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Australia vs England | Semi Final 2, World Cup | Edgbaston | 11th July, 2019 | Australia innings

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Australia have beaten England in the warm-up as well as the group stage game, but the hosts will want to settle scores in the match where it matters the most.

Overview

England v Australia

Edgbaston, Birmingham
2019 ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup, Semi-Final 2
Thursday, 11 July; 10.30am local time; 09.30am GMT

Before the tournament, hosts England, along with India, were touted by some as unequivocal favourites to lift the cup. No team has burst that illusion quite as magnificently as their Ashes rivals.

Australia's dominating performance at Lord's, where they beat England by 64 runs in the group stages is still fresh in everyone's minds, but the five-time champions had announced themselves even before the tournament actually began, triumphing over the hosts by 12 runs in Southampton in the warm-ups.

England, on the other hand, have been inconsistent. They have struggled to chase scores throughout the tournament – their 20-run defeat to Sri Lanka in chase of a modest 233 exemplified that. They will have to hope for a much more solid batting performance from their batsmen should Australia get the chance to bat first yet again.

Australia too have looked a lot more comfortable defending. The two games they lost in the group stages were both while chasing, the second defeat came in their previous game against South Africa, where they fell short of 325 by 10 runs.

That defeat has forced Australia to look at potential changes. Peter Handscomb, who was drafted into the side as a replacement for the injured Shaun Marsh, is confirmed to make his World Cup debut. Matthew Wade has been lined up as a replacement for Khawaja in the squad, who has been ruled out of the tournament with a hamstring strain. Wade has been in terrific form for Australia A, and may be considered in place of the misfiring Glenn Maxwell.

England seem relatively settled coming into the semis on back of two wins against sides like India and New Zealand. But the two recent defeats to Australia might well cancel out any perceived psychological advantage. One can expect a close affair.


Key players

Jason Roy: England have looked a markedly more complete side with Roy in the side. He missed the last game against Australia at Lord's but has since returned to full flow and he would be itching to leave his mark on the big occasion.


Steve Smith: With changes afoot in the Australian middle-order, the experienced Smith will likely have a big role to play. His form this tournament hasn't been upto the mark so far, but the weight of the occasion might just spur the 30-year-old on.

Conditions

Unfortunately, there is some degree of rain on the radar in Birmingham and clouds are expected to be present through the course of the game. As for the pitch, one can expect a good surface for batting.

Squads

England: Eoin Morgan (c), Moeen Ali, Jofra Archer, Jonny Bairstow, Jos Buttler (wk), Tom Curran, Liam Dawson, Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Jason Roy, Ben Stokes, James Vince, Chris Woakes, Mark Wood

Australia: Aaron Finch (c), David Warner, Steve Smith, Peter Handscomb, Alex Carey (wk), Marcus Stoinis, Glenn Maxwell, Mitchell Starc, Kane Richardson, Pat Cummins, Jason Behrendorff, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Adam Zampa, Nathan Lyon, Matthew Wade (pending official confirmation)

https://www.cricketworldcup.com/news/en/1275982
 
Australia v England

• 10 of the last 12 men’s ODI encounters between Australia and England have been
won by England (L2), one of those two defeats inflicted upon England did come last
time out however; a 64-run victory for Australia during the ICC Men’s Cricket World
Cup 2019 group stage at Lord’s.
• Australia are currently enjoying a four-match winning streak over England in ICC
Men’s Cricket World Cup matches; England’s last such victory came in the 1992
tournament in Sydney.
• Australia have won the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup more often than any other side
(five times), they’ve lifted the trophy in four of the last five editions; England have
never managed to win this competition.
• England have beaten Australia in three successive men’s ODI matches at
Edgbaston; the Australian men’s side have failed to win in nine matches at the
Birmingham venue across all formats (L8, D1), last recording any sort of win there
back in 2001 (Test match).
• England have put together a four-game winning run in men’s ODIs at Edgbaston,
including victory over India during the group stages of this ICC Men’s Cricket World
Cup; they have never claimed victory five times in a row there though.
• Australia have been involved in seven previous ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup semi-
finals and have progressed to the final every time (W6 T1); England have won three
of their last four at this stage of the competition, however this is the first time they
have reached this point since 1992.
• Mitchell Starc (Australia) needs one more wicket to set a record for the most wickets
taken at a single edition of the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup; he’s currently level with
Glenn McGrath’s tally of 26 in 2007.
• Jason Behrendorff took his only five-wicket haul in ODI cricket when Australia faced
England during the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2019 group stage; his 5/44 in that
match went down as the fourth-best ODI figures at Lord’s against England.
• England duo Jofra Archer and Mark Wood have picked up more wickets from short
balls at ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2019 than anyone else; taking 10 and six
respectively.
• Australia’s Steve Smith has only managed to record one half-century in his last 10 ODI
innings versus England, that 50 did come at Edgbaston however (56 in 2017); he’s
been dismissed five times by Adil Rashid in this format, two more instances than any
other bowler has managed.
 
Will we see a rematch of the 2015 World Cup final?

