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And that’s that from Pallekele. Thanks for sticking with us despite the downpour. Another good win for England, with Buttler, Banton and Brook bringing England home with two balls to spare. It was a closer game than Friday’s but Sri Lanka lost crucial momentum in the last half of their innings.
We’ll be back on Tuesday for the final T20 of this World Cup warm-up. Till then, goodbye and have a lovely evening.
ShareCaptain talk
Dasun Shanaka: “We did lots right. It’s not the rain… Eshan got injured and he’s a good death bowler. Rathnayake was impressive… every batsman got starts. We couldn’t capitalise for a few overs. Adil Rashid bowled well. We could have respected him more. We play on spin tracks, it’s our home advantage. But teams playing here are getting used to playing with spin. Outside the country is totally different.”
Harry Brook: “I thought we played outstanding, adapted to the conditions well. I think the more time we get out in the middle the better, and thought Tom Banton was outstanding. Our spinners have been awesome.”
SharePlayer of the match – Tom Banton
I like the fact the series is sponsored by lemonade. Anyway, the player of the match is Tom Banton. He grins, “I think, most of my career I’ve been opening, there was a little bit of turn and hold and they’ve got such good spinners, you have to assess. I want to play all formats and take my chance when I can. On wickets like this, the sweep is such a central shot to play.”
Another morale-boosting win for England and a fluent and impressive fifty from Tom Banton, who has made the most of Ben Duckett’s inopportune finger injury.
ShareEngland 173-4 win by six wickets (D/L) and lead the series 2-0
16.4 overs: England 173-4 (Banton 54, Curran 20) Between two tension-building dots, Banton ticks a single, then Curran two, with Banton making his ground courtesy of a full body slide. And with two balls to spare, Curran seals the deal with a dismissive six over long off.
16th over: England 165-4 (Banton 54, Curran 12) England need 3 from 6 balls Nothing silly, just some comfortable singles, a very well run two and an outrageous wide from Pathirana. Can Liyanage pull off a heist in the final over?
ShareFifty for Tom Banton!
15th over: England 157-4 (Banton 50, Curran 9) England need 11 from 12 balls Shanaka brings a little order to proceedings, but his penultimate ball is flicked for four by Banton, for his third T20 fifty (off 29 balls). It’s so good to see him succeed after some ups and downs – not forgetting that epic 371 for Somerset last spring.
Tom Banton celebrates his half century. Photograph: Lahiru Harshana/ReutersShare
Updated at 13.00 EST
14th over: England 149-4 (Banton 45, Curran 6) England need 19 from 18 balls Three fours, two wides and the target drops to just over one a ball. Hasaranga is unlucky that a legbreak picks up an edge which skedaddles along wet grass to the rope.
Updated at 12.55 EST
13th over: England 132-4 (Banton 35, Curran 1 ) England need 36 from 24 balls Pathirana starts the over with a wide, then Brook steps back and swats him over cover for six. And another, almost a repeat, but harder. Imagine a giant crushing a cardboard house. Pathirana gets his man, but Brook has reduced the chase to manageable proportions.
ShareWICKET! Brook c Hasaranga b Pathirana 36 (England 130-4)
After being flambeed earlier in the over, Pathirana outwits the brutalist Brook, seeing him come for a scoop and sending down a short ball. Super catch by Hasaranga, but a game-changer from 12 balls.
Matheesha Pathirana celebrates taking the wicket of Harry Brook. Photograph: Sameera Peiris/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 12.56 EST
12th over: England 117-3 (Banton 34, Brook 24 ) England need 51 from 30 balls Pow! Amid an over of singles, Brook ruthlessly frying-pans Hasaranga for six.
11th over: England 107-3 (Banton 32, Brook 16 ) England need 61 from 36 balls Pathirana comes back for his second over, continually picking at his shirt as he walks back to his mark. England are content to take singles from his first two balls. The third must be close to being called wide, the fourth is, looping over Brook’s head. Brook slices four over point to bring the hundred up, and four more, straighter, to perk up the equation.
