England v Italy: T20 World Cup cricket – live

1 week ago 26

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11th over: England 93-4 (Banton 21, Curran 1) After taking 10 off the first two balls with a four and a six, Brook then chucked his wicket away. It was a horrendous looking shot. He threw everything at it and lost his shape with one hand leaving the bat as he wafted a long way away from his body on the off side. It’s all so nervy. They’re like a herd of spooked zebra! Italy are right in this thanks to some miserly bowling and tidy fielding. Credit to Smuts who was absolutely elated with that wicket.

WICKET! Brook c Meade b Smuts 14 (England 92-4)

THE SKIPPER IS GONE! He hammered the first ball of Smuts’ over for four down the ground and then crunched a six over square leg. Just when you thought England were mounting a fightback they lose their captain. It’s a shocker of a delivery. Very wide outside the off stump and rather than leave it, Brook went fishing. He did well just to reach it but could only manage a feather behind. Perhaps some credit must go to the bowler for pushing it out there, but Brook really should have let it go. He didn’t and leaves his team in a tricky spot.

10th over: England 82-3 (Banton 21, Brook 4) Tidy set from the wrist spinner. Just one poor ball which was dragged down and duly punished by Banton who rocked back and drilled it through the covers. Otherwise it’s just two singles. Six off the over is a win for the Italians as the run-rate has continued to drop. England need a big over to get things going again.

Showbizguru wants to know if Crishan Kalugamage, the wrist-spinner who works in a pizza parlour, “is a pie-chucker”.

We’ll find out now as he’s back into the attack after a change of ends.

9th over: England 76-3 (Banton 16, Brook 3) JJ Smuts is back into the attack and he’s finding a bit of turn away from the right handers with his left arm finger spin. Darting in, getting some grip, that’s lovely bowling. England’s batters are showing him respect and make do with just four singles.

8th over: England 72-3 (Banton 14, Brook 1) The skipper has a job to do after Bethell’s brain fade. Banton gets four thanks to a misfield at short third. England won’t mind that. They need a partnership now. The Italians – apart from that misfield – have been brilliant in the field and have taken every opportunity. Good start from B Manenti.

WICKET! c Singh b B Manenti 23 (England 67-3)

Another one! England keep losing wickets! It’s a pretty poor shot from Bethell who tried to manipulate the angle to one that skidded across him from Manenti’s off-spinner. Bethell tried to hit this behind square on the leg side but felt a little too forced and all he could do was pick out the sweeper at deep backward square with a lazy looking hoik. Perhaps a bit of extra bounce off the deck, but that’s down to mediocre batting if you ask me.

7th over: England 66-2 (Bethell 23, Banton 5) Time for some wrist spin as the beguiling Kalugamage joins the party. Both Bethell and Banton struggle with their timing but there’s a fortuitous boundary as Banton’s under edge evades the stopping keeper and trickles away for four. It’s 10 off the over as England managed to keep the strike ticking, but that looked handy from the leggie.

6th over: England 56-2 (Bethe 21, Banton 1) A great over for Italy. Just six runs and the wicket of Salt. He’s a skiddy type of bowler, delivering from a lanky action. A cutter almost beat Salt before the bumper produced the goods.

Time for a bit of correspondence:

Mark Beadle:

Morning Daniel. Can we assume that Italy are employing the Catchenaccio system in this game?

Genuinely annoyed at myself for not thinking of this joke.

Rod [no surname given] reckons he has the answer to England’s troubles:

I was looking at the Butler/Bethell/Banton/Brook section of the team sheet and I realised what England need is more consistency-

Johnny Bairstow

Rory Burns

Joss Butler

Jacob Bethell

Tom Banton

Harry Brook

Dom Bess

Sonny Baker

Nathan Barnwell

Stuart Broad

Shoaib Bashir

WICKET! Salt c A Mosca b Hasan 28 (England 54-2)

Stunner in the deep! That is a heck of a grab by the tumbling Anthony Mosca who came running in off the fine leg boundary to scoop the ball inches from the ground. A short ball from Hasan is met by Salt who seemed to be caught in two minds. He rolled his wrists on it but still seemed content to go up and over. That meant the fielder was in play but he still needed to pull off something special. After a quick check the wicket stands and England lose another.

5th over: England 50-1 (Salt 25, Bethell 20) Bethell starts the over by skipping down the track and thwacking Stewart over long-on for six. That compels a field change and brings the keeper up to the stumps. No bother. Salt nails a six of his own as he climbs into a length delivery, meeting it as its rising to send it sailing over square leg. Stewart goes fuller – which seems to be the better length on this very good deck – so Salt bunts down the ground for one. Despite the early wicket, England are ticking along nicely.

4th over: England 39-1 (Salt 18, Bethell 12) Bethell gets four more with a streaky flash down to deep third. He then plinks a clip over the infield that plugs in the deep on the leg side, adding two more. Just another single through the rest of the set before a half-hearted appeal for a caught behind as Salt slashes at a wide one.

Sky have just shown a clip of Buttler before the start of the game practicing the exact same shot that proved his undoing.

Perhaps that was premeditated?

