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ICC CT 2017, Group A | England [240/4] beat Australia [277/9] by 40 runs [DLS method]

Fire Bird

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Group A: England v Australia

Date: Saturday, June 10 2017

Venue: Edgbaston, Birmingham

HEAD-TO-HEAD

136 Matches; Australia 80; England 51; Tie 2; No result 3


THE FORM

The oldest rivalry in cricket is set to resume in a game of contrasting importance for the sides involved.

Nothing less than a win will do for Australia, for it has been pushed to a corner by the weather gods in England. Both its games were spoiled by rain, leaving Australia with just two points. It was particularly unlucky in the game against Bangladesh, when rain ruined a one-sided affair with Australia just inches from victory. Should Australia lose, then Bangladesh will go through as the second-ranked team in the group after their stunning win over New Zealand in Cardiff on Friday.

On the other hand, England can lose this game and nothing will change for it. It has not only qualified for the semi-finals, but also sealed the top spot with two victories from as many games. With rain ruining other games in the group, no other team can get close enough.

In the little cricket that Australia has managed in the tournament, it has put up contrasting performances. It was ordinary against New Zealand, reduced to 51 for 3 chasing 291, but unleashed its A game on Bangladesh. The bowlers, who came under fire from Steven Smith after the New Zealand game, put up a vastly improved show.

But Australia’s big concern will be the lack of game time for the batsmen. It has batted only 25 overs in the two games combined, and no one after No. 4 has batted at all yet. Compare that to England, which has scored in excess of 300 in both its games, one batting first and the other while chasing. All its batsmen – barring Jason Roy – are in form, like they have been over the last two years.

THE CONDITIONS

Pakistan kept South Africa to 219 in the most recent match at Edgbaston, but the pitch for Saturday’s game is a fresh one. It could mean the venue is likely to return to being a batsman’s paradise. And here’s some good news for Australia – the forecast is promising and we should get a full game in.

THE MATCH-UP

Joe Root v Mitchell Starc

Starc seemed to take Steven Smith’s remarks on the bowlers’ show in the game against New Zealand to heart. The left-arm pacer joked that he would bowl bouncers to his captain in the nets, but if he was angry within, he took it out on Bangladesh, picking up four wickets to bowl it out for just 182. Starc will once again be key against a strong English batting line-up. The England batting order seems endless but the man holding it together is Joe Root, who has scores of 133 not out and 64 in the tournament. If Starc can get him, Australia can apply some good pressure.


THE WILDCARDS

Australia – Aaron Finch: Finch has scored only two half-centuries in his last 12 ODIs and has been dismissed for 8 and 19 in the two games this tournament. But if there’s one team he loves batting against, it’s England. Three of his seven ODI centuries have come against it, and he averages 46.35 against it as opposed to his career number of 34.30. He should once again fancy his chances against his favourite opposition at a high-scoring venue.

England – Jason Roy: Not a single press conference with Eoin Morgan has passed without a query on Roy’s form. Not without reason, for the opener has crossed 20 only once in his last ten innings. England continues to back him, though, and if he repays the faith, Australia could be in the firing line.

WATCH OUT FOR…

Ben Stokes

Not too long ago, Stokes played a massive part in Smith’s side – Rising Pune Supergiant – reaching the final of the Indian Premier League. His all-round show left Smith in awe, and the Australian captain will be well aware of the dangers associated with a Stokes special. There’s no doubt that Smith knows what Stokes is about – does he know how to stop him?


TEAMS

Australia: Steven Smith (capt), David Warner, Pat Cummins, Aaron Finch, John Hastings, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Moises Henriques, Chris Lynn, Glenn Maxwell, James Pattinson, Mitchell Starc, Marcus Stoinis, Matthew Wade (wk), Adam Zampa.

England: Eoin Morgan (capt), Moeen Ali, Jonny Bairstow, Jake Ball, Sam Billings, Jos Buttler (wk), Steven Finn, Alex Hales, Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Jason Roy, Ben Stokes, David Willey, Mark Wood.
 
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Bangladesh fans will be rooting for England as if it is their own team
 
Looks clear as per weather.com until later in evening by which game should be over - cloudy though
 
Australia should win this for the sake of this tournament,with Aussies in the semis we will have a cracker for sure whether it will be or Aus vs S.A or Aus vs Ind.Nothing against Bangladesh but Aussies should win this or else they will feel very unlucky to miss out.
 
England will do the English thing and take their feet off the gas. Cannot be seen to be trying too hard after all.....
 
Aussies deserve a spot in the semis. They had that BANG game in the bag.
 
This should be a good game. In fact, 3 interesting games up ahead and 2 of them virtual QFs. Aus vs Eng, Ind vs SA, and Pak vs SL. I hope Aus qualifies will make things interesting. I like Ban as well but Aus deserve a spot in the SF because they dominated the Ban game.
 
England will do the English thing and take their feet off the gas. Cannot be seen to be trying too hard after all.....

Honestly doubt it today from this team, the chance to knockout the Aussies in the group stages is incentive enough as it is.
 
England will do the English thing and take their feet off the gas. Cannot be seen to be trying too hard after all.....

No bro. This English side are ruthless (as a Pakistani fan).

Your openers don't mess around, Root hits it hard and your lower order can hustle 150 run with 120SR in very few overs.

Your bowlers sledge and likes of Stoke won't make it any easier for Aussies.

The only "soft" player in this team can be considered Moeen Ali, but even he doesn't hang around and smashes it hard. Also got a knack of picking up important wickets.
 
England will do the English thing and take their feet off the gas. Cannot be seen to be trying too hard after all.....

They have a history of lowering their guard when not much is at stake, but they will be very keen to dump Australia out who are ruthless once it gets to the knockouts. They have a lot to play for.
 