10th over: England 93-3 (Banton 30, Brook 5 ) England need 75 from 42 balls England take Buttler’s wicket in their stride. Banton two-steps and tonks Wellalage inside out for six. Brook joins in with a firm chunk through long on for his first boundary.
ShareWICKET! Buttler c Rathnayake b Wellalage 39 (England 81-3)
Wellalage blows the gods a kiss as Rathanayake takes a cracking catch running in from deep cover. Buttler got the height, but not the distance.
A frustrated Buttler walks after losing his wicket. Photograph: Lahiru Harshana/ReutersShare
Updated at 12.29 EST
9 overs: England 81-2 (Buttler 39, Banton 23) England need 87 from 48 balls The slippery ball is causing problems, and Hasaranga attempts to dry off bucketfuls of rain. Banton drops low, like a cat, despite his great height, and sweeps into the atmosphere for six. New ball.
Updated at 12.21 EST
We resume
8 overs: England 69-2 (Buttler 35, Banton 15) England need 99 from 54 balls Malinga’s first ball back is a full toss at rib height – in his follow through he suddenly clutches his right shoulder and falls to the ground. Looks horribly painful and the commentators think he’s dislocated it. He is helped off the field and Liyanage finishes the over. Banton bottom edges him for four past the diving third man and then Buttler flicks another full toss for four.
ShareRevised target: 168 from 17 overs
So that’s another 111 from 58 balls, if my calculations are correct, which leaves England chasing about 11 an over. Much depends on how the rain has altered conditions. The outfield was worst affected I think.
Updated at 12.10 EST
Even better, live commentary from the crowd, courtesy of Showbizguru.
“News from my eldest in the ground. The rain has stopped. Locals say it’s a passing shower and cricket will be on again fairly soon.
Sadly for him the national holiday in Sri Lanks today means no booze being sold anywhere including in the ground.”
ShareAnd we wait…
Taha Hashim
“Nothing on restart times but those big blue sheets are making their way off while the crowd dances to Gangnam Style.”
It looks as if Steve Smith has been put out to permanent T20 pasture, as Australia leave him out of their final World Cup squad, despite a superb Big Bash. Cummins also misses out, because of the back injury that kept him out of most of the Ashes series.
Australia squad: Mitch Marsh (capt), Xavier Bartlett, Cooper Connolly, Tim David, Ben Dwarshuis, Cameron Green, Nathan Ellis, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Matt Kuhnemann, Glenn Maxwell, Matt Renshaw, Marcus Stoinis, Adam Zampa.
Not a bean to report, as the mopping up goes on in Pallekele. Nothing has been called off yet, though.
I’m just going to grab a cup of tea while we wait.
SharePakistan refuse to play India in World Cup
More political high-stakes moves prior to the World Cup. Pakistan have announced that they will play in the competition, but not against India in the game due to take place in Colombo on 15 February. The ICC are yet to respond.
ShareThe covers are coming off
So this game will live again.
Meanwhile, in Pakistan, Australia have just been thrashed again – this time by 111 runs, bowled out for 96. Three wickets for Abrar Ahmed.
“Apropos your line about the third B in England’s batting,” writes John Starbuck, “has there ever been a side which featured ABC etc. in their line-up? Someone is bound to know, as it’s the daft kind of question cricket fans get heated about.”
Surely not!
It’s raining quite hard by the looks of it in Pallekele. In fact our man on the ground, Taha, say it is “hosing down.” The BBC have the DRS score as 69 – so Sri Lanka take this game if there is no further play.
ShareRain stops play – England 57-2
7.2 overs: England 57-2 (Buttler 30, Banton 9) There’s just time for Buttler to pick a single from Malinga before the rain suddenly starts. The groundstaff spring on with sandbags and covers and we wait to see….
