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Post by Admin on Jul 7, 2021 14:05:28 GMT
Usual thing; county cricket is just a convenience for the ECB Still beats me why elite sportsmen are not getting the jab
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Post by lancsdes on Jul 7, 2021 18:47:29 GMT
Usual thing; county cricket is just a convenience for the ECB” Still beats me why elite sportsmen are not getting the jab’ Do we know they definitely are not getting the jab Admin? Friend of mine who is double jabbed got it last weekend and Andrew Marr had to cry off his program a couple of weeks ago as he got it unpleasantly after double jab.
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Post by Admin on Jul 7, 2021 19:57:34 GMT
Still beats me why elite sportsmen are not getting the jab’ Do we know they definitely are not getting the jab Admin? Friend of mine who is double jabbed got it last weekend and Andrew Marr had to cry off his program a couple of weeks ago as he got it unpleasantly after double jab. No idea Des, however ECB now sweating over Indian series and the Blundred
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Post by chris on Jul 8, 2021 11:56:13 GMT
Still beats me why elite sportsmen are not getting the jab’ Do we know they definitely are not getting the jab Admin? Friend of mine who is double jabbed got it last weekend and Andrew Marr had to cry off his program a couple of weeks ago as he got it unpleasantly after double jab. I think I read somewhere that all that England cricket squad who are now self isolating had received their first vaccination.
Many of our Olympic team are refusing it as they are worried about side effects having an effect on their fitness / performance.
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Post by Admin on Jul 8, 2021 12:38:05 GMT
Tokyo now on high level risk as well
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Post by Admin on Jul 8, 2021 14:17:04 GMT
We appear to be taking all the wickets
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Post by chris on Jul 8, 2021 15:24:25 GMT
We appear to be taking all the wickets Has to be said:
Congratulations to John Simpson. First England match 5 days off his 33rd birthday. Long time coming, but well deserved.
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Post by Admin on Jul 8, 2021 17:21:49 GMT
Lancs players to the fore
First one-day international, Sophia Gardens, Cardiff Pakistan 141 (35.2 overs): Fakhar 47 (67), Mahmood 4-42 England 142-1 (21.5 overs): Malan 68* (69), Crawley 58* (50) England win by nine wickets; lead series 1-0 Scorecard A depleted and inexperienced England thrashed Pakistan by nine wickets in a stunning win in the first one-day international in Cardiff.
After a Covid outbreak forced the hosts to pick an entirely new squad on Tuesday, England picked five debutants and bowled Pakistan out for 141 in 35.2 overs at Sophia Gardens.
Saqib Mahmood dismissed opener Imam-ul-Haq with the first ball of the match and had Pakistan captain Babar Azam caught second slip for a duck with the third.
The near full-strength tourists never recovered, seamer Mahmood, playing his fifth ODI, taking 4-42, Craig Overton finishing with 2-23 in his second match and leg spinner Matt Parkinson 2-28 in his third.
In reply, debutant Phil Salt edged to slip off Shaheen Afridi for seven but Dawid Malan and Zak Crawley, another playing his first ODI, cruised to victory with 28.1 overs - more than half the innings - remaining.
Malan ended 68 not out from 69 balls and Crawley unbeaten on 58 from 50 - the pair putting on 120 from 107 balls.
England take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series, with the second ODI taking place at Lord's on Saturday.
Reaction to England's impressive win in Cardiff New-look England bowlers impress England's XI was their least experienced since 1985 with just 124 caps to their name - 98 of those to captain Ben Stokes.
Salt, Crawley, Middlesex wicketkeeper John Simpson, Somerset all-rounder Lewis Gregory and Durham fast bowler Brydon Carse were the debutants but it was Mahmood, a relatively experienced head in this team on his 11th international appearance, who impressed most.
The Lancashire fast bowler needed a wise review from Stokes to dismiss Imam lbw first ball, before Babar nicked off with a defensive prod two balls later and debutant Saud Shakeel was trapped lbw to leave Pakistan 26-4 off seven overs.
The 24-year-old bowled with pace throughout, hitting a good length, and his fourth wicket came from a back of the length ball that cramped left-hander Faheem Ashraf from round the wicket before taking an edge.
