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Friday, June 7, 2019

2019 ICC World Cup in England & Wales May 30 to July 14,2019 - Match 12 England Vs Bangladesh @ Cardiff Saturday June 08,2019

England take on Bangladesh in their third World Cup 2019 league encounter

England beat South Africa by 104 Runs in their first match on May 30,2019
England loses to Pakistan by 14 Runs in their second match on June 03,2019

Bangladesh beat South Africa by 21 Runs in their first match on June 02,2019
Bangladesh loses to New Zealand by 2 wickets on June 02,2019

Head to Head in ODI's

Matches: 20
England won: 16
Bangladesh won: 4
Tied: 0
No result: 0

England beat Bangladesh by 106 Runs

Scorecard

England       386/6 in 50 Overs
Jason Roy          153(121 Balls 4x14 and 6x5)
Jonny Bairstow   51(50 Balls 4x6)
Jos Butler            64(44 Balls 4x2 and 6x4)
Eoin Morgan       35(33 Balls 4x1 and 6x2)

Bangladesh  280/10 in 48.5 Overs
Shakib Al Hasan   121(119 Balls 4x12 and 6x1)
Mushfiqur Rahim    44(50 Balls 4x2)
Match Result  England won by 106 Runs
MOM - Jason Roy(England)for his 153(121 Balls 4x14 and 6x5)

Jason Roy hit the highest individual score of the World Cup so far as England got their campaign back on track with a 106-run win over Bangladesh in Cardiff on Saturday

Tournament favourites England, whose rise to the top of the one-day international rankings since Bangladesh knocked them out of the 2015 World Cup has been based on aggressive batting, lived up to his words.

Roy’s 153 took England to an imposing 386 for six, leaving Bangladesh needing to surpass Ireland’s 329-7 against England in 2011, the highest score by any team batting second to win a World Cup match.

On a Sophia Gardens ground where they famously beat Australia in a 2005 ODI, Bangladesh were eventually dismissed for 280 with seven balls to spare.

Their chase got off to a bad start when fast bowler Jofra Archer (3-29) dismissed Soumya Sarkar for two with a ball that clipped the top of the left-hander’s off stump.

Archer, whose 10 wicketless overs against Pakistan cost 79 runs, was far more threatening on Saturday as he reached speeds of 95 miles (153 kilometres) per hour.

But Shakib anchored the innings, flicking Archer for six on his way to a 95-ball century that also included nine fours.

Shakib put on 106 with Mushifqur Rahim (44), a partnership that ended when Roy, who dropped a straightforward chance against Pakistan, held a good catch at point.

And 169-3 soon became 170-4 when Mohammad Mithun fell for a duck after edging leg-spinner Adil Rashid to wicket-keeper Jonny Bairstow.

Despite Shakib Al Hasan’s 121 -- just the third Bangladesh World Cup hundred after Mahmudullah made two in 2015 -- the Tigers were never in the hunt.

The Test gloveman was behind the stumps after Jos Buttler suffered a hip injury during a typically dashing 64.

Shakib, who had hit fifties in a win over South Africa and a loss to New Zealand this World Cup, was eventually yorked by Ben Stokes to leave Bangladesh on the brink of defeat.

Pace bowling all-rounder Ben Stokes followed up to finish with figures of 3-23.

England were sent in to bat by Tigers captain Mashrafe Mortaza on a green-tinged pitch, but Roy and Bairstow (51) seized the initiative during a rapid first-wicket stand of 128.

The in-form Roy completed a 92-ball century in bizarre fashion when, not looking, he collided with umpire Joel Wilson as he completed what should have been a single to take him to 97, only for

Mithun at deep square leg to misfield a ball for four. Both Roy and Wilson were unhurt.

Roy was finally caught by Mashrafe off Mehidy Hasan Miraz, holing out after hitting three towering sixes in a row off the spinner

The Surrey batsman faced 121 balls, hitting 14 fours and five sixes as he fell just short of Andrew Strauss’s England World Cup record of 158 against India in Bangalore in 20ll.

“There was a bit of change in the game plan. We didn’t allow them to get early wickets and we knew we would be able to catch up,” said Roy during the break between innings.

The round-robin group stage sees Bangladesh next play Sri Lanka at Bristol on Tuesday, with England facing the West Indies at the Oval on Friday.

Most consecutive 300+ totals in ODIs:
7 England in 2019 *
6 Australia in 2007
5 Sri Lanka in 2006
5 India in 2017






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