Party poopers: England smash India, fairytale final hopes in semi-final beatdown, Pakistan awaits

By Tim Miller / Editor

The whole cricket ground was eagerly awaiting a blockbuster rematch between India and Pakistan, the most fierce rivalry in world cricket, for Sunday’s T20 World Cup final.

But a magnificent all-round performance from England at the Adelaide Oval has put paid to all that, Jos Buttler’s men smashing India by 10 wickets with four full overs to spare to leave themselves just one win away from a second T20 world title.

A brilliant, unbeaten 170-run opening partnership from captain Buttler (80 off 49) and Alex Hales (86 off 47) – the highest partnership for any wicket in T20 World Cup history – paved the way for the most comprehensive of victories; while earlier, a relentless bowling display left Indian blaster Hardik Pandya (63 off 33) too much to do to set a competitive total.

India’s eventual tally of 6/168, only possible thanks to Pandya hitting 58 from the final four overs, may have been enough on another day, against another side. But with the English opening pair in the form of their lives, it always felt light.

The win establishes England, the holders of the ODI World Cup, as the premier white-ball team in the world; should they defeat Pakistan at the MCG on Sunday, they will become the first ever men’s side to hold both major trophies simultaneously.

A first-ball four from KL Rahul from a loose Ben Stokes offering was about as easy as it got for India in the early stages; Rahul, for one, would last just four more balls before edging Chris Woakes behind.

The occasional glorious boundary from Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli – Kohli’s lofted drive for six off Sam Curran one of the shots of the tournament – came with it a mixture of miserly bowling from England’s seamers and leg-spinner Adil Rashid; Sharma, despite four fours, could only muster 27 off 28 balls before a wild slog was spectacularly caught by Curran in the deep.

When India’s talisman Suryakumar Yadav fell for just 14, deceived by Rashid into slicing a lofted drive straight up, a competitive total seemed nearly out of reach already.

But nothing is impossible while Kohli remains at the wicket. The undisputed player of the tournament thus far, the maestro seldom looked rushed as he crept towards his 50, keeping the scoreboard ticking over while preserving wickets for the final flurry.

Jos Buttler and Alex Hales of England celebrate victory. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

There was a bit of luck – a massive LBW shout from England off a Chris Jordan yorker was found by ball-tracker to not be hitting leg stump enough to overturn the on-field not out call – but otherwise, Kohli looked unruffled as he cruised to his fourth half-century in six innings in a remarkable World Cup.

Having been unbeaten in the first three of those, it would be fourth time unlucky for Kohli, well caught at short third man by Rashid as Jordan finally got his man. Nevertheless, his 40-ball 50 had stemmed the tide of the early collapse; and Pandya, who had clubbed Jordan and Curran for three sixes across the previous two overs, was ready to launch.

Having been on 13 off 15 balls before the start of the 16th over, the all-rounder would bring up his half-century with the final ball of the 19th. Together with Rishabh Pant, 20 runs came off a Curran over that seldom put a foot wrong, Pandya hitting a pair of yorkers for spectacular fours (one, admittedly, thanks to a Stokes midfield at deep mid-wicket), and sending the one bad short ball into the stands over long on.

Such was his striking that Pant, one of world cricket’s most exhilarating batters, was content to sacrifice himself in a run out to allow Pandya back the strike in the final over. A six and a four off Jordan ensued, before he fell the only way he was really going to: heading deep back into his crease to deal with the Jordan yorker, he whipped him through mid-wicket for four, only to tread on his own stumps to end the innings in bizarre scenes.

Pandya’s heroics, though, soon paled in comparison to those of Hales and Buttler. Their opening partnership of 81 effectively dealt New Zealand a blow they couldn’t recover from in a crunch group stages game, before they put on 75 in barely over seven overs against Sri Lanka to break the back of a chase that they could easily have botched without them.

This was even more spectacular – more than twice as spectacular, to be specific. Yet again, Buttler and Hales showed a rare desire at this tournament to attack in the PowerPlay overs, rather than preserve wickets: where India crawled to 1/38 from their first six, the English bludgeoned 63.

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From the first legal delivery of the innings, where Buttler hammered a square drive off Bhuvneshwar Kumar, the pair seemed ready to again do all the heavy lifting themselves.

Hales, who might only be in this squad due to Jonny Bairstow’s bizarre golf-inflicted broken leg, seems keener and keener with every passing innings to make up for his wilderness years in which a series of off-field incidents earned him persona non grata status under Buttler’s predecessor as captain Eoin Morgan.

“To get the chance to play for England again at a time when I feel like I am playing the best T20 cricket of my career is a great feeling,” Hales said after his dominant display.

“It’s maybe a chance I didn’t think would come around again.”

Even India’s deep crop of bowlers were no match for the pair, Hales bringing up 50 off just 28 balls having comfortably outpaced Buttler. But the skipper was about to explode himself.

With Pant cramping up behind the stumps, Buttler was keen to give his opposing wicketkeeper an early night to recover. Lethal on anything short, which sat up nicely on the well-used Adelaide pitch, the deep mid-wicket fans took a hammering; Pandya’s efforts to rile the crowd up perhaps would have been better served focussing on hitting his lengths. Clearly India’s best on the night, though, it would be harsh to blame him at all.

