SM
Man City vs. Salford: 1 hr 32 mins
Upcoming predictions and previews

England's chances of World Cup glory

:Headline: England's chances of World Cup glory: ID:364830: from db_amp
We present the arguments that may tip the scales in England's favour, as well as those against.

England stormed into their first World Cup final since 1992 after dispatching Australia, setting up a showdown against New Zealand at Lord's on Sunday.

A comprehensive eight-wicket victory over their oldest rivals was England's first in the knockout rounds of the tournament in 27 years and they now have a first global 50-over title firmly in their sights.

Here, PA presents the arguments that may tip the scales in England's favour, as well as those against.

Reasons to be cheerful

Recent record against New Zealand

England won the bilateral series against New Zealand in 2015 (Owen Humphreys/PA)

England have won eight and lost four of their 12 one-day internationals against the Kiwis since the end of the last World Cup, including edging both bilateral series 3-2. Perhaps more significantly, England have prevailed in their two tournament meetings by thumping margins of 87 runs in the Champions Trophy in 2017 and 119 runs in the group stage earlier this month. Previous form perhaps counts for little on the day but England have proven experience of holding their nerve against their next opponents when it matters most.

Peaking at the right time

Jason Roy has been instrumental since his return from a hamstring tear (Nick Potts/PA)

Falling short in a run-chase against Pakistan was a surprise but then back-to-back defeats against Sri Lanka and Australia left England's hopes of reaching the knockout stages in major doubt. Since then England have rediscovered their mojo, Jason Roy's return from a hamstring tear proving to be a turning point. He and Jonny Bairstow have been instrumental at the top of the order with three-successive century stands. Following a blip earlier in the tournament, England look to be firing on all cylinders once again.

Better batting line-up

Kane Williamson has been in sparkling form for New Zealand – but he has had very little help (David Davies/PA)

New Zealand captain Kane Williamson has had a stellar past few weeks with 548 runs at an average of 91.33 but there has been little support – Ross Taylor the next best Kiwi on the list with 335 at 41.87. England's usual top five – Roy, Bairstow, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan and Ben Stokes – have all amassed more than Taylor at a better average, Root leading their charts with 549 runs at 68.62. Their handiwork has meant 'finisher' Jos Buttler has had a relatively-quiet tournament. Keep an eye on Bairstow, who needs four more runs to join the 500-club for the tournament.

Reasons to be fearful

History is against them

England's win over Australia was their first in a World Cup knockout match since 1992 (Nigel French/PA)

England have reached the last hurdle on three occasions and each time they have come away empty-handed. A defeat to the West Indies in 1979 may have been entirely predictable while Australia were their conquerors 12 years later. Pakistan's 'Cornered Tigers' got the better of them in 1992 and that was as good as it got for England over an abysmal next 23-year period characterised by humiliating group-stage exits and limp defeats in the knockout rounds. That changed after a watershed 2015 tournament, after which Morgan and England pursued a bolder approach.

Lord's woes

Lord's has not been a happy hunting ground for England recently (Nigel French/PA)

England have played 16 ODIs at the home of cricket in the last decade, winning only five of those. It was telling that Morgan chose Edgbaston, Trent Bridge and The Oval as his three preferred venues recently, England having won only three out of six under his captaincy at HQ. Lord's was the venue when England crumpled to 20 for six against South Africa a couple of years ago following a series of injudicious strokes to Kagiso Rabada and Wayne Parnell. Trent Boult, Matt Henry and Lockie Ferguson may look at the game as a blueprint to topple England's formidable batting line-up.

Experience

Williamson and Ross Taylor were part of the New Zealand side beaten in the 2015 World Cup final (Mark Kerton/PA)

These are two well-matched sides but where New Zealand might have one edge is in experience, having reached the final four years ago. The spine of that side remains and will be wiser for their seven-wicket defeat to Australia in Melbourne. England will correctly point out they were on the cusp of 2016 World Twenty20 glory only for Carlos Brathwaite's power-hitting to deny them but this is the deepest they have gone in this tournament. What is inarguable is that it is the biggest game in every player's life.

amp_article__364830 : Database Data restored...  : 
last updated article - 2019-07-13 11:41:59:
html db last update - 2019-07-13 11:41:59 :

ex - 7200 : read : read cache amp html
Share this article now:
Recommended Next on SM
Premier League Table
TeamPWDLFAGDPTS
1Liverpool19144147192846
2Arsenal20117239182140
3Nottingham ForestNott'm Forest20124429191040
4Chelsea20106439241536
5Newcastle UnitedNewcastle20105534221235
6Manchester CityMan City2010463627934
7Bournemouth209653023733
8Aston Villa209563032-232
9Fulham207943027330
10Brighton & Hove AlbionBrighton2061043029128
11Brentford208393835327
12Tottenham HotspurSpurs20731042301224
13Manchester UnitedMan Utd206592328-523
14West Ham UnitedWest Ham206592439-1523
15Crystal Palace204972128-721
16Everton193881525-1017
17Wolverhampton WanderersWolves2044123145-1416
18Ipswich TownIpswich2037102035-1516
19Leicester CityLeicester2035122344-2114
20Southampton2013161244-326
Scroll for more - Tap for full version


Sports Mole provides in-depth previews and predictions for every match from the biggest leagues and competitions in world football.
AL
Sign up for our FREE daily preview newsletter direct to your inbox!

Loading ...

Failed to load data.



. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .