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England [224/2] beat Australia [223] by 8 wickets to reach the final of the 2019 World Cup

Well England's bowling isn't bad anymore with the inclusion of Archer, Woakes and Plunkett are decent as well. I can see them dominating a few more years as well.

Plunkett is old and will retire soon. Woakes is okay. Archer is the real deal. Apart from them they have nothing. Wood has pace but he is mediocre. The willys and the currans are all mediocre.

England should still dominate though. Their batting is monstrous. England winning the world cup will be good for the game's popularity too.
 
Australia need a Wasim Akramesque performance from someone to defend this total now...


(Which I don’t think will happen now)
 
They get the job done. Archer is a star but Woakes is good with the new ball, Wood is a solid enforcer and Rashid-Moeen isn’t the worst spin pair around.
Congrats to you Mr [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]
England deserve this world cup and they will win it.

I will support Eng in final.
 
Irony is that Pakistan Won against both the Finalists :P.

And moreover they had a chance to be in Semis at the cost of one of the finalists only...

How I wish that Pakistan should have qualified....May be then, India would have been in Finals by now... :/
 
All of them hadn’t God-gifted talent.

They have worked hard to be where they are at the moment.

So why can’t we groom the talent which we have into our ‘Stokes’, ‘Buttler’ and ‘Roy’?

Yes they had God gifted talent too to be honest. You cant teach someone the kind of shots that Butler and Roy play for instance. They are natural hitters of the cricket ball.

Yes Pakistan can make the most of their available talent and hone it. However, i cant see any players in domestic cricket who can match these englishmen.
 
Congrats to you Mr [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]
England deserve this world cup and they will win it.

I will support Eng in final.

I have no emotional connection with the team. I only support them after Pakistan because half of my family are British Pakistani.
 
They get the job done. Archer is a star but Woakes is good with the new ball, Wood is a solid enforcer and Rashid-Moeen isn’t the worst spin pair around.

Its the worst attack among top 4 and arguably top 5 teams. Mediocre with only 1 world class bowler in Archer.
 
13 more needed.

England should win this with at least 16 overs to spare. Complete dominance.
 
Had England batted first I’m sure they would have piled up 400+.
 
Well done and well deserved for England.

They have outclassed Australia and perhaps even won Round 1 of the Ashes.
 
Proper phainta this. Im happy we have a new world cup winner finally. Difficult to see how nzl can beat a rejuvenated england but then they were proper underdogs against us too.

Wish there was a 3rd place playoff Match btw.
 
off day for the aussies?
Bowling is bad. Root is playing tennis shots.

It seems Eng vs Nzl final. IN that case Pakistan beat both finalists heheheheheheheheheh
 
I am so glad Australia lost, I was getting sick of their WC wins. Thanks England, please win the trophy!
 
Congratulations [MENTION=7774]Robert[/MENTION] [MENTION=1842]James[/MENTION] [MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]

Well done.
 
off day for the aussies?
Bowling is bad. Root is playing tennis shots.

It seems Eng vs Nzl final. IN that case Pakistan beat both finalists heheheheheheheheheh

You win a cup when you are good on that particular day. Previous performance does not matter in knock outs
 
Cricket's coming home!!!!!!!!! So pumped, I got goosebumps!
 
It’s Student vs. Master on Sunday.

B-Mac’s ultra-aggressive approach rubbed off on England after the WC and showed them that it was okay to discard their conservative approach.

The cycle will come full circle.
 
Yesssssssssssssss!!!!!!

Total hammering for those Aussies.

This feels so good.
 
Irony is that Pakistan Won against both the Finalists :P.

And moreover they had a chance to be in Semis at the cost of one of the finalists only...

How I wish that Pakistan should have qualified....May be then, India would have been in Finals by now... :/

And India lost to both the finalists ;-)
 
England have shown immense resilience. Cannot believe what they have done here. Beat India comfortably in a must-win game, thrashed New Zealand in a must-win game and now absolutely decimated Australia in the semi-final.

Just reading that gives you goosebumps.
 
Australians were just schooled today. Their limited bowling attack finally caught up with them. England's bowlers bowled a lot of cutters, slower deliveries whereas Starc and Cummins just kept providing mindless pace to the batsmen
 
Congratulations Real England fans [MENTION=1842]James[/MENTION] [MENTION=7774]Robert[/MENTION]
 
A new nation will lift the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup after England joined New Zealand in the final with an emphatic eight-wicket victory over Australia at Edgbaston.

Australia had won the toss and chosen to bat, but a blistering opening spell from Chris Woakes (3/20) and Jofra Archer (2/32), removing both openers in the first three overs, set the tone for a fine bowling effort.

Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow then added 124 for the first wicket, their third successive century partnership in this tournament.

