ENG-barrassed: Skipper facing the sack after Poms' nightmare loss to Sri Lanka - World Cup title defence 'is over now'

By News / Wire

England’s excruciating World Cup defence is all but over after yet another shambolic defeat, this time against a Sri Lanka side led by their former head coach Chris Silverwood.

The 2019 champions turned in a meek, error-strewn performance with the bat, blown away for just 156 in Bengaluru, and barely fared any better with the ball as their opponents breezed home by eight wickets in Bengaluru on Thursday. 

Summing up the latest disastrous loss was Adil Rashid’s shambolic run out to leave England nine down, the tailender caught napping at the non-striker’s end as Sri Lankan captain and wicketkeeper Kusal Mendis threw down the stumps after a take down the leg side.

Jos Buttler’s side have now lost four of their five games by heavy margins – beaten by New Zealand, Afghanistan, South Africa and now Sri Lanka – and can start booking an early trip home despite having four fixtures still to play in a torturous group stage. 

Buttler’s future as white-ball skipper will be in jeopardy and the keeper accepts his future as England captain is now out of his hands after another painful defeat sent his side tumbling towards the World Cup exit door.

“It certainly looks that way and that’s incredibly disappointing. It would need a few miracles,” he said, glassy-eyed after another draining day. 

“To be sat here now with the three weeks we’ve had is a shock. It’s a shock to everyone. 

“I’ll walk back in the dressing room after this, look at the players and think ‘how have we found ourselves in this position with the talent and the skill that’s in the room?’.

“But it’s the reality of what’s happened over the last three weeks and that’s a huge low point.” 

Pressed on his own status in charge of the side Buttler indicated a desire to continue but a realisation that the verdict may not be his to make. 

In reality, England do not have an obvious successor lined up and Buttler is relatively new in the role, having inherited the mantle following Eoin Morgan’s retirement last summer. 

He also has a T20 World Cup win in the bank and there has been no indication that managing director of the men’s cricket, Rob Key, has an itchy trigger finger. 

“I certainly have a lot of confidence and belief in myself as a leader and captain and first and foremost as a player, but if you’re asking if I should still be captaining the team, that’s a question for the guys above me. 

“The tournament’s gone nowhere near the way we wanted it to…that much is obvious. As a leader, you want to lead through your own performance and I’ve not been able to do that.” 

Sri Lanka celebrate the run out of Joe Root. (Photo by Matt Roberts-ICC/ICC via Getty Images

Although England are still mathematically in the running, with Buttler saying they “need a few miracles” to win their remaining games, their chances of finishing in the top four are slim – and coach Matthew Mott admitted they were resigned to their fate.

“It’s over now, I think. I’m not a mathematician, but with our net-run-rate and too many teams who are going to take games off each other, we have to come to terms with that from now we’re playing for a lot of pride,” Mott said.

“We’ve got a lot to do there, we feel like we’ve let our fans down, our families and supporters and everyone in that dressing room. We haven’t put our best foot forward and in professional sport that’s what you’re judged on.

“We have to use this in a really positive way, I’ve been part of teams that have won and part of teams that have lost. But when you lose like this, it has to sting and has to hurt, but something good has to come out of it.”

There was an extra layer to their latest humbling given Silverwood’s presence in blue and gold. He served as England’s bowling coach when they lifted the trophy four years ago and was handpicked to take over the top job from Trevor Bayliss soon after. 

But Silverwood was sacked after a dire Ashes campaign in 2021-22 and now, rather than guiding his country through this tournament as he once expected, he has effectively sealed their departure from it. 

A scrappy 43 from Ben Stokes was the best England could muster and that was promptly put in perspective as Pathum Nissanka (77 not out) and Sadeera Samarawickrama (65no) peeled off an effortless century stand in response. 

In all England used just 33.2 overs in the first innings and 25.4 in the second, a damning indictment on all fronts. 

Mott didn’t want to say if it was the end of an era for this England ODI team but he admitted it was a missed opportunity after winning the T20 World Cup last year.

“For us, every time you play a World Cup you know it could be your last … they don’t come along very often,” Mott added. “In the last 12 to 18 months we’ve done well in the T20 World Cup and we’ve bombed out here. We need to get better.

