England cruised into the World Twenty20 final with a seven-wicket thrashing of Sri Lanka at the Beausejour Stadium on Thursday.
Set just 129 to win after tight bowling restricted Sri Lanka — last year’s losing finalists — to 128 for six, England finished on 132 for three as they won with four overs to spare.
Kevin Pietersen, on his return to the side after attending the birth of his son in London, finished on 42 not out and ended the match in style with a six and a four in successive balls off fast bowler Lasith Malinga.
PHOTO: AFP
England, who have never won a major one-day international tournament, are now through to their first final since hosting the 2004 Champions Trophy.
Sri Lanka collapsed to 26 for three in just the fifth over and were unable to recover from that poor start.
Only Angelo Mathews, with 58, offered much resistance against England’s bowlers, before he was run-out off the penultimate ball.
Sri Lanka’s next best score was 16, achieved by both captain Kumar Sangakkara, who won the toss, and Chamara Kapugedera.
“I’m going to sound like a broken record here, but full credit to our bowlers again,” England captain Paul Collingwood said at the presentation ceremony. “We put them under pressure and I’m delighted with how they performed. The two guys at the top of the order, [Craig] Kieswetter and [Michael] Lumb, are still going at the bowlers and again got us into a good position.”
“Unfortunately we didn’t start too well, losing three wickets in the first six [overs],” Sangakkara said. “We didn’t make the most of our opportunities — 150 would have been a good total.”
Man-of-the-match Stuart Broad led the attack with two wickets for 21 runs off his four permitted overs. Both Ryan Sidebottom and fellow seamer Broad took a wicket first ball during Sri Lanka’s top-order collapse.
Spinners Graeme Swann and Michael Yardy then ensured runs remained hard to come by with a combined eight overs that cost just 41.
At the start of their run chase, England were confronted by a trio of spinners as Sri Lanka looked to exploit their supposed vulnerability against slow bowling on a pitch offering some turn, but Kieswetter, driving strongly, and left-hander Lumb settled any lingering nerves with an opening stand of 68.
That partnership should have ended on 40, however, when Kieswetter cut the ball to backward point and Lumb set off for a non-existent single.
Lumb was almost at the other end of the pitch before he was sent back, but Ajantha Mendis fumbled the return to the stumps, with Lumb meters out of his ground, and the chance had gone.
Kieswetter was eventually yorked by Malinga for 39 and Lumb bowled for 33 walking across his stumps by seamer Thissara Perera, but the damage had already been done.
Sri Lanka were seven for one at the start of the second over when left-arm quick Sidebottom removed Sanath Jayasuriya for just 1 after the veteran fended outside off-stump and edged straight to Collingwood at second slip.
New batsman Tillakaratne Dilshan on 9 then miscued a hook off Tim Bresnan and was well caught by a diving Luke Wright, running in from deep backward square-leg, to leave Sri Lanka 20 for two at the end of the third over.
Sri Lanka’s collapse continued when Broad, as Sidebottom had done, took a wicket with his first ball.
Mahela Jayawardene, the tournament’s leading scorer with 302 runs, including a century against Zimbabwe, fell for just 10 when he edged a well pitched-up ball outside off-stump and was caught by wicketkeeper Kieswetter.
Swann and Yardy kept the pressure on and Sri Lanka couldn’t break free.
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