While Bairstow fell for 34, Roy went on to make 85 before Joe Root (49 not out) and Eoin Morgan (45 not out) did the rest, as England secured their place at Lord’s on Sunday.

Steve Smith had earlier made a defiant 85, before he was removed by a stunning piece of fielding from Jos Buttler, and England then cantered to the target of 224 in 32.1 overs, handing Australia a first defeat in their eighth World Cup semi-final.

Two decades after Australia had been involved in the closest semi-final of all at this ground, when a tie against South Africa had secured their passage to the final, there was to be no such drama this time around.

As a result, it will be either England or New Zealand who will become the sixth side to lift the World Cup, joining the West Indies, India, Australia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka in cricket’s pantheon.

It will be England’s fourth final, and first since 1992, while the Black Caps have reached their second in succession.

The first ball of the game had given little indication of what was to follow, David Warner driving confidently through the covers off Woakes.

However, Archer’s first delivery thundered into the pads of Aaron Finch, the Australian skipper removed for a duck, having scored centuries in each of his previous two World Cup clashes with England.

Warner continued to attack, lifting Woakes back over his head for four, but the next ball the bowler got his revenge with one that got big on the opener and was edged through to Bairstow at first slip.

Peter Handscomb, making his first appearance of the tournament after replacing the injured Shaun Marsh, followed for four, clean bowled by Woakes to leave Australia 14/3.

It was then that Smith and Alex Carey began to rebuild, adding 103 for the fourth wicket. However, when the keeper fell for 46, picking out deep midwicket off Adil Rashid, Australia’s hopes were dented further.

Marcus Stoinis went for a duck four balls later, with Archer returning to remove Glenn Maxwell for 22 just as he looked set to tee off.

Smith’s second recovery job came with Mitchell Starc, the pair adding 51 for the eighth wicket before Buttler’s stunning intervention.

Starc nicked behind the next ball and Mark Wood, in his 50th ODI, wrapped up the innings to leave England chasing a very manageable 224 to reach the final.

England could have played conservatively with a small target, but this team knows only one way and they attacked from the off.

Bairstow hammered a boundary in the first over, Roy flicked Starc for six off his toes and then smashed Nathan Lyon’s first delivery back over his head and over the rope as Australia had no answer.

The first real worry came with 71 on the board, Bairstow appearing to have injured his groin while running two, but after some treatment from the physio, he put the pads back on and continued in the same vein as before.

Smith had salvaged Australia’s innings, but his hopes of turning the match with the ball were emphatically ended by Roy, hitting him for three successive sixes including one monster over long on that landed in the top tier.

Starc finally ended the opening stand in his fourth spell, getting Bairstow leg before for his 27thwicket of the tournament – a record for a single edition – but it was little consolation.

Root then hit three fours from his first four deliveries, and while Roy fell two overs later, England’s Test skipper was joined by their one-day captain, Morgan, to see the team home.

Scores in brief:

England beat Australia by eight wickets, at Edgbaston, Birmingham

Australia 223 all out, in 49 overs (Steve Smith 85, Alex Carey 46; Chris Woakes 3/20, Adil Rashid 3/54, Jofra Archer 2/32)

England 226/2, in 32.1 overs (Jason Roy 85, Joe Root 49 not out, Eoin Morgan 45 not out; Pat Cummins 1/34, Mitchell Starc 1/70)

Player of the match: Chris Woakes (England)

Next match: England v New Zealand, Lord’s, London, 14 July
 
11 July - Birmingham - Australia Captain Aaron Finch post-match press conference

England - 226-2, Australia - 223

Q. Aaron, were you surprised by the way England started in the field?
AARON FINCH: No, not at all, they have done it quite a bit in this tournament. They've got bowlers that hit the seam and if there is anything in the wicket, they will certainly get it out of it. Chris Woakes, a world-class bowler, puts it in the right area time and time again. Archer is getting better and better as he's starting to play a bit more international cricket as well, so definitely wasn't a surprise.

Q. Aaron, we've seen twice in two days, once the top order goes, with a lot of teams, the middle order doesn't seem to be strong enough unless you are England. Has that been a concern that maybe you have overlooked because of the runs you and David were scoring at the top?
AARON FINCH: If it were not for our middle order today, we would have been in real trouble. We still managed to get 230-odd. I think the way that Steve and Alex formed that partnership and managed to really drag us back into the game after a tough start was really important. I think the way that they managed to soak up pressure and then slowly start to transfer a bit more pressure back on to England before we lost our way again. It was a bit of a frantic start, 3-fer in the powerplay and a good partnership and a couple of quick wickets again which always sets you back a little bit.