“A T20 World Cup is the next thing on the agenda (in June 2024), from an ICC events point of view. We need to make sure we do our best preparation and hopefully we put in a much better performance.”

The day started with the latest confusing selection from England, who dropped rising star Harry Brook and rookie seamer Gus Atkinson as they fielded a side comprised entirely of thirty-somethings for the first time ever in ODI cricket. 

It proved a thoroughly misguided decision from a team long past its peak. With a dominant, table-topping India up next in Lucknow, it is hard to see what they do next. 

Things began with a brief burst of positivity, openers Dawid Malan and Jonny Bairstow taming the new ball sufficiently to take 45 from the first 39 deliveries, with nine boundaries. 

But the growing optimism was shattered by the introduction of old foe Angelo Mathews, called up as an injury replacement just a couple of days ago and embarking on his first ODI spell in three-and-a-half years. 

It took the 36-year-old just three deliveries to get back in the groove, Malan caught behind for 28 chasing a cutter. 

Mathews was involved again in the crucial dismissal of Joe Root, who had just three to his name when he chopped to point and set off for a single, turning on his heels once Bairstow dug his in at the non-striker’s end. 

Mathews picked up and threw in one swift movement, leaving Mendis to obliterate the stumps as Root dived in vain.

The errors kept coming, Bairstow reaching 30 before a cross-batted swat at Kasun Rajitha plonked straight to mid-on. Lahiru Kumara had Buttler flashing to slip and Liam Livingstone lbw.

Stokes went on the attack, despite struggling for timing, but lost two more partners as Moeen Ali and Chris Woakes spoon-fed catches to backward point. 

When Stokes dragged a pull down deep-midwicket’s throat, England’s hopes died.

David Willey, who hit England’s only six of the innings, also started gamely with the ball, getting rid of Kusal Perera and the dangerous Mendis but Samarawickrama and Nissanka knocked off the runs in a composed manner.

Nissanka sealed victory in style by slamming the expensive Rashid for a big six over long-on.

Sports opinion delivered daily 

   

The Crowd Says:

2023-10-27T23:18:51+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I think there are some very talented spinners out there, including Rocchiocolli but all need to bowl a lot of overs, to show what they might be able to offer at Test level. Right now, teams are stacked with quicks and medium pacers, so spinners only bowl maybe 10 or 20% of the overs. Case in point, the Shield game between the Vics and NSW. The spinners from both sides have bowled less than 30 overs out of a possible 200 and that includes 16 overs from Nathan Lyon

2023-10-27T23:02:52+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Agree BG. The fact that Rashid treated like still in play meant there was nothing really for the umpire to decide. But it could have been a grey area.

2023-10-27T23:01:04+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Read again. I didn’t say he wasn’t out.

2023-10-27T09:10:05+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It should have been too. Totally under-prepared.

2023-10-27T09:09:23+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Corey Rocchiocolli is taking a few on WA pitches, so the WACA coaches must have seen something.

2023-10-27T07:58:11+00:00

E-Meter

Roar Rookie


What about Wood with his fast pies? In England he was a funnel web spider. Now he’s a daddy long legs.

2023-10-27T07:19:18+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


The pile on the Australian team after the first two games was worse I think

2023-10-27T05:50:04+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The embarrassing bit is for those who have joined the Pommy pile-on today. What if the English team, the way they have been characterised, actually beat the Aussies? Embarrassing forthose posters?

2023-10-27T05:43:43+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


That's not the schedule though.

