England's defence of their World Twenty20 title ended with a 19-run
defeat against Sri Lanka, as the home side were cheered on amid a
raucous atmosphere generated by a vibrant home crowd. Lasith Malinga
ripped out the top order with three wickets in four balls, to
immediately set back a tough chase of 170, then returned to finish with 5
for 31 just when Samit Patel offered England a glimmer.
Malinga had been relatively quiet in the tournament until today, taking
three wickets in five matches, but doubled his tally in the blink of an
eye when he was brought on for the third over. Luke Wright, promoted to
open after Craig Kieswetter was dropped, unleashed a fierce square cut
but sent it straight to backward point, Jonny Bairstow was done by a
slower ball to end a difficult tournament and next ball Alex Hales was
pinned by an inswinging yorker, although replays suggested it was
sliding down leg.
There were low expectations from outside the England squad before the
tournament and they have never looked like being capable of defending
their crown. Patel, at least, could hold his head high with a powerful
67 off 48 balls to show he has been underused whereas others, like Jos
Buttler, who gave Malinga his fourth when he hooked to long leg, often
appeared out of their depth. Graeme Swann swung strongly, making the
highest score by a No. 9 in T20s, and the fifty stand with Patel came
from 26 balls but, as against West Indies - whose progression was
secured by England's defeat - it always needed a miracle of Medinah
proportions.
The top order has cost England throughout the tournament and reshuffling
did them no good. From 18 for 3, their hopes were lifted by Patel, who
before this innings had not faced a ball in the tournament. Sent in a
No. 4, in a failed attempt to keep Eoin Morgan away from the first six
overs, he drove a straight six before adding five fours - including
three of Ajantha Mendis' first over - in his first 20 deliveries. For
all the talk of spin, Sri Lanka bowled one over of it in the first
eight.
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Mendis continued to prove expensive when Patel collected two more
off-side boundaries and it was his 18-year-old team-mate, Akila
Dananjaya, who struck the blow that hurt England the most when Morgan
missed a reverse sweep. Ravi Bopara, surprisingly recalled as
Kieswetter's replacement, has looked a tortured soul with the bat of
late and it was no surprise when he basically missed a straight delivery
from Jeevan Mendis. It may be a while until he is back in an England
shirt.
Unlike most of the strong totals at this tournament, Sri Lanka's effort
was not underpinned by one substantial effort but was forged by
free-scoring throughout the line-up, which quietened the concerns about
the middle order. Not that the top three, the big three, failed to lay
the foundations and it was Mahela Jayawardene, curiously not officially
listed as captain at the toss, who marshalled the first half of the
innings with a classy display.
England's bowling attack could be split in half. The combined eight
overs of the three players brought into the attack who didn't face New
Zealand - Dernbach, Patel and Bopara - went for 81 while the established
trio of Broad, Swann and Steven Finn produced 6 for 82 from 12.
Swann evened the contest when he had Jayawardene caught at deep
midwicket and next ball Kumar Sangakkara was given caught behind,
although he did not appear pleased with the decision, before a
counterattacking response from the middle order. It was a fantastic
response by Angelo Mathews and Jeevan Mendis to the loss of two key
batsmen. Neither took a backward step - Mendis opening his innings with
two boundaries off Swann - and Mathews showed elegant clean striking as
the fifty stand came from 29 balls.
Again England hit back with Broad this time taking two in two balls when
Mendis spliced to midwicket and Mathews dragged a pull on to his
stumps. Still Sri Lanka kept on swinging and the 18th over, bowled by
Dernbach, included a six apiece for Thisara Perera and Lahriu
Thirimanne. The sixth-wicket pair added 35 in 19 deliveries to ensure
the home side remained ahead of the game. When England's chase reached
the 13th over they were guaranteed a semi-final spot but by then an
overwhelming victory was also in the bag. It will take a very good
performance to stop them.
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