Overall it was a clinical bowling performance from England's new-look attack.
Gregory, who has previously played seven Twenty20s, shared the new ball and bowled a perfect away swinger to take a thin edge off Mohammed Rizwan's bat in the fourth over. Parkinson chipped in and Overton claimed the final two wickets with bouncers.
Embarrassing defeat for lacklustre Pakistan Pakistan, ranked sixth in the world, were expected to provide stiffer competition than Sri Lanka, who England swatted aside 3-0 in a T20 series and 2-0 in an ODI series in recent weeks.
Instead, Pakistan they were soundly beaten by England's second string - or even arguably third string when injuries are also taken into account.
The tourists have had no competitive warm-ups before this match and it showed. England bowled well but there were also a number of soft dismissals.
Fakhar Zaman and Sohaib Maqsood hinted at a recovery from 26-4 with a stand of 53 before a terrible mix-up which resulted in Maqsood being run out for 19.
Fakhar top scored with 47 but he tamely cut Parkinson to backward point when his side needed a bigger score.
Even Hasan Ali, Pakistan's number nine, was culpable, hitting a slog sweep to deep mid-wicket off Parkinson, having been dropped playing the same shot two overs earlier.
Welcome runs for Crawley England batter Zak Crawley raises his bat after passing 50 on his ODI debut against Pakistan Zak Crawley made an assured 58 not out on debut This was only his fourth ODI but Malan eased England to victory with the type of steady innings he has shown in T20s.
Perhaps more significant for England was Crawley reaching his half-century off just 44 balls.
The score-line meant there was little pressure but he played with freedom, hitting seven boundaries all around the wicket.
This unprecedented situation has given Crawley a chance to find form and confidence against the white ball, having had a miserable run in the recent New Zealand Test series, but with five Tests against India to come later this summer.
'A very clinical performance' - what they said England captain Ben Stokes: "It was a very clinical performance, when you get opposition four down early on then you're ahead in the game.
"When you get a new group together you're striving for that first real team performance. We didn't get put under pressure today, I have no doubt we will at some point. Not every game of cricket goes as smoothly as this."
Pakistan captain Babar Azam: "We were a bit loose with the bat, and that's why we didn't get a big total, but credit to the England bowlers.
"I don't think we misread the conditions - the momentum they got, and the fact we couldn't get a big partnership, is why we didn't get a big total."
Player of the match Saqib Mahmood: "It was a red-ball wicket early on, and early wickets meant we could set more attacking fields.
"Hopefully guys can take confidence from this."
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Post by Admin on Jul 10, 2021 19:29:41 GMT
England v Pakistan, second one-day international, Lord's England 247 (45.2 overs): Salt 60 (54), Vince 56 (52); Hassan 5-51 Pakistan 195 (41 overs): Shakeel 56 (77); Gregory 3-44, Mahmood 2-21 England win by 52 runs; lead series 2-0 with one game to play
England pulled off another impressive victory over Pakistan by 52 runs in the second one-day international at Lord's to clinch the three-match series with a game to spare.
After rain reduced the contest to 47 overs per side, England recovered from 160-7 to 247 all out in 45.2 overs - the hosts unchanged from an XI that included five debutants in the first ODI after a Covid-19 outbreak.
They then grabbed the initiative of an entertaining game by reducing Pakistan to 86-5 with a fine new-ball spell.
Fast bowler Saqib Mahmood stood out again, dismissing captain Babar Azam lbw for 19 and Mohammad Rizwan caught behind for five, while Lewis Gregory removed opener Imam-ul-Haq with his first ball - the seventh delivery of the innings.
Saud Shakeel kept the tourists in the game with 56 from 77 balls, while Hassan Ali took 22 runs from one Matt Parkinson over to energise the vocal Pakistan supporters.
But Shakeel holed out to deep square-leg off Parkinson and Gregory claimed the final wicket in the following over, Pakistan dismissed for 195 with 36 balls remaining.
All-rounder Gregory, who took 3-44, earlier scored 40 in a crucial eighth-wicket stand of 69 with Brydon Carse.