Yeah, I think a lot of teams have been in a similar boat. I think most of the time opening the batting has been the easiest place, so not to be today for myself and Dave and Pete at No. 4. It was tough conditions at the start. England bowled very well. We just needed to find a way through that period to really set a platform for the middle overs.

Q. Where would you say the match was won and lost today? Was it because of the way you started with the bat or would you say it was because how Jason and Jonny set the tone for England up top?
AARON FINCH: Definitely in the first ten overs of the game. We know they were going to come really aggressive at us with the bat, so we had to be aggressive with the ball, we had to take or create ten chances and take them as well, so it wasn't going to be a game, especially against England, a game that peters out into the 47th, 48th over. It was going to be ultra-aggressive and they got on top of us early with the bat.

But the damage was really done with the ball. That sets you back. That forced us to rebuild for such a long time and start to drag some momentum back and then, like I said, you lose a couple of quick wickets again, new batters starting, it is always tough against really good leg-spin and good quicks as well.

So, all in all, we were totally outplayed to be honest all throughout the day, so you look back at that and you can analyse each ten overs, but just outplayed.

Q. How disappointed are you because Australia have a good record in the semifinals. This time they were quite disappointing. How disappointed are you?
AARON FINCH: Very disappointed. We came here today expecting to win. We felt like our preparation leading in to the tournament and then the momentum we'd built-up through the tournament was really important and we came here feeling good, we trained well, we had enough break in between games and guys were fresh enough, so very disappointing.

Q. Aaron, from what you see of England at this World Cup, and obviously today, do you think they will win it now?
AARON FINCH: It will be a hell of a game. Two teams that -- New Zealand, we know they fight and scrap for every run. They are dynamic in the field. They are a team that are never out of the contest. England play a high-energy, high-risk game. Probably New Zealand, so I think it will be a great game.

Q. Glenn Maxwell was identified by you guys as someone that could win you games, he probably hasn't done that. What have you made of his tournament overall?
AARON FINCH: I thought he started off really well and got us into some really good positions with -- even the game against England, sorry India, where he started to build some real momentum. Again, probably a few starts here and there and probably not like he has done in the past gone on and got the really match-winning contribution where he takes games away from opposition so quick.

But with the ball, I know he didn't get any wickets but he was reasonably economical when he bowled and did that in some really tough places, so I know that he's disappointed. International cricket is very hard (smiling).

Q. There was a bit of talk during the week about whether Glenn would play today. Can you tell us was that close to not happening? And how many different options did you guys run through as far as your 11 goes getting closer to the match?
AARON FINCH: You weigh up every possible 11, whatever you think's the strongest 11 to win the game, matching up to England, also what is in your best interests in terms of your strengths and stuff like that, so you put dozens of teams up, dozens of combinations and that happens every game, you throw enough stuff in the air, but we were really confident to back Maxxy in to the game.

Like I said yesterday, he's such a dynamic player, that and a three -- what's it called? Three -- brings three skill-sets to the table that are really hard to ignore at times as a player and we know, we have seen how damaging and how much of a match-winner he can be in the past and we saw in the last World Cup the impact that he had in big games.

So it just wasn't to be today and it's not just that, our senior guys, myself, Davey, we didn't get going, Starcy didn't get going, Pat Cummins, guys that you expect to stand up in big games, we were just outplayed.

Q. Aaron, Jason Roy's been tipped for a possible top-order place in the Ashes series coming up. As an Australian, would you be glad not to see him play in that series given how he performed today?
AARON FINCH: He definitely goes hard having played with him for a few years now for Surrey. He's a player that when he's on he can be so damaging to an opposition and in such quick time as well. So not sure what the wickets are going to be like in the Ashes series. I think the first Test is here, is that right? So it will be interesting to see how that plays out.

But he's got some really good hundreds in county cricket, probably more so in the middle-order. That is just one of those things that if he gets going on his day, he can be brutal and he can score so quick in all forms of the game, he is a very dangerous threat no doubt.

Q. Just considering where you go as a team and getting to a semifinal, is that a reflection as a success or failure? And how much was Usman Khawaja missed today?
AARON FINCH: Usman was missed a lot, no doubt. He is a world-class player. He started to get some really good runs and really good momentum into this back half of the tournament so that was really stiff when he did his hamstring there.

In terms of where we were 12 months ago, obviously I think we have made a huge amount of progress. Really proud of everyone involved for how much hard work and how far we have come, but at the same time we came here today to win a semifinal and get ourselves into a position to win another World Cup.

So that was really disappointing how it ended, especially to put up probably one of our worst performances overall for the tournament, so that was really disappointing.

But really proud of where we have come from and the gains that a lot of players have made over the last 12 months in particular.