Same can be said about the One free point that Australia got, even NZ had that game in their bag.

Same would have been told had the match been called off when Lanka needed 320 odd against us.Lanka might lose 49 times out of 50 times against India but that 1 win can not be ruled away. BD might have won against AUS who knows
 
Clash of the tournament for me this one. Hope it lives up to the expectations.
 
So did NZ. They had that AUSSIE game in the bag too.

Same can be said about the One free point that Australia got, even NZ had that game in their bag.

53/3 while chasing 235 was hardly in the bag with Smith, Maxwell, Head, and Wade still available to bat.

Aussies were stomping over Bangladesh in their match. Needed a little over 100 runs with 9 wickets in the bag.
 
Not a big fan or follower of England team but I'm rooting for them in this one due to a couple of reasons, 1) Don't like Aussies one bit and would love to see them getting knocked out and on their flight back home 2) BD's valiant and inspiring run-chase last night and keeping their hopes alive in the tournament, don't want to see their monumental efforts go to waste because of an England loss.
So hopefully Englishmen won't choke to their arch-rivals for once in their own den and deliver a commendable performance to knock Aussie motormouths out of CT.
 
ICC CT 2017, Group A | England v Australia | 10th June, 2017 | Birmingham | Match Thread

I said yesterday at home that the team batting second will win the match, and I stick by my prediction.

We´ve had three great consecutive days in the tournament which´ve made it well and alive - although much wasn´t expected from those matches. However, my fear is that big matches have a tendency to disappoint and lest that happens today, or even the next two days.
 
Good, Poms are bowling. Normally, in Ashes I support Poms, more from the soft corner to the weaker team than anything else, but today I do expect AUS to come hard. They have won 5 world cups for a reason - lets see if this team has the steel in them like their predecessors.
 
Poms have chosen their possible next XI. Aussies are unchanged I believe.
 
How does Morgan being an Irish feels while lip syncing English Anthem? And more importantly how will his countrymen react to his performance?
 
Dissapointed not to see Pattinson been given a run on the tournament thus far.
 
From a Pakistani perspective who should we essentially root for ??? At the moment I am backing the Aussies to win this one !! :ma
 
Dissapointed not to see Pattinson been given a run on the tournament thus far.

China made - might not last full 10 overs. But, instead of those "all-rounders, I would have played 4 pacers + Zampa. Patinson, Starc, Zampa & Cummins are good enough bat to cover one less such "all-rounder".
 
From a Pakistani perspective who should we essentially root for ??? At the moment I am backing the Aussies to win this one !! :ma

We should root for England, as then we can have a chance to face Bangladesh in the Semifinals rather than Australia or England.
 
China made - might not last full 10 overs. But, instead of those "all-rounders, I would have played 4 pacers + Zampa. Patinson, Starc, Zampa & Cummins are good enough bat to cover one less such "all-rounder".

So, you want to drop the best Australian bowler in this tournament.
 
It's really difficult to contain any of these 2 teams with bat - if they bat full 50 overs, scores will be around 350. Only way is to play almost like Test match & knock wickets at the cost of RR. Don't think,asking of around 8 for last 25 overs is an issue for them, unless wickets are down. Zampa will be key today - 3/72 can win for Aussies.

Whoever faces Poms/Aussies, must plan to chase.
 
Josh Hazlewood.

I see, reading isn't your strength :( - read again :)

"instead of those "all-rounders, I would have played 4 pacers + Zampa. Patinson, Starc, Zampa & Cummins are good enough bat to cover one less such "all-rounder""
 
Can't recall when last Warner surviving opening spell, unless it's a marble smooth road ............
 
Ok, I misunderstood. You want all 4 pacers and Zampa to play.

The more condition favors batting, the more teams need to reinforce bowling. In last 10-12 years, AUS probably has suffered about 7 or 8 of the highest 10 successful chases.
 
Can't recall when last Warner surviving opening spell, unless it's a marble smooth road ............
Most overrated player to grace the planet. Can't bat to save his life when the pitch offers something.
 
BD chances of qualifying are diminishing with every over.. England need a couple of wickets else Australia are set to score 350+..
 
BD chances of qualifying are diminishing with every over.. England need a couple of wickets else Australia are set to score 350+..

It's a 333 per wicket at least; but yes, chasing 350 doesn't happen every day.
 
It's a 333 per wicket at least; but yes, chasing 350 doesn't happen every day.


It's always difficult to chase 350+ and Australian bowlers historically thrive under pressure and in a must win game as today I don't think they will let England chase 350+..

Having said that England will be under no pressure whatsoever and play freely without any fear and might end up chasing 350+.. It would be a mouth watering chase whatever the result would be.
 
It's always difficult to chase 350+ and Australian bowlers historically thrive under pressure and in a must win game as today I don't think they will let England chase 350+..

Having said that England will be under no pressure whatsoever and play freely without any fear and might end up chasing 350+.. It would be a mouth watering chase whatever the result would be.

Normally, I take that wherever Finch scores big - that wicket has ZERO spin & the wicket is a belter & it' possible to chase almost anything. This has been AUS's game oblate - preparing roads & win by the depth of batting, because they are the only team whose 1st choice bowlers are handy with bat, makes it almost bottom less batting resources - backed by outstanding fielding. But, this English side is a replica of that strategy & probably better.

AUS has lost probably 6 or 7 matches in last 4/5 years defending around 333 or more - today might be next one.
 
Is this really a good start by Aussies? Unless Smith goes on to make 150, don't see Aussies building momentum once Ali/Rashid starts to take pace off. I was fearing Aussies racing to like 135/1 in 20 overs.
 
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