Defeated England lose their grip on T20 title

England came up short in defence of their ICC World Twenty20 title, in last night’s 19-run defeat against hosts Sri Lanka, and must head home before the semi-finals.

Stuart Broad’s team spluttered to 18-3 against Lasith Malinga – and despite a maiden Twenty20 international half-century from Samit Patel, could not sustain a telling recovery in pursuit of 
169-6 at Pallekele.

Sri Lanka hit seven sixes in all, and it was clear England faced no easy task to win their last Super Eight match – as they had to if they were to qualify on net run rate ahead of West Indies.

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In the event, their attempt was undermined from the outset as Malinga took three wickets in his first over on his way to a career-best 5-31 in this format.

That was not quite the knockout blow, England twice briefly threatening to put themselves back in contention. But in the end – even with a late hand from Graeme Swann to help narrow the margin – Patel (67) was left with too much to do on his own.

Captain Stuart Broad admits England have major lessons to learn.

“We’re really disappointed, but the guys have tried really hard in these few weeks here,” Broad said.

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“But we’ve learnt a huge amount and as long as we can take lots away from it, that’s all we can ask.

“We need to keep wickets in hand at the top, today proved we’ve got good strikers at the end who can get us close.”

Broad added: “Obviously today losing three in an over hurt us quite a bit – any time a bowler takes five wickets against you in Twenty20 he’s going to come out on the winning side. Also our death bowling, we didn’t get that quite right and that’s something we need to work on.”

Samit Patel was the one player to come through the Malinga-induced carnage, smashing 67 from 48 balls, but he received no meaningful support until a late cameo of 34 from 20 by Swann.

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Broad picked out Patel and seamer Steven Finn, who took eight wickets in the tournament, as the bright spots for England.

“I think Steven Finn’s been fantastic for us in this tournament,” he said.

“Samit played really well, played the spinners well and got us in a position we could possibly have won the game from.”

No Sri Lanka batsman had been able to dominate, after being put in under lights, Broad (3-32) faring best of the England bowlers.

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Finn and Jade Dernbach used the new ball well, until the latter dropped short in his second over – and was hooked, by Mahela Jayawardene, and upper-cut, by Tillekeratne Dilshan, for sixes.

Dernbach had already had Dilshan dropped head-high at slip by Swann. But it was not a costly miss, because Finn soon had the opener lbw bang in front.

Jayawardene played and missed at some early drives but then batted serenely, as he almost always does, to help his team to 74-1 at the halfway mark.

The 11th over, however, brought an advantageous trade-off for England – eight runs off Swann, and two wickets.

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Swann had Jayawardene well-held by Eoin Morgan, diving in at deep midwicket, and then Kumar Sangakkara controversially caught-behind next ball by Yorkshire’s Jonny Bairstow.

Sri Lanka had to start again, with two men in on nought.

But Jeevan Mendis immediately swept and then slog-swept Swann for boundaries, and at the other end Angelo Mathews climbed into two off-drives for boundaries off Broad.

After the fourth-wicket pair shared a half-century stand in five overs, Broad returned to become the second England bowler to put himself on a hat-trick.

He had Mendis mis-pulling to midwicket, and then Mathews edging on to his stumps as he tried the same shot.

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Once more, two new batsmen were in on nought. But again, they flourished – Thisara Perera especially with some muscular hitting to give the hosts the edge at the interval.

That narrow advantage was soon much broader when Malinga, held back until the third over, made an instant and terminal impact.

Luke Wright cut him hard but straight to point, where Dilshan took the catch; Bairstow, promoted to No 3, lasted only two balls before falling for a change of pace and getting underneath one to mid-off, and Alex Hales was perhaps a little unfortunate to be given out lbw.

Patel breathed some life into England’s reply nonetheless, energising a 55-run stand with Morgan as he took particular toll of Ajantha Mendis with a string of off-side boundaries.

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But Morgan was to fall lbw, trying to reverse-sweep Akila Dananjaya, and then Ravi Bopara confirmed he is still out of form when no match for Jeevan Mendis’s leg-spin variations.

Patel carried on regardless with a 37-ball 50, containing seven fours and a six. But no significant support was forthcoming until Swann helped him plunder 51 from just 28 balls to keep England in with the slimmest of chances until almost the end.