Banton and Buttler walk off as rain stops play in Kandy. Photograph: Ishara S Kodikara/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 11.30 EST
7th over: England 56-2 (Buttler 29, Banton 9) Hasaranga with his right arm leg breaks, a bustling approach with a pinch and a half of Shane Warne. Buttler is lucky to get a thick edge, but he and Banton are quick between the wickets and pick up three.
6th over: England 51-2 (Buttler 25, Banton 8) Plentiful loot for England from the reverse as first Banton collects six over deep backward point and then Buttler joins in for a four.
Updated at 10.52 EST
5th over: England 39-2 (Buttler 20, Banton 1) With a tonk of the bat like the call of a champagne cork, Bethell glides four through the covers to the first ball of Shanaka’s over. But he’s gone two balls later and the third B of England’s top order marches in.
ShareWICKET! Bethell c Mendis b Shanaka 13 (England 38-2)
Bethell loses his shape and, suddenly in his tennis whites, backs away to play a forehand slug and top edges to the keeper.
Dasun Shanaka celebrates the dismissal of Bethell. Photograph: Eranga Jayawardena/APShare
Updated at 11.03 EST
4th over: England 34-1 (Buttler 20, Bethell 9) Malinga with a penny-pinching over, Bethell can’t get him away.
3rd over: England 31-1 (Buttler 15, Bethell 5) Wellalage, with a luscious head of boyband hair. Buttler continues to rattle through his repertoire, with four from a reverse and Wellalage is unlucky to concede four byes to a ball that flummoxes batter and keeper.
2nd over: England 21-1 (Buttler 15, Bethell 5) Buttler is cut in half by a cutter from Shanaka, Sri Lanka consider, and decline, a review – but the next ball is kind and Buttler sends it flying through backward point for another boundary. Bethell lives dangerously, bottom-ending four through midwicket, just past a flying fielder.
ShareWICKET! Salt c Mishara b Pathirana 1 (England 10-1)
A first over breakthrough as Salt bends, angles, and guides Pathirana straight to Mishara at deep slip.
1st over: England 10-1 (Buttler 9, Bethell 0) Pathirana, wrist cocked, sling-shot action from right behind his back. Buttler pings two fours through point, but Salt lasts just two balls.
Pathirana celebrates with teammates after the dismissal of Salt. Photograph: Eranga Jayawardena/APShare
Updated at 10.43 EST
Sri Lanka weren’t quite able to capitalise on their flying start but Asalanka and Rathnayake ensured that they got close to 200. I suspect it won’t be enought but let’s see how Sri Lanka bowl. Seam bowling was expensive.
ShareSri Lanka 189-5 after 20 overs.
20th over: Sri Lanka 189-4 ( Asalanka 28, Liyange 1) Archer, whose last over was costly, bowls the final six of the innings. He licks his lips as a buoyant crowd roar on Sri Lanka. Just a bye and a leg bye from the first two balls, then Tom Banton makes a meal of a catch on the rope from Asalanka, feet in Hull, hands in Liverpool. Bethell doesn’t make a similar mistake next ball to send Rathnayake on his way, and Asalanka can’t make his reprieve count from the last ball.
ShareWICKET! Rathnayake c Bethell b ARcher 40 (Sri Lanka 187-5)
Much applause for Rathnayake after he is collected on the deep midwicket boundary by Bethell. A cracking innings.
19th over: Sri Lanka 184-4 (Rathnayake 40, Asalanka 27) And Curran it is, gingerly examining his hand before running in. A single to start things off then Asalanka jumps into position for a ramp over his right shoulder, like a royal dismissing a footman. Four. Now Rathnayake gets in on the act, scooping Curran from side on and finishing with a roly poly as the ball bounces over the rope. A wide. A cracking stop in the field by Bethell on the rope prevents four from the penultimate ball, but the last is thrashed through mid over by Rathnayake.