Sunderland Echo

England stronger after T20 World Cup anguish – Jordan

- By Rory Dollard nep.sport@jpimedia.co.uk

Chris Jordan is convinced England’s heartbreak­ing defeat in the last T20 World Cup final helped them become a calmer, wiser side as they try to recapture the trophy five years later.

When Jordan delivered the penultimat­e over of the 2016 tournament at Eden Gardens, it looked to have all-but sealed a second T20 World Cup triumph for Eoin Morgan’s men.

The West Indies needed 27 runs off the last 12 balls and Jordan held his nerve to cough up just eight from his six deliveries. What happened next is for the history books, with Carlos Brathwaite launching Ben Stokes for four consecutiv­esix es to seal a dramatic victory against the odds.

Stokes remains on an indefinite break from the game but seven of the shellshock­ed England XI from that night in Kolkata are part of the squad that will open their 2021 campaign against the Windies on October 23 and their previous meeting in the competitio­n is sure to loom large over proceeding­s.

Jordan said: “I bowled my last over under what was quite immense pressure and when I bowled a dot ball on that final ball, it definitely did feel a lot closer than it ended up.

“That’ s part of the learning, part of having that experience, because having that feeling after that ball… I’ll never take myself to that place ever again. I definitely won’t be thinking that way after bowling the 19 th over until it’s fully, fully over.

“We definitely came out stronger for it as a unit and as a team.

“I wouldn’t say it really haunted us too much, that’s part of sport, that’s part of life. Someone has to come up victorious and for something like that to be done in the last over, you can’t really write that.”

Jordan suggested England, who went on to win the 50-over World Cup in 2019, made a conscious decision not to get hurried along in the frantic finishes.

“One of the things that sticks out tome is how quickly that last over went. I remember going into a few games after that and, when we did get in those situations, we just started to slow the game down a bit more so our decision making was much clearer,” he said.

“Then you saw that going into the 2019 World Cup. The team was on autopilot really.

“For this team, having been together for so long, the chemistry is there, the talent is there. All the ingredient­s are there for us to make a decent run in this campaign as well.”

 ?? ?? England’s Chris Jordan.
England’s Chris Jordan.

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