England had lost 5-42, seamer Hassan ripping through the middle order en route to figures of 5-51, after opener Phil Salt hit an aggressive 60 from 54 balls and James Vince scored 56 from 52.
It resulted in another impressive win for this inexperienced England side, who lead the series 2-0 going into the final match in Edgbaston on Tuesday.
This was also the first cricket match in England to be allowed a capacity crowd since the start of the pandemic, although the attendance was 22,704 - around 75% full.
This England success was almost as impressive as the nine-wicket win in Cardiff, given it was a more all-round performance and at times they were put under significant pressure.
Put into bat in damp conditions, Dawid Malan nicked to slip and Zak Crawley was brilliantly bowled by a Shaheen Afridi yorker, both for ducks, but Salt and Vince counter-attacked with a stand of 97 from 80 balls.
Salt and Vince were bowled by the spin of Shakeel and Shadab Khan respectively, and when captain Ben Stokes had his off stump removed by Hassan for 22, before John Simpson and Craig Overton quickly followed, England were in serious trouble.
Report But they responded again. Carse and Gregory had relatively quiet debuts in Cardiff but the pair showed maturity in rotating the strike while still scoring at a decent rate and punishing the bad balls.
Without their stand - the highest for the eighth wicket in an ODI at Lord's - England would likely have been well short.
Their influence continued in the second innings when Gregory took the first wicket - Imam caught by wicketkeeper Simpson - and the last - Haris Rauf taken down the leg side.
Carse ended Hassan's onslaught of 31 from 17 balls by having him caught at fine leg for his first international wicket and Simpson, another in his second ODI, caught the eye with a brilliant take off Parkinson.
He anticipated a sweep from Faheem Ashraf and caught the left-hander off the face of the bat down the leg side.
The fact the result was not completely certain even with Pakistan nine down showed England's total was not insurmountable.
Instead the loss of early wickets cost Pakistan again, as it did in Cardiff.
Babar, the number one ranked ODI batter in the world, showed a flash of his brilliance in hitting three boundaries in one over including a perfect on-drive, but he was removed by a good ball from Mahmood, which nipped in and would have hit the top of middle.
In contrast, opener Fakhar Zaman made a tortured 10 from 45 balls before being bowled by Overton.
Pakistan's bowling was improved, with Hassan the standout performer, though Rauf and Ashraf allowed Salt and Vince too many loose balls.
England captain Ben Stokes: "The really pleasing thing about that is the inexperienced players coming in and still continuing that mindset that we've produced over the last four or five years.
"The performance was fantastic."
Pakistan captain Babar Azam: "We didn't utilise the first 10 overs, we didn't get a partnership to score a good total and lost early wickets.
"Hassan Ali was outstanding and Saud Shakeel showed his potential."
Former England bowler Steven Finn on Test Match Special: "England were just impressive all round. The important thing is Pakistan put England under more pressure and it was a test to see if this inexperienced side could get through it.
"They came through every one of those passages of play where they could have folded."
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Post by Admin on Jul 15, 2021 12:42:55 GMT
Rishbah Pant has Covid
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Post by Admin on Jul 16, 2021 20:11:28 GMT
Livi just hit the fastest 50 in T 20 cricket for England he is in the zone
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Post by Admin on Jul 16, 2021 20:53:11 GMT
Fastest ever England century
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Post by Admin on Jul 17, 2021 7:28:37 GMT
First Vitality T20, Trent Bridge Pakistan 232-6 (20 overs): Babar 85 (49), Rizwan 63 (41) England 201 (19.2 overs): Livingstone 103 (43), Shaheen 3-30 Pakistan won by 31 runs Scorecard Liam Livingstone's spectacular century was not enough to prevent England from being beaten by Pakistan in a riotous first Twenty20 at Trent Bridge.
With the hosts chasing 233 - what would have been their highest T20 pursuit of all-time - Livingstone reached 50 from 17 balls and 100 from 42, both England records.
He went to three figures with his ninth sixth, but was out next ball, a crucial swing of momentum towards Pakistan.
The tourists had earlier racked up 232-6 - their highest total in a T20 - taking advantage of a superb pitch and short boundaries on a sun-kissed evening in Nottingham.