Q. Can I ask you about Alex Carey? How is he? What happened and how much bottle did it take for him to carry on?
AARON FINCH: He's very tough. I think the grille got pushed back into his, the ball got pushed back through the grille. He had seven or eight stitches in his jaw there and he was a bit sore on the other side, but, apparently, he looks all clear for any clinical tests for a fracture or anything like that, so he's very tough.

It would take a bit more than that to get him out of the game and he did a fantastic job today as well. He was a part of a really good partnership there with Steve to get us to a half competitive total.

Q. What did you make of the atmosphere here today? Did it have any sort of detrimental effect on you guys and is it something that maybe Australia have got to be a bit more mindful of in the rest of the summer?
AARON FINCH: No, I think you always expect that when you turn up here. The Hollies out there are always loud. It's a great place to play cricket. I know it sounds a bit stupid after we have lost and we don't have a great record here, but it's a great place to play.

The atmosphere -- they appreciate good cricket as well as obviously supporting England heavily. But they do appreciate good cricket. It is great fun playing here. It's -- no doubt throughout the Ashes series it will be loud as well wherever you go.

Q. Aaron, we saw England four years ago after they got knocked out of the World Cup strip everything back and spend four years building. Do you think that is now the template, would that be a strategy that you guys look at and say a clean slate and it will all be about 2023?
AARON FINCH: I think that after a World Cup you always start looking and you have one eye towards the next one. I think that as a management, senior players, I'm sure over the next -- not sure when our next one-dayer is to be fair -- over the next couple of months or so we will sit down and start talking about that and start planning how we think that we can best plan and prepare and improve over the next four years to get us to go, well two steps further.

Yeah, I think that every team will do that. You start looking at what you can improve most, areas that you can identify that you need some work to be done and that will happen no doubt -- that happens naturally with players when you are talking about the game and trying to find ways to improve.

But as a coaching staff, as a management, that will be really important as well that everyone gets on the same page and everyone pulls in the same direction which is what we have done. We have been really lucky. Everyone has bought into the way we have played and it is unfortunate we have come up short.

Q. Given the heavy defeat today and the first Test is here at Edgbaston, do England have a psychological edge going into that match?
AARON FINCH: No, I don't think so. I think with different players -- there's -- there will be a high turnover of players I would imagine. In terms of the squad, there will be 16 picked for the Ashes. So there will be maybe not a high, half players maybe turned over. So I don't think that the guys carry too much baggage when you are going between formats. If we rolled up and played a one-dayer tomorrow, there might be a few scars there, but in terms of the Test, I don't think so.
 
1 July - Birmingham - England Captain Eoin Morgan post-match press conference

England - 226-2, Australia - 223

Q. It's been a long journey, some ups and some downs, but you are through to the World Cup Final. How does that sound? How do you feel?
EOIN MORGAN: It sounds pretty cool and it feels pretty good. The performance in the last three games, we have got better and better as a group. We talked before the tournament that we would have to do that in order to get to a semifinal and final and be contenders.

So I think today was, I suppose, a step further in the performance and adding on the two that we've built on already, I think it was important that we did that.

Q. You said you wanted to play with smiles on your faces and embrace the moment, did you do that?
EOIN MORGAN: I think we did, absolutely. Everybody out there on the field and even in the changing room loved every ball that was bowled. There was no lack of commitment, application and we had a bit of a day out which, it's cool when it happens like that, particularly when the bowlers bowl like that, it is awesome.

Q. A year ago to the day, England were knocked out of the semifinal of the Football World Cup. Is it coming home?
EOIN MORGAN: (Laughter) I wouldn't get too carried away yet. It is obviously a very exciting time for everybody and ourselves included. I think giving ourselves the opportunity for Sunday's final is brilliant. We'll be giving it everything we can in order to try and win that game.

Q. Finally from me, Jason Roy, very disappointed with his dismissal. Is there any danger that he could be banned for the final?
EOIN MORGAN: I doubt it. I didn't see exactly what happened, I was on the toilet, ironically. So I've heard what happened, but I can't imagine he would be, no.

Q. It's unlikely that you would have had to endure any of this horror semifinal defeats that everybody talks about in England in the '90s and 2000s. Do you understand this whole apprehension and cynicism around England, about knockout games at all?
EOIN MORGAN: (Smiling) I think we're quite cynical people, who never quite give people credit when it's due. There's always a different side to it. We grow up around it. It is the way we are and we sometimes enjoy it too much.

I think us, as a team, we have learnt to enjoy ourselves, particularly days like this, even if they don't go well. If you had offered us the position to play in a final the day after we were knocked out of 2015 World Cup, I would have laughed at you.

Q. Four years of planning and preparation, you have had some great moments along the way. But do you feel as though you have saved the best for the game that was most important, that that was your most complete performance of the four years?
EOIN MORGAN: I think close to. I think particularly the bowling unit. When you perform like that, you continue to take wickets, along with a little bit of luck, but we were quite persistent in the lengths that we bowled. We stuck to our plans, our plans managed to work, even when Smith and Carey started to dominate and grow in the partnership they did, we found something, an opportunity.

