Glasgow Times

England bow out as India show no mercy to book final date

- RORY DOLLARD

ENGLAND’S reign as T20 world champions was ended in brutal fashion by India in Guyana, with their batting hopelessly exposed in a 68- run semi- final defeat. Eight months ago England held both white- ball crowns and, while this T20 World Cup has been an improvemen­t on the 50- over debacle that unfolded in India last year, they were outclassed by a side who outstrippe­d them on all measures.

On an awkward surface at the Providence Stadium, a low and slow turner that required guile and impeccable judgment, India still found their way to 171 for seven while England stumbled to 103 all out.

Only two of their top six managed double figures as they lacked the tools to take on an outstandin­g attack that reduced their plans to ruins. While India will head to Barbados for tomorrow’s final against South Africa, their beaten opponents head for home after a turbulent campaign.

England captain Jos Buttler told Sky Sports: “India certainly outplayed us. We let them maybe get 20- 25 too many on a challengin­g surface that they played well on. They fully deserved to win.

“They’ve got some fantastic spinners. Our two bowled well, but in hindsight we probably should’ve bowled Moeen [ Ali] in our innings with the way spin was playing. But with a good score and their brilliant bowling attack, it was always going to be a tough chase.”

Buttler’s Indian counterpar­t, Rohit Sharma, was delighted.

“It’s very satisfying to win this game,” he said. “We worked really hard as a unit. To win like that was a great effort from everybody.

“I thought 170 was a very good score and the bowlers were fantastic.

“We’ve been very calm. We understand the occasion [ now] of the final. It’s important we stay composed, because that helps you make good decisions. We have been very steady, calm, and that has been the key for us.”

Buttler, along with head coach Matthew Mott, arrived in the Caribbean with their jobs under scrutiny and, although reaching the last four shows progress of sorts, they lost heavily to Australia in the first round, botched a chase against South Africa in the Super 8 and failed to come close to India.

Three of their four wins came against associate nations, with a solitary win against the West Indies in the higher- profile contests. And while they were always second favourites against the world’s No. 1 side, the gulf between the teams was yawning.

Sharma starred with 57 in a decisive stand of 73 with Suryakumar Yadav, while spin twins Axar Patel and Kuldeep Yadav shared six wickets at a cost of just 42.

Yet, for a few fleeting minutes at the start of their chase England gave the illusion of being on sound footing. Buttler took the fight to Arshdeep Singh as he hurried the score to 26 off three overs. But his flurry was all too brief. The first ball of spin from Patel proved fatal, stooping into a reverse slog- sweep but getting his timing all wrong. Instead of racing away to the boundary it looped off the toe of the bat and nestled gently in the wicketkeep­er’s gloves.

It was a hammer blow but one that Phil Salt could not dwell on as he set about the fiendish task of taking down Jasprit Bumrah. Aiming a booming drive at the seamer he hit nothing but fresh air as a smart offcutter rattled the stumps.

India were enjoying themselves and plunged England further into the mire when Patel saw off Jonny Bairstow for a three- ball duck. Looking to hit with turn that never came he paid for the error with his off stump.

By now the game plan was in the bin. Left- handers Ali and Sam Curran were both promoted, to three and six respective­ly, but never laid a glove on the bowlers. Moeen charged Patel but flopped to his knees by the time he was stumped and Curran was frazzled enough to review an lbw decision plumb in front of middle stump.

At 49 for five, it was all but over. Harry Brook made 25 in quick time, extracting some enjoyment from a grim enterprise, but was bowled off the reverse- sweep as the excellent Kuldeep Yadav whirled away.

Jofra Archer hit two sixes but ran out Liam Livingston­e with a bad call, with Adil Rashid also caught short of his ground as the wheels came off and the innings subsided in 16.4 deliveries.

Earlier, South Africa had enjoyed a nine- wicket victory over Afghanista­n to move into their first T20 World Cup final.

The Proteas’ bowling attack rampaged through Afghanista­n’s batters on an unruly pitch in Tarouba to set their chase target at just 57, ultimately ending Afghanista­n’s Cinderella tournament run in 53 balls.

 ?? ?? India celebrate after England’s Liam Livingston­e is run out in the T20 World Cup semi- final
India celebrate after England’s Liam Livingston­e is run out in the T20 World Cup semi- final

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