T20 WC Final: Ben Stokes, Brook, Moeen Ali make the chase look easier as England outplays Pakistan
MELBOURNE,NOV 13: England outplayed Pakistan in all departments of the game as they won the Twenty20 World Cup at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday.
Pakistan’s bowling was off the mark and costly lapses from the fielders saw to its fall.
Chasing a total of 137, England reached the target losing 5 wickets.
England were in for trouble in the initial phase of the match as they lost their first wicket when Shaheen Afridi rattled the stumps of Alex Hales.
England were 32 for two at the end of 2 overs when Philip Salt followed Hales to the pavilion. Salt, who survived an LBW review when he was 6, was removed by Haris Rauf with his individual score at 10.
When England score was 32, Joe Butler’s contribution was 20 runs off 10 balls.
England were 37/2 in 4.2 overs and 43/2 in 5 overs. Butler fell for 26 in the 5th over and England were 45/3.
England cruised to 61/3 in the 7th over and at the end of 10 overs they were 77/3.
England were 82/3 at the end of 12 overs.
A breakthrough for Pakistan came when Harry Brook (20) was removed by Shadab Khan. England were then 85/4. Ben Stokes was out there in the crease at the time with 39 off 38 balls while Moeen Ali had scored 19 off 8 balls.
England lost the wicket of hard-hitting Moeen Ali when the score was 132. Moeen Ali was removed by Mohammad Wasim Jr. But by that time it was all over for Pakistan.
Ben Stokes remained unbeaten on 52 off 49 balls as England clinched the title.
Earlier, tight bowling and remarkable fielding saw England restrict Pakistan to 137/8 in 20 overs.
Wickets fell at regular intervals for Pakistan after England captain Jos Buttler won the toss and chose to bowl first, as they did against India, possibly confident of chasing the target.
Pakistan’s 100 came in 14.3 overs. They were 100/4 and then 119 for 4 at the end of 16 overs. They were 121/ 5 in 16.3 overs, 129/7 at the end of 18.3 overs and 131 for 8 in 19.3 overs.
For Pakistan, a responsible 32 from Babar Azam, Shan Masood (38) and Shadab Khan 20 kept the scoreboard ticking even as wickets fell at regular intervals.
Babar Azam fell for an awkward shot. He scored 32 from 27 balls.
The runs mostly came more from singles and twos, rather than from massive hits. The big hits, if at all, came from the bat of captain Babar Azam and Shan Masood.
Riswan earlier survived a runout in the very first over of Ben Stokes. He would have been back in the pavilion if Chris Jordan had hit the stumps at the non-striker’s end.
For England, Sam Curran took three wickets. His figures – 4-0-12-3. Adil Rashid took two crucial wickets, while Stokes took one and Chris Jordan two
Rain was widely forecast but had yet to arrive with a minimum of 10 overs per side needed to constitute a game, compared to five during the group stages.
If the match starts but cannot be finished, it will resume on Monday from where it was halted.
England, the 50-over World Cup champions who are looking to add to their sole T20 crown in 2010, named an unchanged side with batsman Dawid Malan and pace bowler Mark Wood still not fit, meaning Phil Salt and Chris Jordan retain their places.
Pakistan are also searching for a second T20 title after winning the tournament in 2009 and, like England, named an unchanged side.
England: Jos Buttler (capt), Alex Hales, Phil Salt, Ben Stokes, Harry Brook, Liam Livingstone, Moeen Ali, Sam Curran, Chris Jordan, Chris Woakes, Adil Rashid
Pakistan: Mohammad Rizwan, Babar Azam (capt), Mohammad Haris, Shan Masood, Iftikhar Ahmed, Mohammad Nawaz, Shadab Khan, Mohammad Wasim Jr, Naseem Shah, Haris Rauf, Shaheen Afridi
Umpires: Kumar Dharmasena (SRI), Marais Erasmus (RSA)
TV umpire: Chris Gaffaney (NZL)
Match referee: Ranjan Madugalle (SRI)
-The New Indian Express