3rd over: England 26-1 (Salt 18, Bethell 5) Success for Italy as they bag a big fish. Bethell strides to the crease and with a lovely bit of timing eases his second ball to the cover fence. But just one single elsewhere, along with the wicket and three dot balls, you have to say that’s a more than handy start for Grant Stewart.

Buttler played across the line of that one. Rather than try and hit it over mid-on or back over the bowler’s head, he tried to flick it to cow corner. As a result, he skewed it off the toe-end. An ugly shot in the end.

WICKET! Buttler c Manenti b Stewart 3 (England 21-3)

Buttler can’t believe what he’s done! Stewart’s first ball is on e fullish length around middle and leg with perhaps a little bit of shape away from the right hander. Buttler never tried to keep it down but the bat turned in his hand as he caught a leading edge that flew high towards the Italian skipper at mid-off. He never looked like dropping it. Italy are on the board!

Grant Stewart of Italy celebrates after taking the wicket of Jos Buttler of England.
Grant Stewart of Italy celebrates after taking the wicket of Jos Buttler of England. Photograph: Pankaj Nangia/Getty Images

2nd over: England 21-0 (Salt 18, Buttler 3) There’s a drop-catch! But it’s about 20 rows back over fine leg. Ali Hasan lands his first ball halfway down the track and Salt swivels and nails the pull shot. Two balls later a lovely clip off his pads races away to the midwicket boundary for four more. Buttler gets on strike and will keep it for the next over with a scampered single to mid-on’s left.

1st over: England 9-0 (Salt 7, Buttler 2) England off to a top start thanks to Salt leaning back and spanking the first delivery for four down the ground. That was almost a tennis shot. Smuts gets lucky as his final ball is also dragged down but Salt picks out the sweeper at cow corner with a mighty heave. Four singles elsewhere.

JJ Smuts – who has never been to Italy – will open the bowling with some darting off-spin.

Phil Salt will face up first.

Alistair Connor writes in and wants to know, “what’s the record of this Italian side against ... Scotland?”

Hmmm. Well, according to a quick Google search, they’ve played each other once with Scotland winning by 73 runs.

Hard to believe the two associates have only played each other once. I’ll keep digging (but by all means, if someone out there can correct me, please let me know).

Meanwhile the anthems are done. England in red with blue trousers. Italy in a blue hue known as blu Savoia. #4B61D1. Apparently it ids a “a shade of blue between peacock blue and periwinkle”

Nasser Hussein rings the bell and we’ll get cracking shortly.

Here come the players. A sparse crowd, but that was to be expected. Eden Gardens is a mighty arena and it is a Monday morning. Still, credit to those who turned up in time for the anthems.

Teams

England: Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wk), Jacob Bethell, Tom Banton, Harry Brook (c), Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Jamie Overton, Jofra Archer, Liam Dawson, Adil Rashid.

Italy: Justin Mosca, Anthony Mosca, JJ Smuts, Harry Manenti (c), Marcus Campopiano, Ben Manenti, Grant Stewart, Gian-Piero Meade (wk), Crishan Kalugamage, Ali Hasan.

England win toss, bat first.

All eyes on England’s top order.

Nick Knight says, “don’t overthink it. Just chuck ‘em out and leave them to it.”

Afghanistan beat UAE by five wickets.

It was pretty comfortable in the end. Afghanistan are a proper side. England, and most other top teams, can be thankful they didn’t have them in their group.

It’s easy to patronise the smaller nations, so please take this with the utmost sincerity I intend – I just love this Italian side.

Brothers opening the batting. A wrist-spinner born in Sri Lanka who works in a pizza shop. A head coach who used to play for the side when no one cared about them. A rag tag crew punching above their weight.

If you’re not sold, take a gander at this cracking piece that I guarantee will challenge the allegiances of a few English supporters:

Harry Brook has admitted that his team has “not been at their best”.

That’s obvious. But you know what, it doesn’t matter how you start in these tournaments as long as you build momentum.

A win today would secure their passage to the Super 8s and from there, well, who knows.

If there are any early birds up and about, UAE are giving Afghanistan a proper game.

Looks like the Afghans should get over the line in a nervy chase, but they still need 28 from the final 18 balls. In the balance.

OH, Azmat has just smacked a six down the ground. 22 needed off 17. Hmmm, could be done and dusted unless there’s a wicket.

A reminder of England’s campaign so far:

Preamble

Good morning, buongiorno, how you doin’?

Welcome to the OBO of England v Italy. It seems bonkers to say, given the pedigree of both cricket nations, but we could have a proper contest on our hands.

England’s T20 World Cup campaign has failed to leave second gear. They were poor in their defeat to the West Indies and hardly convincing in their wins over Nepal and Scotland – their first triumph over European opponents in this competition.

Italy meanwhile have been a revelation. They too lost to the West Indies but obliterated Nepal by 10 wickets thanks to a pair of 60s from the Mosca brothers at the top of the order, as well as the beguiling leg spin of Crishan Kalugamage. England only crawled over the line against Nepal off the final ball of the match. If that’s anything to go by we should expect an Italian win. Right?

Well, that’s not how things go and if any one of England’s big names find form this should be a romp. But let’s not rule anything out. This could go down as a classic.

We get underway at 9:30 am in the UK, 3 pm in Mumbai.

We’ll have team news and other bits to follow.

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