There has never been a World Cup final rematch in the history of the tournament as consecutive World Cups have always had one or two different teams playing in it from the previous edition. Will that change when Australia and New Zealand face each other again in the World Cup final on Sunday?
 
Would you rate this the best English World Cup team ever? More balanced than 1979 ,1987 and 1992?
 
Would you rate this the best English World Cup team ever? More balanced than 1979 ,1987 and 1992?

Don’t really follow English cricket but ever since I started watching cricket, best team on paper after 1999 WC. They had players like Vaughan, Mark Ealham, Nasser Hussein who averages lower than Mushfiq. This England team is a different beast. But only thing is some of the players aren’t even English.
 
Arguably in terms of pure ability the most evenly matched teams ever in a World cup semi-final with The 1999 semi final teams of Australia and South Africa.Similar to 1975 England-Australia semi final or 1987 but more evenly poised.
 
Australia have never lost a ODI final.

England have won their last ten games at Edgbaston, their fortress.
 
Would you rate this the best English World Cup team ever? More balanced than 1979 ,1987 and 1992?

I don’t know what ‘balanced’ means in this context.

in 1979 England had Willis and Botham but were too slow with Boycott and Brearley.

In 1987 Botham and Gower took the tournament off. Annoying because their replacements were Athey and Capel who failed in the Final.

In 1992 they had a very good batting side but Wood and Archer would have got into the workmanlike bowling attack.

So yes, this is their best ever ODI side.
 
Australia have never lost a ODI final.

England have won their last ten games at Edgbaston, their fortress.

Never lost a semi final actually

Australia have lost two finals 79 and 96
 
Just leaving my hotel.

Literally EVERY person going to the cricket is not just an India fan, but an Indian.

Further evidence of the death of white ball cricket among white English people under the age of 50.

(I’m going to upload an article later about how the ground experience in England has gone backwards over the last 40 years as the administrators write off ordinary ticket revenue and conclude that only TV and hospitality money matters.)
 
Big big game for the home nation different context but just like the Germany v Italy in 2006 Gelsenkirchen Eng need to handle pressure toss will be important id say bat first
 
Just leaving my hotel.

Literally EVERY person going to the cricket is not just an India fan, but an Indian.

Further evidence of the death of white ball cricket among white English people under the age of 50.

(I’m going to upload an article later about how the ground experience in England has gone backwards over the last 40 years as the administrators write off ordinary ticket revenue and conclude that only TV and hospitality money matters.)

Looking forward to this.

If 800 words and written by you, pm to mods and we will add to our articles
 
Just leaving my hotel.

Literally EVERY person going to the cricket is not just an India fan, but an Indian.

Further evidence of the death of white ball cricket among white English people under the age of 50.

(I’m going to upload an article later about how the ground experience in England has gone backwards over the last 40 years as the administrators write off ordinary ticket revenue and conclude that only TV and hospitality money matters.)

Yes thats true but thats not the main reason behind this. Actually many indian fans bought ticket early because they thought india will play this match as they were 2nd in league table until the very last match.

Yes, Cricket is not as popular but its semi final and Emgland playing in it. So enthusiasm is not as low. But yeah not satisfactory and we all know cricket popularity is on decline in UK due to lack of interest. On top of it Cricket is not free to TV in England and thats sad!
 
Australia batting first.

Let’s see if England can get rid of their ‘chokers’ tag.
 
Australia batting first.

Let’s see if England can get rid of their ‘chokers’ tag.

When have England choked? This is their first semi since 1992! Did they even have the chance to choke?
 
I would like to See Carey coming at no.5 both Stionis and Maxi have been poor throughout where as
carey has grown into a champion.

Pitch looks good for batting but still First blood to Aussies, Get on the two openers early and Aussies
can be put into tremendous pressure

Rooting for England today
 
England made a mistake by going in with Adil Rashid, he has been pretty poor this tournament. Should have picked another pacer
 
England made a mistake by going in with Adil Rashid, he has been pretty poor this tournament. Should have picked another pacer

Actually think they should have gone with an extra spinner as pitch pretty flat there and on paper, Aussies not that great playing spin than pace...
 
The World Cup Final 2019- Australia V NZ- Make Your Predictions

This SF today was a 50/50 if England batted 1st, but as the Aussies are batting 1st, its almost certain( not quite a 100%) that Aus will be in the final. This will be a repeat of the 2015 final, who do you fancy. Aus dont seem to care for WC`s and hence they seem to be under no pressure and perform better. One Aussie journalist remarked that the less they care, the better the team are. Aussies to win their 6th World Cup.
 
Warner and finch are boring batsmen in the first 10 overs. I'm only looking forward to smith's partnership with handscomb.
 
Review wasted

Looks like they finally watched Finch getting out to Bhuvi countless times. They were too short to Finch in the last game
 
At work, how are the conditions? Read on cricinfo the pitch looks flay. Overhead?
 
Why has icc changed it, it more or less 62m from both sides but against ind it was 59m and 78m on both sides on this ground.
 
Game is finished. Easy win for England now. Warner was the man they wanted.
 
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