Will Jacks gamble pays off with England on brink of T20 World Cup semi-finals

Will Jacks gamble pays off with England on brink of T20 World Cup semi-finals


Incongruous as it seems after two weeks of insipid cricket, England are now on the brink of the World Cup semi-final. A crushing 51-run victory over Sri Lanka in Pallekele, overcoming a pitch that offered grip and turn, means that a win against either Pakistan or New Zealand will take England to the last four.

When Sri Lanka are playing at home, you do not need to see the score to tell how the hosts are faring; your ears will suffice. The sound of the famous papare band and the effervescent local crowd betrayed England’s strife; against Sri Lanka’s wonderfully varied attack, England staggered to 68-4 and 106-6 and ultimately a final total of 146-9. Thereafter, the silence – interspersed only by occasional bouts of music on the tannoy system – betrayed that Sri Lanka were heading inexorably to defeat.

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England’s win was inevitable long before Dilshan Madushanka was clean bowled attempting a heave against Adil Rashid. In the space of 20 frenetic balls during the Powerplay, England took 5-19, effectively securing the match.

Will Jacks gamble pays off with England on brink of T20 World Cup semi-finals

England celebrate taking the wicket of Sri Lanka captain Dasun Shanaka during an extraordinary spell of bowling in Kandy – Dibyangshu Sarkar/Getty Images

Harry Brook enlisted Will Jacks to bowl the second over and locate grip and bounce on a turning pitch. As an off spinner, Jacks was also better-placed to protect the shorter boundary from the left-hander Kamil Mishara; indeed, had Pathum Nissanka been on strike, Liam Dawson would have bowled instead.

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When he bowled the second over against Australia in the last T20 World Cup, Jacks infamously conceded 22 runs. This time, he conceded just four, all from a misfield, earning Brook’s trust to stay on.

“Spin played a big part in our innings and I knew he was going to play a big part in our bowling innings,” Brook explained. “He is a very competitive lad. He was annoyed when he got out tonight. After his first over he said ‘I always bowl better when I am annoyed’.”

Jacks’s second over would go far to determining the fate of the game. His third ball turned more than Kusal Mendis expected, handing Jacks a routine return catch. With Sri Lanka 20-2, Pavan Rathnayake attempted to launch his first ball to the boundary. Instead, his charge down the pitch only resulted in a leading edge; two wickets in two balls against right-handers showed that, on pitches offering such assistance, Jacks does not only threaten left-handers.

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Rather than a utility player – the “Jack of all trades,” Brook joked – Jacks has been England’s most valuable cricketer so far this World Cup. After hitting 21, continuing his success in a new role at number seven, Jacks finished with 3-22. He has now won three player of the match awards in five games this competition.

Just as Jacks bowled unchanged through the Powerplay, so did Jofra Archer. Reasoning that England were perhaps 15 runs short of par, Brook empowered Archer with aggressive fields. Nissanka, a centurion against Australia earlier this week, is Sri Lanka’s outstanding batsman. His wicket always carried outside importance; in the third over, Nissanka flicked an Archer delivery that stuck in the pitch to Jamie Overton at deep midwicket, who had just been moved to protect that boundary.

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