Stokes wins closest ever World Cup final for England

Good luck to the keepers of cricket’s annals, who will struggle to smuggle this scoreline neatly into their records.

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TELFORD VICE at Lord’s

BEN Stokes played a charmed innings to mastermind England’s triumph in the most closely fought final in men’s World Cup history.

England, who played in their fourth final, claimed the trophy for the first time by beating New Zealand, who had reached in the decider for the second consecutive time.

But it needed a super over to separate the sides after the match was tied — New Zealand totalled 241/8 and England were dismissed for 241.

Even that wasn’t enough to decide the issue: both teams scored 15 runs in the super over, so the equation was further distilled to which side had hit the most boundaries.

All told, super over and everything, New Zealand hit 14 fours and three sixes.

England? Twenty-four fours and two sixes.

Arise, World Cup champions. And good luck to the keepers of the annals, who will struggle to smuggle that scoreline neatly into their records.

New Zealand have batted first only three other times in their 11 games in the tournament, and twice in those matches they have made smaller totals than Sunday’s 241/8. They won one of those games and lost the other.

Their most dependable batters, Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor, who between them had scored both of the centuries and five of the 11 half-centuries the Kiwis have made during the World Cup going into the final, were dismissed for 30 and 15.

It was left to opener Henry Nicholls, playing only his third match of a tournament in which his 28 against India in the semi-final at Old Trafford, to provide stability with his 77-ball 55.

Williamson helped Nicholls add 74 for the second wicket, the only half-century stand of the innings, and No. 5 Tom Latham’s 47 was New Zealand’s next best effort.

Chris Woakes and Jofra Archer used the new ball effectively for England, and Woakes took 3/37.

Liam Plunkett claimed 3/42, taking all of his wickets with cross-seam deliveries.

Of England’s six bowlers, only Stokes, who went wicketless for 20 off three overs, conceded five or more runs a ball.

New Zealand defended a lower total as recently as Wednesday, when they made 239/8 in their semi-final against India at Old Trafford and won by 18 runs.

But they reduced the Indians to 5/3 in the first 19 balls of the innings — the like of which they couldn’t repeat on Sunday.

Instead Jonny Bairstow stood firm through stands of 28 with Jason Roy and 31 with Joe Root.

Roy was fortunate to survive, by the slimmest of “umpire’s call” margins, which was handed down after South Africa’s Marius Erasmus decided the Englishman was not out, when the New Zealanders reviewed Trent Boult’s shout for lbw off the first ball of the innings.

Then Colin de Grandhomme dropped a return catch Bairstow offered in the 11th, when he was 18 and England were 39/1.

Root gave De Grandhomme some solace six overs later when he flashed at a wide delivery and was caught behind.

Bairstow went for 36 three overs after that, dragging Lockie Ferguson onto his stumps.

And when Ferguson roared in from the cover boundary to catch, centimetres from the turf, Jimmy Neesham’s first ball of the match — which had been hammered there by Eoin Morgan — England were 86/4 and reduced to their last pair of proper batters.

But they were Stokes and Jos Buttler, and they clipped 110 runs off 133 balls in a largely controlled partnership that endured into the 45th over and took England to within 46 runs of victory.

It ended when Buttler hammered Ferguson to deep cover, where substitute Tim Southee held a fine sliding catch. Buttler’s 60 came off 60 balls and included six fours.

That started a slide of six wickets for 45 runs, but Stokes survived for an undefeated 84 off 98 balls with five fours and two sixes.

England were 220/7 with Stokes 63 not out and in the 49th over when he smashed Neesham to the midwicket boundary — where Boult fell over the boundary and turned a catch into a six.

England needed 15 off the 50th over, and Stokes lofted Boult for six over midwicket.

That narrowed the equation to nine off three — clearly in the Kiwis’ favour.

Stokes smacked Boult to midwicket along the ground, and Martin Guptill’s throw hit Stokes as he dived to make his ground.

From there, it scooted over the boundary to earn six runs off one delivery.

That meant England needed three runs off two balls, but only two were added as Adil Rashid and Mark Wood were run out in the process.

That tied the scores, prompting the super over.

Stokes and Buttler returned to club 15 runs off Boult, each of them hitting a four.

Neesham and Guptill came out to face Archer, and Neesham lifted a massive six over midwicket off the second ball.

Two were required off the last ball, but Guptill was run out by Roy’s throw to wicketkeeper Buttler scrambling back for the second.

That tied the scores again, but for only as long as it took to tally up the boundaries.

England Goliath against Kiwi David

England and New Zealand have the resources to turn themselves into better versions of themselves. South Africa, comparatively, do not.

Sunday Times

TELFORD VICE in London

ENGLAND have drunk deeply of the Kool-Aid of how good people have said they are on their march to Sunday’s men’s World Cup final at Lord’s.

New Zealand, whose coach, Gary Stead, once washed the windows of the august Pavilion, seem almost embarrassed to share a field with these legends of their own lore.

Eoin Morgan’s Irish accent got in the way, but his Churchillian intent shone through after his team’s emphatic eight-wicket semi-final win at Edgbaston on Thursday: “Sunday’s not a day to shy away from; it’s a day to look forward to, much like today.

“We have created the opportunity to play in a World Cup final. It will be a matter of the same again trying to produce everything that we can performance-wise, but enjoy the day.”

Contrast that with what Kane Williamson said about handling the pressure of hanging onto the steepler offered by Ravindra Jadeja, who seemed to be smashing India to victory in the other semi, at Old Trafford on Wednesday: “Someone goes ‘catch it’ and it’s above me so it must be mine.”

It’s a neat script for one of sport’s most compelling screenplays: David versus Goliath.

Better yet, there are lessons in the protagonists’ contrasting approaches for South Africa, whose performance at the tournament was far below their capabilities.

Having believed for so long that they were among world cricket’s big boys, they weren’t ready for the bleak truth that they aren’t — even after trying to tell themselves exactly that.

Not so England, who did not reach a semi-final for six tournaments after losing the 1992 final to Pakistan. Group stage exits in half of them tells, unarguably, a tale of decline.

But this time England have some of the most booming bats in the game. Jonny Bairstow and Jason Roy average 69.47, more than any other opening pair in one-day history. Joe Root has scored two centuries, Morgan and Jos Buttler a ton each.

This marks the sixth time in a dozen World Cups that New Zealand have forged to or past the semi-finals. They are the little country that can. Almost. They went one step further four years ago, but were swiped aside by Australia in the final.

Unlike South Africa, New Zealand know who they are and what they can do. They bring an attack that rasps with the pace of Lockie Ferguson and the swing of Trent Boult, and the key on Sunday will be how the batters in blue square up to the bowlers in black.

England and New Zealand have the resources to turn themselves into better versions of themselves. South Africa, comparatively, do not.

But it comes down to more than money. It’s also about belief, and South Africa are all out of the stuff. For now.