We didn't drop a catch on Adil, which is great, that allowed him to build momentum and confidence and he bowled brilliantly.

Q. Is that the blueprint for how you'd like your team to embrace Sunday? You lost the toss, but came out and really flew out the blocks. It looked like you enjoyed yourself all day?
EOIN MORGAN: Yeah, absolutely. I think Sunday's not a day to shy away from, it's a day to look forward to, much like today. We have created the opportunity to play in a World Cup Final. It will be a matter of the same again trying to produce everything that we can performance-wise but enjoy the day.

Q. Did Jonny pick up an injury when he was batting and if so, what was it? And how bad is it?
EOIN MORGAN: Yeah, I'm not sure what it was but he seemed to move alright after it, so it is not very concerning I don't think. It might be a niggle, we don't know until he is scanned, but after it, he seemed to move well, so that's a good sign.

Q. Was that the best Adil's bowled in this tournament? And why do you think he hasn't quite had the wickets that we might have expected so far?
EOIN MORGAN: I thought he bowled well against Pakistan up to a period, probably the period where the catch was dropped. That gets you down a bit as a bowling unit. I don't think we have fielded well and supported him within the group and today I thought we did really well.

The pitch offered a little bit, but his variation I thought was brilliant.

Q. The final is going to be on free-to-air TV. The whole nation is going to be behind you at last it feels like. How exciting is that personally and as a team?
EOIN MORGAN: Very cool. Particularly given the 2005 Ashes for me was sort of the day cricket became cool. Throughout the whole summer, the game was on the front and back page of every newspaper going around, everyone was talking about and it that is really good for the game and it's the game I love so it's great news that it's on free-to-air.

Q. Adelaide 2015 and now Edgbaston 2019, could you talk about this turnaround, or the renaissance in English white-ball cricket in these four years, for you as a captain personally and as a team?
EOIN MORGAN: Yes, it's been a process for the last four years. In 2015 we were way off the mark, we struggled against the top teams, and the teams that sat below that, so there was quite a drastic change in the way we played and the way we looked at playing our 50-over cricket. That has worked out extremely well for us and given the support that we've had throughout, the ECB, the backroom staff, as players we have taken that I suppose as far as we can so far.

Q. Television cameras appear to show that in the England dressing room there was a large board with signatures and messages. Were they personalised? Talk us through those.
EOIN MORGAN: Yes. So I'm trying to think when it was, before the Pakistan series, myself and the head coach went into the ECB offices and did a live stream Q&A with an internal one with all the ECB staff, either watching online or in the room in one of the Lord's stands. It was an opportunity for us to launch our marketing campaign and to answer questions but also, you know, unite us a little bit. 50-over cricket has always taken a back-seat to t20 cricket and Test match cricket, so involving everybody, making sure they appreciate the work that they do behind-the-scenes is extremely important for us because -- particularly the social media stuff and all the online stuff, the guys love it, particularly the young guys.

So we launched the Express Yourself campaign that day and it went well. They gave us the big cardboard cut-out of Express Yourself. We signed it, absolutely everybody signed it, and basically said thank you and the messages and sent a picture and that will be going back to the ECB offices at the end of the tournament.

Q. A thank you from you and the team to the ECB?
EOIN MORGAN: Absolutely.

Q. Did you have a chance to see any of the New Zealand's win over India and what are you expecting from them on Sunday?
EOIN MORGAN: Yeah, I did. I watched most of it right up until we trained yesterday. A great game of cricket. I thought India were completely done and dusted after the early wickets that New Zealand took. They bowled extremely well and took their opportunities.

I think New Zealand throughout the whole tournament has been probably the hardest side to beat and the best side in the group stages. I think their performance in the semifinal was probably their best. They will be a difficult side to beat on Sunday, so we are looking forward to it.

Q. You talked about how good it is that the final is going to be on free-to-air television. Is there an awareness from you and the team that what you have done today and what you might do on Sunday is bigger for the game in this country than just you lifting the World Cup?
EOIN MORGAN: I don't think there will be an understanding of that until after the tournament and even then it will take some time. When guys go home, in various pockets during the tournament, they sort of get a glimpse of it, they have been recognised more than they would. I think that's probably going to step up quite a lot when guys go home at the end of the tournament.

Q. How important was it to stay calm after that loss to Australia earlier in the tournament to sort of keep the confidence there and I suppose, like, was there anything that you have picked up from that game specifically in terms of how to beat them, playing some bowlers or batsmen?
EOIN MORGAN: Not really. We know each other inside out as a team. I think highlighting the under-riding factor that we were carrying something around and it was from the previous game against Sri Lanka and to get rid of any baggage that we might have been carrying into that game.