Captain Babar Azam struck 85 from 49 balls and Mohammad Rizwan 63 from 41.
England were ragged, dropping catches and too often missing the mark with the ball to concede their highest score for eight years.
Livingstone's incredible knock kept England in it, but they were eventually bowled out for 201 in the last over to lose by 31 runs.
The second game of the three-match series - at Headingley on Sunday at 14:30 BST - is live on BBC One.
433 runs, 27 sixes - watch the best moments from a T20 thriller England v Pakistan - fixtures & results
'Like a scene from a romantic comedy!' - Fielders collide as Moeen is caught Livingstone headlines thrilling entertainment This was a memorable contest, magnificent entertainment played in front of a raucous crowd of 17,000.
Whereas Pakistan were humbled 3-0 by a virtual third-string England side in the one-day internationals, they were energised by a change of format and boosted by the hosts' poor performance with the ball.
As well as Jos Buttler and Ben Stokes, an entire first-choice attack of Jofra Archer, Mark Wood, Sam Curran, Chris Jordan and Adil Rashid were missing. In their absence, England were flayed.
While the bowling understudies failed to impress, Livingstone, previously not a certainty for a place at the T20 World Cup in October, showed he belongs among England's embarrassment of batting riches.
His clean striking was simply astonishing, made all the more impressive by the fact England lost regular wickets around him.
Livingstone's eventual dismissal, caught at long-on off the leg-spin of Shadab Khan, was a hammer blow to England.
On a night illuminated by wonderful batting, it was Pakistan's superior bowling and fielding - led by paceman Shaheen Shah Afridi's 3-30 - that proved the difference.
Brilliant Babar leads Pakistan run-fest England gifted away the chance to bat first and might wonder how different the outcome could have been had Dawid Malan held a difficult, low chance at a wide slip when Babar edged the first ball he faced, bowled by David Willey.
Reprieved, Babar played a majestic innings, full of wristy whips through the leg side.
Watch the best of Babar Azam's 85 against England Rizwan struggled at first, but gradually found fluency in a stand of 150 - the highest opening partnership against England in a T20.
The lack of early wickets severely hampered England's cause and as the bowlers struggled with their lengths, Pakistan's batsmen queued up to despatch the ball into the stands.
The first six did not come until the 12th over, but nine more were smashed after that as 152 runs were plundered in the final 10 overs.
England's mountain proves too high England's display with the ball was as curious as it was disappointing. Only Willey managed an economy under 10, yet off-spinner Moeen Ali went unused, with Livingstone bowling two overs.
Eoin Morgan's men have history at Trent Bridge - twice on this ground they have posted record totals in ODIs - and Livingstone raised hopes that something special could be achieved once more.
Although England lost three wickets in the powerplay - Shaheen and Haris Rauf both took spectacular catches - Jason Roy got them moving with 32 from 13 balls.
Watch Shaheen's stunning catch to dismiss Malan Then Livingstone took over with fast hands, brute force and straight hitting. He reached 50 in only 22 minutes, adding 51 in five overs with Morgan and 44 in 4.3 with Lewis Gregory.
He went to three figures by lofting Shadab over long-on, only to be held on the same boundary by Shaheen, departing to rapturous applause.
Willey was England's last hope, yet he fell to one more superb catch, this time by Shadab, running around the leg-side rope.
'An incredible knock' - what they said England's Liam Livingstone: "We've spent 10 days in isolation. It was nice to have that break and I came back in feeling really fresh. I didn't pick a bat up for 10 days then came back in yesterday and felt really good."
England captain Eoin Morgan: "It was an incredible knock. The biggest compliment I could pay him is our changing room has watched some incredible knocks from Roy or (Jos) Buttler or Ali and that knock was as good as any of them. He was incredible."
Pakistan captain Babar Azam: "Everyone took part in today's win. After mine and Rizwan's partnership all the batsmen came and performed their roles and we got a brilliant total.
"We want to carry on the momentum on to the next game and take the positives from today."
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Post by Admin on Jul 18, 2021 20:15:30 GMT
BBC REPORT
England 200 (19.5 overs): Buttler 59 (39); Hasnain 3-51 Pakistan 155-9 (20 overs): Mahmood 3-33, Rashid 2-30 England won by 45 runs
England's spinners squeezed Pakistan to claim an emphatic 45-run victory in the second Twenty20 and level the series at 1-1.
