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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Pietersen seals England victory

England 151 for 4 (Pietersen 73*) beat Pakistan 147 for 9 (Butt 34, Yardy 2-19) by six wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
Hawkeye

Kevin Pietersen returned to form with a confident 52-ball 73 not out, as England's powerful new batting line-up capitalised on a spirited display from their bowlers - as well as some poor fielding from Pakistan - to ease along to a comfortable six-wicket victory with three balls to spare. After two rain-affected contests in Guyana, it was England's first victory of their World Twenty20 campaign and a vital one too, coming as it did against the reigning champions.

Chasing 148 for victory after winning the toss and choosing to bowl first, England were indebted to three incredible let-offs from Saeed Ajmal, who dropped Craig Kieswetter twice at mid-on and Michael Lumb once at mid-off, all inside the first five overs. The first reprieve, off the sixth ball of the innings, was the most culpable, as Kieswetter drove Razzaq into Ajmal's midriff, only for the ball to bobble free as he inexplicably attempted a shy at the non-striker's end.

Thereafter, the ball pursued Ajmal like a Guyanese mosquito, as England's openers muscled their way to an opening stand of 44 in 5.4 overs. Kieswetter's first boundary, in the third over, came courtesy of a chipped drive off Mohammad Aamer that would have been snaffled by a more athletically timed leap, while Lumb's let-off came just as England were stepping up the pace of their chase - 19 runs had been bashed off Mohammad Asif's second over, and Lumb had just made that 23 in seven balls with a clipped four through fine leg when Ajmal failed to gather a drive off a low full-toss from Aamer's very next delivery.

Ajmal did make partial amends for his butterfingers when he drew Lumb down the pitch with his fourth delivery to have him stumped for an aggressive 25 from 13 balls, while Kieswetter fell three overs later for 25 from 27, but not before he had bludgeoned Mohammad Hafeez for a massive six that took a chunk out of the Garry Sobers pavilion at midwicket. It was the safer hands of Umar Akmal that ended his stay, as he backpedalled on the long-on boundary to hold onto a lofted mow.

But Pakistan's dose of the dropsies didn't end there. Pietersen belted a drive into - and out of - Razzaq's hands as he steadied himself in his followthrough, and then creamed Ajmal to long-off where Aamer leapt with one hand but could only parry the chance over the rope for six. Pietersen, whose form has been hit-and-miss of late, didn't need a third invitation to cash in, and Shahid Afridi was whipped back over his head for a second six, to bring up a 37-ball half-century.


In the same over, Paul Collingwood - who had been the silent partner in a 60-run stand for the third wicket - picked out Umar on the long-off boundary to depart for 15 from 16 balls, but with 23 runs required from 24 balls, there was no late collapse on the cards. For once, Eoin Morgan failed to apply the finishing touch as Ajmal slipped an arm-ball through his defences, but Pietersen stood firm to deliver a vital victory.

In the final analysis, Pietersen's substantial performance proved to be the difference between the teams. With the sizeable exception of Shahid Afridi, who ran himself out first ball, most of their batsmen made starts - including Kamran Akmal, who swatted the first ball of the innings, from Ryan Sidebottom, over fine leg for six. But after an erratic display, their highest scorer turned out to be Salman Butt with 34 from 26 balls.

Pakistan had been handily placed on 44 for 1 after their six Powerplay overs, after England's seamers had adopted a bang-it-in approach on a lively Bridgetown surface, but thereafter it was over to the slower men, with the spin of Michael Yardy and Graeme Swann joining forces with Paul Collingwood's under-rated offcutters to stymie the flow of runs. Yardy leaked consecutive fours to Mohammad Hafeez as he struggled at first to find the right length, while Collingwood was belted for a massive six over midwicket by Butt, but the change of pace kept the run-rate in check, while serving up three vital wickets.

The first of those was Butt, who had been cruising along before he skimmed a flat drive off Swann to Collingwood in the covers. One over later, Umar survived a stumping as Kieswetter fumbled off Yardy, but England responded with two in two balls, as Hafeez slashed a shorter ball to short third man, before the main man, Afridi, dabbed his first ball into the covers, set off for a non-existent single, and didn't even try to regain his ground as Luke Wright lobbed the ball back to the keeper.

Misbah-ul-Haq flogged a Broad free hit into the stands for six before Yardy bowled him with a quicker ball as he telegraphed his intended reverse-sweep, and though Umar batted with purpose to make 30 from 25 balls, he was brilliantly snaffled on the boundary's edge by Pietersen, who sprinted back towards the rope from long-on to cling onto a steepling chance as the ball plummeted over his shoulder. Fawad Alam then snicked his third delivery, from Broad, through to the keeper, to leave Pakistan in some strife on 120 for 7 with 16 balls remaining.

Thanks to some sloppy late work in the field, and some ambitious biffing from the tail, Pakistan managed to hoist that total to a defendable 147 for 9, but once the catches started to go down, there was no way of reeling England back in.

  • England begin to gel as a Twenty20 unit

    It's difficult to know quite how good England were in the opening Super Eight game because Pakistan were so poor, but there is no doubt they are a vastly improving Twenty20 team

  • Pietersen praises England power-hitters

    Kevin Pietersen could be leaving this tournament at any moment should his wife go into labour, and in the form he showed against Pakistan it will be a considerable hole to fill if he is absent

  • Pietersen seals England victory

    Kevin Pietersen returned to form with a confident 52-ball 70 not out, as England's powerful new batting line-up capitalised on a spirited display from their bowlers to ease along to a comfortable six-wicket victory

England 2nd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st44MJ LumbC Kieswetter
2nd21KP PietersenC Kieswetter
3rd60PD CollingwoodKP Pietersen
4th15KP PietersenEJG Morgan
5th11KP PietersenLJ Wright

ICC Men's T20 World Cup

Group A
TeamMWLPTNRR
AUS22041.525
PAK2112-0.325
BAN2020-1.2
Group B
TeamMWLPTNRR
NZ22040.428
SL21120.355
ZIM2020-1.595
Group C
TeamMWLPTNRR
IND22041.495
SA21121.125
AFG2020-2.446
Group D
TeamMWLPTNRR
WI22042.78
ENG2011-0.452
IRE2011-3.5
Group E
TeamMWLPTNRR
ENG33060.962
PAK31220.041
NZ3122-0.373
SA3122-0.617
Group F
TeamMWLPTNRR
AUS33062.733
SL3214-0.333
WI3122-1.281
IND3030-1.117