, too, seems a place too high at five, however well he batted there against Pakistan in the build-up to this tournament.

Buttler said afterwards that one of his regrets was that Moeen, who faced 12 balls for his unbeaten 24, and Livingston­e, who had faced just two balls when the rain came, had not batted for long enough against the Irish.

They can be expected to be promoted tomorrow and, however vital Stokes is to the team, he has to go down the order, probably to seven. He could also open instead of Hales, where he would either come off spectacula­rly or depart quickly.

As for the bowling, Woakes’ place must be in jeopardy after this performanc­e, while there are concerns over another key figure.

Adil Rashid has been the most important bowler in England’s T20 cricket for some time, but he has been well short of his best and this was the seventh time in his last 11 games that the leg-spinner has gone wicketless. Suddenly there are so many questions and suddenly, with New Zealand being restricted to a point by the Melbourne monsoon that washed out their game against Afghanista­n yesterday, this Super 12 group is wide open.

It is up to England to get on course again by beating Australia in what will be effectivel­y a knockout game here tomorrow in front of a big home crowd.

If they don’t, they can all but wave goodbye to their World Cup.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Party time: Fionn Hand celebrates with Irish supporters
GETTY IMAGES Party time: Fionn Hand celebrates with Irish supporters
 ?? POPPERFOTO ?? All going wrong: Stokes is bowled by Hand
POPPERFOTO All going wrong: Stokes is bowled by Hand
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