2023-10-27T05:42:41+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


DMT, Honestly, I’m not sure I feel strongly enough to really dispute your point, but honestly; what tactical moves have you seen from Buttler this World Cup? You say he had limited resources, but why are they more limited than what Cummins has at his disposal? They’re still playing bulk all rounders… Neither appear capable of the sort of inspired bowling or fielding changes that swing games. The hatred for Cummins on the site, when not entirely related to his age, political opinions or his apparent omnipresent control over selections, seems to be based around his conservatism and lack of faith in young players. Sounds identical to Buttler as far as I’m concerned

2023-10-27T05:33:31+00:00

The Bush

Roar Guru


Gordon, As with anything; it’s just not black and white. I agree that the Aussie selectors have frequently loved connecting a dash of white ball, hit-and-giggle runs as equating to “form” in real cricket. I also thoroughly dislike when ability in one format is treated as reason to be selected in another format, if the statistical evidence says otherwise. But, if you’re a proven star in multiple formats, like Root and, begrudgingly I’ll admit Bairstow to a far lesser degree, I think it’s fair to considered their overall form across formats. Again, this doesn’t mean common sense shouldn’t prevail, so Warner’s consistent test failures, despite ongoing whiteball success does not mean we should treat his current white ball dominance as evidence that he’ll now score red ball runs again.

2023-10-27T03:45:58+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


First grade & first-class cricket in Australia doesn't lend itself to developing spinners, not like it used to a few decades ago. How long has it been since we've seen turning wickets in grade or Shield comps? Sydney & Adelaide used to turn quite nicely but that's not so much the case now. There's also no reason why curators can't develop wickets that mimic Indian conditions, especially in places like Darwin, Cairns or T'vile. They did that not too many years ago in Darwin as a one-off before a Sri Lanka tour(?) and it didn't take a lot of effort. I'd have thought this should be compulsory for any touring team, months before they depart. Granted it won't be the same as being in India, but it will give both bowlers and batsmen a chance to work on how to manage on these sorts of wickets

2023-10-27T03:30:55+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Interesting points for sure Dave. In terms of 20.1.1.1 the ball can be deemed dead if it goes into the keepers gloves and is returned to the bowler so they can deliver the next ball. The ball can also be deemed dead if it's returned directly to the bowler, the bowler fields the ball themselves and starts to walk back to their mark, etc. In other words, it can be both, but not in the same delivery. I'm guessing the 3rd umpire thought the keeper regarded the ball as still in play and presumably so did Rashid and everyone else who thought he was out. It must come down to how long after the keeper takes the ball in that scenario does it cease to be in play? On paper we could end up with the ridiculous situation where after every delivery, the keeper takes the ball and stands there for 10 seconds or longer, waiting for the batsman to leave their crease to do some pitch repair, then knocks the bails off and/or tries to run out the non-striker who's coming down the pitch for a chat.

2023-10-27T03:10:13+00:00

Kizman

Roar Rookie


If Aus lose tomorrow, they really can't afford to lose to England. England would really love to knock over Aus, even if they can't qualify themselves.

2023-10-27T02:49:15+00:00

jammel

Roar Rookie


I thought it was clearly OUT. Rashid should have quickly retreated behind his crease. Easy.

2023-10-27T02:45:16+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


It will if he remains captain of the white ball teams!

2023-10-27T02:40:49+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Yep, Australia doesn’t do any of that stuff either. You could also ask , why aren’t club cricket rules changed. To require every fieldsman to bowl at least 5 overs. So as to develop more future bowlers & especially some all rounders who can bowl spin , for example. Any good batsman in Australia, who could bowl a decent leg spin , or off spin would walk into every Australian side. I’m not sure that even with enough chances , any Australian batsman are going to excel in Asian Conditions? I’ve not seen any of that virtually ever, on tours of India & Sri Lanka.

2023-10-27T02:23:03+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I think every team in world cricket will struggle against quality spinners if the surface is right, even India. In England's case though, they're managing to get out to the faster bowlers at least as often as the spinners. That was certainly the case overnight. If so, why not throw in a few younger blokes to see how they go? Relying on these current blokes is not a recipe for success. The younger guys might initially crash & burn but if they're any good and are given a few chances, might actually learn to bat in Asian conditions.

2023-10-27T02:05:38+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


All of that l get but that doesn't explain Rashid not caring about his wicket. Always be in your crease unless you are stupid.

2023-10-27T02:02:30+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


England , like Australia struggle on spin friendly pitches , against quality spinners. It’s correct to say that both countries will need to make changes to their aging sides. Yet will any younger players coming in be any better on spin friendly wickets? I certainly doubt it at this point.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar