Ireland picked up a famous win over England at the T20 World Cup, as England’s run chase was ended by rain with them five runs short of par on DLS in Melbourne.
The Irish reached 157 all out in their innings, with captain Andrew Balbirnie the star of the show, making 62, and although a good score, it could have been more having been 103-1 at one stage.
England, though, were struggling to keep pace, losing early wickets and finding any rhythm difficult at the enormous Melbourne Cricket Ground.
However, Moeen Ali was just starting to motor alongside Liam Livingstone in the 15th over of the chase, but the rain became too heavy and the teams were dragged off with England frustratingly just behind par score.
After some time was lost at the start of the innings, there was little to play with at that juncture and the game came to an end just a few minutes later, with Ireland victorious.
The famous 50-over World Cup win in Bangalore was 11 years ago now and Irish fans have added another brilliant win to remember against the English.
The result makes Group One of the Super 12 stage very interesting indeed, with both England and Australia having now lost one out of two matches, and their clash on Friday back at the MCG becomes crucial.
There was a disrupted start with rain around in Melbourne early on, with 18 minutes lost before the Irish innings started in earnest, although it did become a great start from the underdogs.
Paul Stirling was dismissed in the third over, but Andrew Balbirnie and Lorcan Tucker were impressive as they took Ireland to 103 before a really unfortunate runout of non-striker Tucker as a straight shot from Balbirnie unintentionally flicked onto the stumps by bowler Adil Rashid’s fingers.
That wicket left the score at 103-2 after 12 overs, and the innings lost momentum somewhat after that, with only Curtis Campher really making an impression in the second half of the allotted overs.
Liam Livingstone was the surprise hit of the bowling attack, finishing on 17-3 off his three overs, while Mark Wood also picked up three wickets from his four overs as Ireland were bowled out for 157 off 19.2 overs.
England’s reply could not have got off to a worse start, with Jos Buttler caught behind just two balls in.
Alex Hales was gone in the third over with England on 14-2 and struggling, with Ben Stokes adding just six, bowled by a superb Fionn Hand delivery, leaving England 29-3 off 5.1.
Dawid Malan and Harry Brook settled the ship, although they were falling behind the run-rate as they restricted their big shots due to the early wickets. A number of wides from the Irish bowlers were aiding the English cause, though.
They were also helped by back-to-back drops in the 11th over, with Mark Adair and then Gareth Delany spilling chances off George Dockrell. However, Delany then made up for it just a couple of balls later, hanging onto one in the deep to dismiss Brook.
Things were looking bad for England and got even worse when Malan was caught by Hand off Barry McCarthy, bringing his struggle of an innings to a close on 35 from 36 balls.
Moeen Ali and Liam Livingstone were in and then men tasked with getting the job done for England, which Ali started to do impressively, reaching 24 off 12 balls.
However, the rain came back in Melbourne with England 105-5 after 14, a score which left Buttler’s side five runs below par on DLS as the teams left the field.
There was not much time to play with and the teams could not return, with Ireland taking the victory.
Balbirnie said of the fantastic win: ‘It’s amazing and it’s emotional because we’ve never played a game of cricket here.
‘To come here and play the tournament favourites, with so many big names, and put on a show in front of friends and family and so many people around the world is very satisfying. To do this at one of the most amazing cricket grounds in the world is pretty special.’
England captain Buttler added: ‘Especially in the first 10 overs with the ball we were poor. We were a long way short of where we needed to be and we let Ireland get away from us.
‘We let them them score both sides of the wicket when it was favourable for bowling. We won the toss had everything in our favour but we didn’t take advance of that.
‘The second 10 overs we were much better, we let Ireland have 20 or 30 too many in the first half and so we were under pressure. We managed to restrict them but they showed us how to bowl out there.
‘Myself getting out in the first over, that’s never ideal and it put pressure on the rest of our batting. They bowled well and certainly used the conditions better.
‘We won the toss and chose to bowl knowing we’d have the advantage of knowing what we’d have to do when it came around to batting, but we weren’t able to make the most of it.
‘Friday is massive. This result has put a lot of pressure on us now but it’s as big as it can get now to get us up for it, Australia v England at the MCG.’
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