Harry Brook's Birthday Win: England Crush Sri Lanka in T20 World Cup Opener

England began their Super Eights campaign with a commanding 51-run victory over Sri Lanka. Batting first, England posted 146/9, powered by Phil Salt's 62, before their bowlers dismantled the Sri Lankan batting order for just 95. Captain Harry Brook, celebrating his 27th birthday, hailed the win as a perfect gift and praised his team's adaptability to the slow pitch. Will Jacks was instrumental in the win, contributing with both bat and ball to claim the Player of the Match award.

Key Points: England Beat Sri Lanka in T20 World Cup Super Eights

  • England's 12th straight T20I win over Sri Lanka
  • Phil Salt top-scores with 62
  • Will Jacks takes 3 wickets for Player of the Match
  • Sri Lanka bowled out for 95
3 min read

"A beautiful birthday present": England captain Harry Brook after win over Sri Lanka

England captain Harry Brook celebrates birthday with 51-run win over Sri Lanka. Phil Salt scores 62, Will Jacks named Player of the Match.

"A beautiful birthday present. - Harry Brook"

Pallekele, February 22

England defeated Sri Lanka by 51 runs in Pallekele to start the Super Eights with a comprehensive win, and England captain Harry Brook was happy with the win on his birthday.

Celebrating his 27th birthday on Sunday, Brook led his side to the 12th straight victory over Sri Lanka in T20I cricket.

During the post-match presentation, England captain Harry Brook said, "A beautiful birthday present. I thought we played exceptionally there, and to get over the line and bowl them out for less than 100 is an awesome effort.

Asked to bat first, England made 146/9 in 20 overs with the help of Phil Salt's 62 off 40 balls, including six fours and a couple of sixes.

Will Jacks (21 off 14 balls), Brook (14 off seven balls) and Sam Curran (11 off 11 balls) also contributed well to the total.

For Sri Lanka, Dunith Wellalage was the top wicket-taker with three scalps. Maheesh Theekshana and Dilshan Madushanka took a couple of wickets each.

Speaking about the pitch, he said, "I didn't think there were really any demons on the pitch. I think the spinners on both sides used the pace really well, and that's what brought a lot of wickets. We saw how it was behaving in the first innings, and the lack of pace was creating chances. So we had a good chat about that before going out, and we adapted to the surface really well. It was just slow."

Will Jacks took three wickets and made 21 runs, which helped him get his third Player of the Match award in the tournament.

"Jacksie was pretty annoyed with the way he got out, so he said to me he always bowls better when he's angry, and thankfully he got off to a cracking start," he said about the Player of the Match, Will Jacks.

While chasing the challenging target, Sri Lanka lost their top-five wickets inside the powerplay.

Captain Dasun Shanaka (30 off 24 balls) tried his best to take his team past the line, but Adil Rashid dismissed him to dash the Lankan hopes.

Kamindu Mendis (13 off 11 balls) and Wellalage (10 off 10 balls) were the only batters for Sri Lanka to score in double digits.

The co-hosts were bundled out for 95 runs, losing the match by 51 runs as Jofra Archer, Liam Dawson and Rashid shared two wickets each among them, with Jacks taking a three-fer.

Speaking about Phil Salt, who played a 62-run knock, he said, "It was hard to time, and I thought Salty played an exceptional innings there to get 60 with everybody fumbling around him as well. Not the fluent Phil Salt that everybody knows, but he managed to get us to a very good score there and a couple of partnerships at the end as well. It was a hell of a performance."

Asked if he is concerned about Jos Buttler's form with the bat, he said, "Not concerned at all. He's a powerhouse of world cricket. He has been for many years. He's arguably the best white-ball player to have ever played the game. He's just lacking a little bit of confidence at the minute, but I'd rather him start the competition like this and finish with a flourish. Looking forward and really excited to see how he goes in the next couple of games."

Now, Sri Lanka will clash with New Zealand in Colombo on Wednesday, whereas England will take on Pakistan on Tuesday at the same venue.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Sri Lanka's batting collapse was painful to watch. 95 all out? That's just not acceptable for a team playing at home. They need to seriously work on their technique against quality spin, something our Indian batsmen have mastered over the years.
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Aman W
Phil Salt's innings was the difference. Scoring 60+ on that tricky pitch was a match-winning knock. England's depth is scary - even when Buttler isn't firing, others step up. Our team needs similar bench strength.
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Sarah B
Respectfully, while it was a comprehensive win, the article focuses a lot on England's praise. The analysis of *why* Sri Lanka failed so badly, especially on home soil, is a bit shallow. The pitch reading and adaptation by England was the real story.
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Karthik V
Will Jacks is turning out to be a proper all-rounder for them. 3 wickets and 21 runs! England always finds these multi-dimensional players. Hope our young guys like Jaiswal and Dube are watching and learning. The game is changing!
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Nisha Z
Birthday win must feel amazing! 😄 But seriously, 12 straight wins over Sri Lanka? That's a mental block now for the Lankans. Their next match vs NZ is a must-win. As a neutral fan from India, I just want to see some good, competitive cricket.

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