Although Jos Buttler, Moeen Ali and Liam Livingstone - who twice hit sixes out of Headingley - all sparkled with the bat, England failed to post a total that would have put Pakistan out of the game.
From 137-3 in the 14th over and 164-5 in the 16th, England lost their last five wickets for 36 runs to be bowled out for 200.
However, England's trio of spinners, led by Adil Rashid, superbly exploited a pitch that rapidly deteriorated.
Rashid claimed 2-30, fellow leg-spinner Matt Parkinson 1-25 and off-spinner Moeen 2-32 as Pakistan lurched to 155-9.
The series decider is at Old Trafford on Tuesday at 18:30 BST.
After the thrilling entertainment of Pakistan's 31-run win in the series opener, this was another thoroughly enjoyable contest, played in front of a full house on a baking hot day.
England stuck with their plan of experimenting with October's World Cup in mind. Captain Eoin Morgan was rested, Jonny Bairstow shifted down the order to number six and Moeen's off-spin employed after he did not bowl on Friday.
With the World Cup set to be played in the United Arab Emirates and Oman, most encouraging will be the combined performance of leg-spinners Rashid and Parkinson, who lined up in the same England team for the first time.
The hosts' total looked no more than par, only for Rashid and Parkinson to stifle Pakistan on a pitch that became increasingly responsive to the slow bowlers.
Fresh from his dazzling 42-ball century on Friday, Lancashire's Livingstone was again striking the ball with awesome power.
Buttler, captaining in his first match for a month because of a calf injury, added the early impetus with his 59 from 39 balls, putting on 67 with Moeen, who crashed 36 from 16.
But it was Livingstone, himself sharing 52 with Buttler, who provided the stand-out moments.
A first straight six out of the ground, off spinner Imad Wasim, was handsome, but a second, off the pace of Haris Rauf that went over the new stand and onto the rugby ground, was a massive hit.
Livingstone was run out for 38 from 23 balls when he failed to respond to Tom Curran's call, a signal for England to lose momentum against a Pakistan side that held their length with the ball and caught well in the field.
Still, England have not lost a T20 when they have posted 200 batting first, a record that never looked in danger.
England spinners stifle Pakistan In hindsight, the way the pitch behaved suggested Pakistan made a mistake in fielding first after winning the toss, but that should take nothing away from the way England bowled.
Although captain Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan reprised their stellar opening partnership from Friday by adding 50 in the powerplay, after Saqib Mahmood had Babar miscue to extra cover the spinners took over.
Rashid bowls with a fizzing pace and possesses a dangerous googly. Parkinson is much slower, using his flight and guile. At one stage they bowled five overs in tandem that cost only 28 runs and brought two wickets - both to Rashid, one a superb caught and bowled to remove Rizwan. The life had been sucked from the chase.
Moeen followed up with two wickets in an over, while Parkinson finally got his reward from the last ball of his spell when Azam Khan was stumped.
In all, England sent down 11 overs of spin, the most they have bowled in a T20, before seamer Mahmood nipped in at the death for 3-33.
England captain Jos Buttler on BBC One: "I was a bit nervous coming into today but I enjoyed it. It was great to be back out there.
"We've got a lot of options and that's fantastic for us. It was nice to give Moeen that opportunity today. It was a great all-round performance from him and the leg-spinners bowled really well together."
Former England captain Michael Vaughan: "England were very, very impressive, particularly with the ball in hand. All the bowlers had a good afternoon out. And you expect that from England with the bat."
Former England batter Ebony Rainford-Brent: "It was a ruthless performance and England made it look easy in the end."
Pakistan captain Babar Azam: "We started well but they got 20 or 30 runs extra. After six overs of our chase we couldn't continue the partnerships."
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Post by Admin on Jul 21, 2021 12:43:59 GMT
Third Vitality Twenty20, Emirates Old Trafford Pakistan 154-6 (20 overs): Rizwan 76* (57); Rashid 4-35 England 155-7 (19.4 overs): Roy 64 (36), Hafeez 3-28 England won by three wickets
England overcame an almighty wobble to beat Pakistan in a pulsating final Twenty20 at Emirates Old Trafford and win the series 2-1.