I thought the Australia game at Lord's we under-performed, we weren't good enough. That can happen on any given day. That's performance-related. I think the way we played against Sri Lanka wasn't naturally performance-related, it was actually due to our application and attitude.

Q. Have the boys earned a beer tonight or do you have to put them on ice?
EOIN MORGAN: No, they have learnt a beer and a glass of wine definitely. Definitely.

Q. The way you guys thrashed Nathan Lyon and Mitchell Starc, does that give you special satisfaction considering they are top-class bowlers who have troubled your team in the past?
EOIN MORGAN: They are very strong side with a lot of top class bowlers. Obviously Starc has had a very good tournament and Nathan Lyon is an exceptional Test match bowler, that can have a good day any day. The way that we took advantage of conditions, we batted well on a very good batting wicket, that suited us, and we can have bad days where it doesn't come off, but we stuck to the way we play and that was satisfying.
 
Morgan tells his England players to embrace being in World Cup final

Eoin Morgan asked his England team to embrace the occasion of a World Cup semi-final and they did just that on their way to an eight-wicket victory over Australia at Edgbaston.

From the brink of elimination after defeat to the same Australians at Lord’s, England have now won three in a row to reach the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup final and a clash with New Zealand back at the Home of Cricket on Sunday.

And Morgan has urged his team to show the same enjoyment as they did in this emphatic victory over the defending champions.

He said: “I think we did (embrace it), absolutely. Everybody out there on the field and even in the changing room loved every ball that was bowled. There was no lack of commitment, application and we had a bit of a day out which, it's cool when it happens like that, particularly when the bowlers bowl like that, it is awesome.

“I think as a team we have learnt to enjoy ourselves, particularly days like this, even if they don't go well. If you had offered us the position to play in a final the day after we were knocked out of the 2015 World Cup, I would have laughed at you.

“I think Sunday's not a day to shy away from, it's a day to look forward to, much like this. We have created the opportunity to play in a World Cup final. It will be a matter of the same again trying to produce everything that we can performance-wise but enjoy the day.”

It has been a remarkable journey for Morgan and his side, knocked out before the quarter-finals four years ago, to No.1 in the world and in a first ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup final in 27 years.

They could not have hoped for a better start, Chris Woakes and Jofra Archer combining to remove Australia’s in-form openers as Aaron Finch’s side were reduced to 14/3 and were eventually bowled out for 223.

Morgan reckoned that it was one of, if not England’s most complete performance over the four years since the last World Cup, especially with the ball.

He added: “I think particularly the bowling unit. When you perform like that, you continue to take wickets, along with a little bit of luck, but we were quite persistent in the lengths that we bowled.

“We stuck to our plans, our plans managed to work, even when (Steve) Smith and (Alex) Carey started to dominate and grow in the partnership they did, we found something, an opportunity.

“We didn't drop a catch on Adil (Rashid), which is great, that allowed him to build momentum and confidence and he bowled brilliantly.”

On their way to the semi-finals, England saw off New Zealand by 119 runs in Durham, but Morgan believes the Black Caps have been the best team in the tournament so far and will pose a huge challenge in the final.

He added: “I think New Zealand throughout the whole tournament has been probably the hardest side to beat and the best side in the group stages.

“I think their performance in the semi-final was probably their best. They will be a difficult side to beat on Sunday, so we are looking forward to it.”
 
Proud Finch accepts Australia were outplayed by classy England

Australia captain Aaron Finch admitted his team were outclassed as England booked their final date with New Zealand at Lord’s.

Finch won the toss and decided to bat at Edgbaston - and that was arguably the moment of the day for the five-time world champions.

His opening partnerships with David Warner have laid the foundation to Australia’s progress to the semi-finals of the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup but this was a day to forget.

Between them they mustered just nine as the pace attack of man of the match Chris Woakes and Jofra Archer had them reeling at 14/3.

“Those first ten overs changed the game, the damage was done with the ball,” said Finch, who was rattled out for a duck by Archer's first delivery.

“You can try to analyse the game as much as you want but we were totally outplayed.

“Chris Woakes is a world-class bowler and Archer is just getting better and better the more international cricket he plays. It was tough conditions and they just bowled really well.

“I think we’ve made lots of progress as a team in the last 12 months and I’m proud of how far they’ve come. However, we came here to win and I’m just disappointed with how it ended, putting up probably our worst performance of the entire tournament in the semi-final.

“We came in with lots of confidence, we felt our preparation and momentum was really good.”

Finch paid credit to the fourth-wicket partnership of Steve Smith and Alex Carey for at least giving his bowlers a target to work with, as Australia managed to score 223 from 49 overs.

