Wednesday, February 26, 2025
spot_img

England, Afghanistan eye win to stay afloat

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

Lahore, Feb 25: A battered England will hope to keep their Champions Trophy hopes alive when they face a dangerous Afghanistan in a crucial group B match here on Wednesday.
A defeat here would severely dent both the teams’ dreams of a semifinal berth in the tournament, as South Africa and Australia have already notched up two points.
The days of England’s white ball supremacy are far behind now, as the former world champions’ creaking unit even failed to defend a 350-plus total against Australia in their tournament opener.While England may take some comfort in posting a massive total, the reality is that it came against an Australian side missing their premier pacers – Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, and Josh Hazlewood.
The English bowlers then failed to stop an Australian line-up that did not have lead batters such as injured Mitchell Marsh and now-retired Marcus Stoinis.
So, England will need to show massive improvement against Afghanistan on both those counts.Afghanistan’s three-pronged spin attack, consisting Rashid Khan, Noor Ahmad and Mohammad Nabi, has the potential to trouble even the best, and England batters’ recent outings against slow bowlers are not confidence inspiring either.England also suffered a setback as all-rounder Brydon Carse has been ruled out of the tournament with a toe injury. He has been replaced by leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed in an effort to strengthen their spin department.
This move will also provide Adil Rashid with proper backing, as, until now, Liam Livingstone had been performing that role with his mixed bag of off-spin, leg-spin, and seam-up deliveries.
But England’s real problem lies in the patchy form of opener Phil Salt and Harry Brook in the middle-order.
Salt’s only hundred in the format was in 2022 and since then the Welshman has not really converted his starts, often getting out after a quick 30 or 40.Brook also offers a similar tale. The Yorkshire man looked in prime form during the home ODIs against Australia last year, hammering a hundred and two fifties in a three-match series.However, Brook has been riddled with self-doubts against spinners since the tour to India, and fell to Aussie leg-spinner Adam Zampa in the last match.
Now, the 26-year-old will have to negate three high-quality tweakers against Afghanistan.
The Afghans, on the other hand, have their own problems to tackle. They are coming off a 107-run shellacking by South Africa in their tournament opener.
They had reached the semifinals of the T20 World Cup 2024 with almost the same set of players but the ODI format demands much more consistency in performance and execution of strategies.Afghanistan have the required talent but they need to find a way to channelise that consistently to challenge England, even in their most vulnerable state.
England’s clash against Afghanistan is more than just another group-stage match—it’s a battle for survival in a tournament that has already exposed their flaws and shaken their once-dominant white-ball reputation.
With their bowling lacking bite and key batters struggling for form, England must summon every ounce of resilience to keep their Champions Trophy campaign alive. (PTI)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

HYC moves high court on SBI job quota for tribals

SHILLONG, Feb 25: The Hynniewtrep Youth Council (HYC) and a job aspirant filed a writ petition before the...

HANM flags ILP & language demands in national capital

From CK Nayak NEW DELHI, Feb 25: The Hynniewtrep A’chik National Movement (HANM) on Tuesday held a sit-in in...

UDP ready for role of primary opposition party in KHADC

SHILLONG, Feb 25: The five newly-elected MDCs of the United Democratic Party (UDP) in the KHADC will meet...