Chasing 155 on a dry, turning pitch, England needed 61 from nine overs with eight wickets in hand after Jason Roy's 64.
However, with Pakistan's spinners applying a vice-like grip and Dawid Malan struggling to score freely, the equation went out to 39 from four overs before captain Eoin Morgan regained control.
In a dramatic penultimate over, Malan was bowled by Mohammad Hafeez, only for Liam Livingstone to hit his first ball for six then be caught off his next, leaving six required off the final over.
Although Morgan holed out with four needed, Chris Jordan got England over the line with two balls to spare.
England's own spinners were earlier at the fore, restricting Pakistan to 154-6. Mohammad Rizwan batted through the innings for 76 not out, but the tourists were shackled by Adil Rashid's 4-35.
The hosts end their white-ball summer with only one defeat from 12 matches against Pakistan and Sri Lanka, now moving on to a five-Test series with India which begins on 4 August.
Before then, English cricket takes a step into the unknown with the inaugural season of The Hundred, which starts on Wednesday with the opening match of the women's competition.
This was ideal preparation for the T20 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates and Oman starting in October.
Although the deafening atmosphere is likely to be very different to what England will experience at that tournament, to win a high-stakes game by completing a tense chase on a spinning pitch against a skilful attack is an examination passed.
From a position where they were coasting, England were plunged into tension by some questionable strokes and the nous of the Pakistan bowlers.
Captain Morgan looked to have the game won when he flicked two sixes off Hasan Ali's 18th over, yet vastly experienced off-spinner Hafeez dragged Pakistan back into it.
Malan was bowled trying to make room, and rising star Livingstone heaved his first ball over mid-wicket, then sliced to short third man.
Morgan skied a missed chance from the first ball of Hasan's last over and ran two, then was caught, only for the nerveless Jordan to take the required four runs from the next two deliveries.
Spinners hold Pakistan again England's 45-run win in the second match at Headingley on Sunday was partly engineered by the spinners, and they repeated the dose at Old Trafford.
Just like in Leeds, England sent down 11 overs of spin, with Livingstone filling the role of leg-spinner Matt Parkinson, who was left out on his home ground.
They were again led by the dependable Rashid, who returned his best figures in a T20 international, while off-spinner Moeen Ali conceded only 19 runs from four overs.
Rizwan swiped the majority of his runs through the leg side, but after he added 40 in the first five overs with captain Babar Azam, Pakistan slowed once Babar was stumped off a delightful Rashid googly.
Still, England were cruising as Roy swatted on the leg side and crashed through point for his highest score in a T20 international since February last year.
'He's on fire!' - Watch the best shots as Roy hits 64 His dismissal - miscuing leg-spinner Usman Qadir to long-off - was followed by Jonny Bairstow needlessly being caught at cover off slow left-armer Imad Wasim and Moeen being bowled hacking at Hafeez.
Malan managed 31 from 33 deliveries, but he at least provided a foil for Morgan, whose 21 from just 12 balls ensured England emerged from the chaos.
"I genuinely don't think the ball will spin like that in UAE, but we are ready for any surfaces that do spin."
Player of the match Jason Roy: "I just went out there and tried to have a bit of fun. I was frustrated to get out when I did but the boys were good enough to get us over the line.
"We play incredible cricket on flat pitches and score millions of runs. For us to have a performance like that on a pitch like that is very rewarding. Today is going to give us lots of confidence."
England Test bowler James Anderson on their T20 World Cup chances: "They have got an absolutely fantastic chance. The quality they have got in their squad is as good as, if not better, than anyone else in the world.
"They have got the skills and the players to be able to perform in all conditions. They've got players who know how to win tournaments now."
Pakistan captain Babar Azam: "We were 10 to 15 runs short today. Our batting let us down, but we fought, our players fought well and you saw the fight from them which was good.
"We need to do better against spinners. We haven't batted as well as we could. Some days we have good days and some days we have bad days."
BEEB REPORT
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