But he admitted it was hard to be competitive when England openers Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow started their chase in a blaze of boundaries.

“Steve and Alex dragged us back into the game but we knew they’d come out aggressive with the bat and they just got on top of us straight away,” he added. “When Jason is playing like that he can be so damaging to the opposition.”

Australia’s attentions will now turn to the forthcoming Ashes, with a match between their possibles and probables the next focus before the Test team is finalised, ahead of the series opener back here in Birmingham.

And Finch admits Sunday’s final - which will see a new team engraved on the trophy - is difficult to call, while also looking ahead to 2023.

“It’ll be a hell of a game between two teams that love to fight and scrap,” he added. “New Zealand are never out of the contention and England play a high-energy and high-risk game.

“After you finish a World Cup you’ve always got one eye on the next one. We’ll sit down and start planning and talking and thinking about how we can improve in the next four years to go two steps further.

“There are always areas to identify where you need some work done. We’ll get on the same page and pull in the same direction.”
 
Roy and Bairstow prove that respect and not friendship is the key to being considered one of the great England opening partnerships
Beating Australia at any time presses the collective pleasure centre of the English but to do so at cricket in a World Cup semi-final brings national rapture.

Beating Australia at any time presses the collective pleasure centre of the English but to do so at cricket in a World Cup semi-final brings national rapture.

For the game to be essentially over before England even lost a wicket, following Australia’s dismissal for 223, was down to the ongoing excellence of opening batsmen Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow.

Re-united three games ago, after injury had disrupted their partnership, they posted their fourth century opening stand of the tournament and their third in a row.

That is incredible batting which for Roy and Bairstow, or should that be Bairstow and Roy, places them in the pantheon of great England openers like Hobbs and Sutcliffe, Hutton and Washbrook and Cook and Strauss.

Their dynamism, power and consistency at the top of England’s one-day batting order have been the main reason England now find New Zealand standing between them and their first World Cup title when the final is played at Lord’s this Sunday.

Ironically, the opening pair that has outscored them in this tournament were Australia’s Aaron Finch and David Warner, their semi-final opponents.

But England’s opening bowlers, exploiting some early seam movement, ensured they were far from a match for Roy and Bairstow on the day, after Finch fell for a first ball duck and Warner a slightly lengthier nine.

Coaches will tell you that opening pairs ideally come as right and left-hand combinations to mess with the bowlers lines.

Roy and Bairstow are both right-handers but they mess with bowlers’ lengths instead - Roy being savage on anything wide of off-stump and Bairstow brutal with balls near leg-stump.

Their collective power, though, means they also scramble bowlers minds which enables them to exude a fear factor among opponents more commonly attributed to aggressive fast bowlers than batsmen.

There was certainly a tentativeness about the opening salvo by Australia’s bowlers, which failed to find the same seam movement as England’s had earlier in the day.

Mitchell Starc, the leading bowler in this World Cup by some distance with 27 victims, was given some harsh treatment.

Although not exclusively the doing of Roy and Bairstow, the 70 runs he conceded from nine overs were his second worst figures of the tournament.

The pair played some superb shots, Bairstow square driving his first ball from Jason Behrendorf for four, Roy flicking Starc off his toes for a six that sailed over long leg’s head. Both strokes were typical of their executors; Bairstow’s strong bottom hand providing crunching heft while Roy’s hands, so fast in the way that he breaks his wrists, that he'd just as easily be at home hitting top-spin passes at Wimbledon.

There was more. Roy’s demolition of Steve Smith, as Finch, Australia’s captain, gambled that his predecessor’s wrist-spin might conjure a wicket, was simply brutal. Three sixes in three successive balls meant the experiment was short-lived.

To have achieved so much greatness you’d assume Roy and Bairstow were close off the field as well as on it, but that is not the case.

One of the assumptions people tend to make about players in team sports is that they must all like each other otherwise the team project falls apart. Not true.

Respect is the most important thing and Bairstow and Roy clearly have that for each others talent, their deeds not being done through gritted teeth. But as for close mates, that is clearly for others.

Interestingly, their dismissals may have reflected this, at least partially. Bairstow was lbw to Starc to one whose only doubt was whether or not it pitched outside leg-stump after umpire Kumar Dharmasena gave him out.

Normally, someone in that situation would ask his partner where they thought a review was worth taking but while Bairstow glanced briefly in Roy’s direction, he did not wait for his answer before calling for Hawkeye to adjudicate, which it did to his detriment.

That seemingly impetuous act meant England had used their single review so when Roy was given out by Dharmasena 14 balls later, for 85, there was no review left to reprieve him.

