A SWOT analysis of England's home World Cup

By Ritesh Misra / Roar Guru

Hosts England made as many as three changes to their provisional list of 15 players to reveal their final team this week.

The hosts indeed look good. After my SWOT analysis of the Indian and Australian teams identifying their internal strengths and weaknesses and external opportunities and threats, here is my SWOT analysis of the hosts.

Let’s take a look at the English team.

The batsmen are Eoin Morgan (captain), Joe Root, Jason Roy and James Vince, who came in for Alex Hales after he failed two tests for recreational drugs.

The batsmen-wicketkeepers are Jos Buttler and Jonny Bairstow, while England have two batting all-rounders in Moeen Ali and Ben Stokes.

They have four bowling all-rounders in Chris Woakes, Liam Dawson, Jofra Archer and Tom Curran. Joe Denly made way for Dawson, while Archer came in for David Willey, who will certainly feel unlucky.

The specialist bowlers are Liam Plunkett and Mark Wood as the front-line quicks while Adil Rashid will handle the spin, along with batsman-spinner Moeen.

Lets run the SWOT analysis.

Strengths
Nothing succeeds like success and England – the No.1 ODI side in the world who have won 11 bilateral series in a row – are certainly pre-tournament favorites.

Their batting firepower is astonishing. They have the ability to chase 350 comfortably, and if they bat first, they are confident of out-batting the opposition.

Joe Root is one of England’s many excellent batsmen. (Photo by Visionhaus/Corbis via Getty Images)

They have several bowlers who can bowl at 90 miles per hour, and they have two handy spinners in Moeen and Rashid, as they proved by taking a dozen wickets each in the 5-0 demolition of Australia.

Weaknesses
There’s no perceptible weakness, as such, with a batting line-up that goes right down to Curran, who may come in at ten.

The only thing is that England have never won the World Cup so far, and in crucial knock-out games like the semi-final or final, they possibly may falter. At least that’s what opponents will be hoping for.

Mark Wood, their spearhead, is a bit injury-prone, which could be a worry.

Opportunities
Once again, no perceptible external opportunities for opponents to exploit.

They will only hope that stroke-makers will self-destruct, or T20 marvel Jofra Archer – with only three ODI appearances to his name – will be inexperienced for the World Cup.

Maybe the bowling attack can be exploited, as was done recently in West Indies, especially by “Universe Boss” Chris Gayle.

Threats
The only possible threat could be the burden of over-expectations.

England are certainly favorites, but in a multi-lateral tournament with knock-out games in the semi-final and final, funny things have been known to happen.

Other teams will be also ready to move in for the kill, and at that stage, any of the four semi-finalists can be eventual champions. And in all likelihood, the team that holds their nerves better will come up trumps.

All said and done, however, I feel England will be the third host team in a row to lift the World Cup.

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-23T01:33:47+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Amazing batting depth. Variety in bowling but their bowling could lose lead them a few games.

2019-05-22T10:30:37+00:00

George

Guest


Rinse and repeat ad nauseum for weeks on end.

2019-05-21T22:51:41+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Another fine analysis Mitesh and as always I have a couple of suggestions. I don't know if Archer and Wood are that much of a strength, Mitesh. Sure they're both quick but Pakistan had no trouble taking them for 6 an over just recently. They also change the dynamic of that side if they both play. The huge strength England's had was an ODI batting side that saw a pretty handy hitter in Rashid come in at 11. If Archer and Wood both play, they're batting 10 & 11. This makes the batting just that little bit less potent. A clear threat has to be pitches offering sideways movement. England batsmen play through the line and when there's movement they occasionally stumble. It will be interesting to see what comes out in the actual World Cup. Another threat is the lack of games against top quality opposition in the past 18 months. The closest they came was an Indian side minus the best ODI bowler in world cricket. A further threat is the fact they've played high quality but one dimensional cricket for the past few years, which must have allowed other teams to develop plans to combat that approach. That said, having the plans and executing them against this side will be very difficult. England are deserved favourites and Morgan must have one hand on the Cup based on the Pakistan performances, but in a knockout setting it takes very little for teams to find themselves watching rather than playing in the final.

2019-05-21T22:22:46+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


Bowling is clearly the achilles heal of this team. They are fortunate to have a batting line up that can often hide the weaknesses of the bowling attack.

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