The match was perfectly summed up by a lofted Buttler drive being dropped by Yadav running in, with the ball rebounding past Kohli and to the boundary.

The last thing to tick off was to finish in style; with a spectacular six down the ground off Shami, Buttler ensured the most emphatic of chases was completed by the most emphatic of strokes.

England, for the third time, are into a T20 World Cup final. And while Pakistan’s surge at this tournament has been something to behold, there is no question about who will start on Sunday as comfortable favourites.

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-11T20:48:10+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I'm hoping for rain and the game to be awarded to the team that has the best make-up.

2022-11-11T17:45:58+00:00

Stuckbetweenindopak

Roar Rookie


Trying to sign off in style Jeff :happy:

2022-11-11T10:27:47+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I think Broad would find it a bit difficult to respect Warner, don't you? Apart from the obvious, Warner's been Broad's bunny for so long now he must burst into tears every time he sees him.

2022-11-11T10:25:03+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing: Yes, barely a night goes by in the pubs and clubs across England without talk switching to what's happening in Australia.

2022-11-11T10:19:21+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Two more than the Aussies have got...

2022-11-11T10:06:34+00:00

Alchemist

Roar Rookie


Yet another coach the men's team has let slip through the cracks. Did an amazing job with the women's team over an extended period.

2022-11-11T09:20:50+00:00

Keith Griffen

Guest


India has been brought back down to earth. It's ironic that Pakistan dont even play in the IPL And aren't even as highly paid, yet still are in the final!

2022-11-11T09:18:13+00:00

SDHoneymonster

Guest


If they can't get a game in on either day (and it's harder to for the knockout games, given that they need to be at least 10 overs a side, rather than 5 like in the group stages) then the trophy is shared.

2022-11-11T09:15:00+00:00

Senator McKinley

Guest


So let me see if we've got this straight, Peter. Israel Folau can say what he likes, and the Manly seven can say what they like. But Pat Cummins is woke for expressing his opinion, and Warner is absolutely disgusting? Me thinks you only want people to say and think what you say and think....

2022-11-11T08:55:52+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


No, but they established the selection process, post-coup, at that meeting.

2022-11-11T08:51:53+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Rain Sunday. Rain for reserve day Monday. What happens next? Perhaps it's time we let go of "biggest capacity venue" is the only option? Melbourne may have a big capacity venue, but surely it ranks lowest re reliability of weather for cricket, especially at this time of year. Adelaide or Perth at 55k or Gabba at 40sK, are just fine.

2022-11-11T08:47:54+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Well it’s not the pub crew if you are unhappy about NSW selections. Every NSW player in the side was there long before the current set up. Apart from the 1970’s NSW has pretty much dominated selections

2022-11-11T08:09:23+00:00

El Loco

Roar Rookie


If the form of the batters wasn't destroying their confidence enough, Shami's bizarre outfield relay would've made sure of it. Then the dropped catch that went for four; tough chance for sure but the two fielders between them couldn't have made a bigger mess of it. Comical by the end.

2022-11-11T08:06:32+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You've had those names all series. Read the scoreboards, read the team list. 2+2 =4

2022-11-11T08:04:31+00:00

El Loco

Roar Rookie


Yeah, 'creeping' towards fifty isn't exactly what you're after in a T20! Nor 'keeping the scoreboard ticking over while preserving wickets for the final flurry'. Beautiful 50-over stuff, not so much the 20-over stuff. There was something a bit unconvincing about Kohli last night. Would've been interesting to see more of Pant.

2022-11-11T07:42:31+00:00

Simon

Guest


Players who keep getting games without performing at the level

2022-11-11T07:39:55+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


Senator, you’re no Adam Bandt One off sledges - no biggie I trust the umps to warn and infringe bad behaviour. But they have to see it first All I can say for someone who professes do hate PC and woke and whatever, You are “absolutely disgusted” pretty easily.

2022-11-11T07:24:31+00:00

Peter Darrow

Roar Guru


Google it. Ironically he was out a few balls later. Are you not bothered by sledging Micko?

2022-11-11T06:42:25+00:00

Simoc

Roar Rookie


For my money Englands appoach is the one that will win most games. Pick attacking batsman and go for it. Kane Williamson and Virat Kohli shows how building a T20 innings can cost your team the big games. Pakistan have a similar approach which hasn't worked because their top two have been out of form until the semifinal against NZ. See the difference putting Indias bowlers under pressure makes to their bowling. They looked fantastic in the previous game and hopeless against England. I think Australia will play similarly but I reckon the lineup is wrong. Bring Maxwell in at first drop then Stoinus, Marsh, David, Green and Inglis (or Carey). I'm not sure who Warners opening partner should be but someone who bats like S Yadav would be ideal.

2022-11-11T06:30:05+00:00

bungeye

Roar Rookie


"Must be a full moon tonight, they’re all out" I suspect it's hormonal...it's a runaway train at this point. "International coach" is code for Australian. I mean, c'mon, I didn't want it too obvious???? The fact remains, you guys are very Australian centric, we deserve all the pleasantries that will be coming or way.xxx I hope that helps

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