On Sunday, he and Bairstow get another chance to put a bowling attack to put to the sword, that of New Zealand, once more. Do that and England will have their best chance yet of winning a World Cup.
 
Australia captain Aaron Finch admitted his team were outclassed as England booked their final date with New Zealand at Lord’s.

Finch won the toss and decided to bat at Edgbaston - and that was arguably the moment of the day for the five-time world champions.

His opening partnerships with David Warner have laid the foundation to Australia’s progress to the semi-finals of the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup but this was a day to forget.

Between them they mustered just nine as the pace attack of man of the match Chris Woakes and Jofra Archer had them reeling at 14/3.

“Those first ten overs changed the game, the damage was done with the ball,” said Finch, who was rattled out for a duck by Archer's first delivery.

“You can try to analyse the game as much as you want but we were totally outplayed.

“Chris Woakes is a world-class bowler and Archer is just getting better and better the more international cricket he plays. It was tough conditions and they just bowled really well.

“I think we’ve made lots of progress as a team in the last 12 months and I’m proud of how far they’ve come. However, we came here to win and I’m just disappointed with how it ended, putting up probably our worst performance of the entire tournament in the semi-final.

“We came in with lots of confidence, we felt our preparation and momentum was really good.”

Finch paid credit to the fourth-wicket partnership of Steve Smith and Alex Carey for at least giving his bowlers a target to work with, as Australia managed to score 223 from 49 overs.

But he admitted it was hard to be competitive when England openers Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow started their chase in a blaze of boundaries.

“Steve and Alex dragged us back into the game but we knew they’d come out aggressive with the bat and they just got on top of us straight away,” he added. “When Jason is playing like that he can be so damaging to the opposition.”

Australia’s attentions will now turn to the forthcoming Ashes, with a match between their possibles and probables the next focus before the Test team is finalised, ahead of the series opener back here in Birmingham.

And Finch admits Sunday’s final - which will see a new team engraved on the trophy - is difficult to call, while also looking ahead to 2023.

“It’ll be a hell of a game between two teams that love to fight and scrap,” he added. “New Zealand are never out of the contention and England play a high-energy and high-risk game.

“After you finish a World Cup you’ve always got one eye on the next one. We’ll sit down and start planning and talking and thinking about how we can improve in the next four years to go two steps further.

“There are always areas to identify where you need some work done. We’ll get on the same page and pull in the same direction.”
 
Alex Carey has the stitches to show he has bled in Australia’s cause.

Carey only made his ODI debut last January but his performances behind the stumps - and with the bat - have been a big positive of his team’s run to the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2019 semi-finals.

He made a career best 85 against South Africa, 71 against New Zealand and shared a vital fourth wicket partnership with Steve Smith at Edgbaston.

After a horror start, their 103-run stand meant Aaron Finch’s side were at least able to set England a target, albeit one they knocked off with just under 18 overs to spare, thanks to Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow’s blitz of boundaries.

England’s bowlers were certainly firing and Carey’s helmet was removed by a short-pitched delivery from Jofra Archer, the wicketkeeper showing lightning reaction to grab it before it fell on his stumps.

“That’s the best catch I’ve taken all World Cup,” he joked, after he was finally dismissed for 46, meaning he averaged an impressive 62.5 for the tournament.

“Jofra’s got a pretty good bumper and a few stitches is nothing to worry about.

“I didn’t really want to come in with three down that quick but it was good to grab the opportunity, Steve and I just tried to absorb the pressure and get something on the board.

“We wanted to bat first but credit to their quicks who really learned from playing us at Lord’s and it just wasn’t our day with the bat.

“We thought we’d get back in it with early wickets but Jason and Jonny soon got going and took any momentum away from us.

“If we went back 12 months not many people would have given us a chance to make the semi-finals and we’ve played some cricket to be proud of. There’s still disappointment to get here and not make the final.”

Meanwhile, Pat Cummins paid tribute to fellow bowler Mitchell Starc, who is likely to top the bowling charts with his 27 wickets securing a tournament record.

However, he admitted the Aussie pace attack were always struggling considering they were protecting a 223 total.

“It was really hard to defend a target like that, when we didn't get an early wicket it meant they were able to play with lots of freedom,” he said. “We just got beaten by a better team on the day.

“We’ve managed to win games without playing the perfect game the whole way through. Every time we finished a game we spoke about areas we could improve on but against England we just didn’t play our best."

Despite a demanding few weeks of cricket, the Australia vice-captain insists his body is holding up ahead of the Ashes summer, having taken more wickets than anyone else the last time the two rivals clashed with the red ball in 2017/18.

“Starting on the campaign you get nervous about how much cricket is ahead,” he added.

“There were a couple of busy periods, you play four games in ten days but once we got through that it was one every five or six days which you can get through ok so I’m feeling good."
 
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