England's T20 World Cup Hopes Dented by 30-Run Loss to West Indies

England suffered a 30-run defeat to West Indies in their T20 World Cup group stage match, chasing 197. Captain Harry Brook admitted his team was "a little bit careful" and failed to execute their plans, particularly as expected dew did not arrive to aid batting. West Indies' total was built on Sherfane Rutherford's unbeaten 76 and crucial late hitting from Jason Holder. The loss leaves England third in Group C standings, behind West Indies and Scotland.

Key Points: England's T20 WC Loss: Brook Admits Team Was "Careful"

  • England bundled out for 166 chasing 197
  • West Indies spinners take 6 key wickets
  • Sherfane Rutherford's 76* powers Windies total
  • Defeat leaves England 3rd in Group C
  • Brook cites lack of dew and poor execution
4 min read

T20 WC: Captain Brook says England "didn't execute well" after 30-run loss against Windies

England captain Harry Brook says his team "didn't execute well" and was "a little bit careful" in their 30-run T20 World Cup defeat to West Indies.

"We were probably a little bit careful, myself included. - Harry Brook"

Mumbai, February 12

England captain Harry Brook said the team didn't execute to the best of their ability and believed his side was "a little bit careful," following a 30-run defeat to West Indies in both teams' second group-stage match at the ongoing T20 World Cup 2026, on Wednesday.

England, while chasing 197 runs, were bundled out at 166 in 19 overs, with all-rounder Sam Curran (43 runs) being the top scorer in their innings.

England made a quick start to their chase, with Phil Salt scoring 30 of the first 38 runs inside the opening 3.2 overs. However, West Indies' spinners -- Roston Chase, Gudakesh Motie and Akeal Hosein -- slowed the scoring after the Powerplay. The trio claimed six of the last nine wickets as England lost those wickets for just 92 runs in 12.3 overs.

The defeat leaves England in third on the Group C standings, behind West Indies and Scotland.

Brook admitted his team may have been too cautious while chasing the 197-run target, saying they expected the Wankhede pitch to improve, but it did not.

"One thing I would say is we were probably a little bit careful. Chasing nearly 200 is always a big ask and like I said we didn't think - we thought the pitch would get a little bit better and it'd slide onto the bat a bit more and that didn't happen, but yeah - like I said we were probably a little bit careful, myself included," Harry Brook said in the post-match presentation, as quoted by the ICC website.

Brook also admitted England did not execute well enough with the ball and felt they conceded 15-20 runs too many. He said the target was chaseable, but the expected dew did not arrive, making batting harder than anticipated. He also credited West Indies as a powerful side.

"We probably didn't execute as well as we usually can. We didn't quite execute well enough with the ball and they probably got 15, 20 too many. We thought it was chasable, definitely. We obviously planned for dew and it didn't quite get as dew as we thought, and it didn't quite slide onto the bat as much as we were expecting. But yeah, T20 cricket's such a fickle game and the West Indians are such a powerful side," Brook said.

In the match, England captain Harry Brook won the toss and elected to field first.

After West Indies openers Shai Hope and Brandon King were dismissed inside the first two overs, West Indies batting line-up contributed with crucial scores to take the team to 196/6 in 20 overs. Shimron Hetmyer (23) and Roston Chase (34) gave the two-time T20 World Cup champions some momentum with a 47-run stand in 28 balls, taking them to 55/3 in the powerplay.

Sherfane Rutherford slammed five sixes and two fours for a timely half-century. He struck seven sixes and two fours during an unbeaten 76, and stitched important partnerships with Powell (51 for the fifth wicket) and Jason Holder (61 for the sixth wicket). Jason Holder then shifted his gears when he hammered three sixes off all-rounder Sam Curran in the 17th over. Holder's 33 off just 17 balls helped West Indies score 54 runs in the last four overs as they crossed the 190-run mark.

For England, Jofra Archer (1/48) and Sam Curran (1/36) scalped one wicket each. Jamie Overton (2/33) and Adil Rashid (2/16) were also among the wicket takers.

Chasing 197, opener Phil Salt got England to a blistering start. The right-handed batter hammered 24 runs off Jason Holder's second over.

However, during the fourth over, Romario Shepherd removed dangerous Salt for 30 off 14 balls, with four boundaries and two sixes. Jacob Bethell joined Jos Buttler on the crease and continued with a flurry of boundaries. England reached 67/1 after the end of the power play.

Spinners Roston Chase and Gudakesh Motie provided the dream start in the middle overs for West Indies. Chase dismissed Buttler for 21 runs, and Motie took the wicket of Banton in consecutive overs after the Powerplay.

Skipper Harry Brook (17) came into the middle to support Bethell (33), who was removed by Motie's spin as England slipped to 131/5 after the end of the 14th over. In the very next over, Chase joined Motie by trapping Will Jacks plumb to leave England reeling at 134/6.

Towards the end, Sam Curran hit an unbeaten 43-run knock off 30 balls, but England were bundled out for 166 runs and lost the contest by 30 runs to register their second consecutive win in the ongoing T20 World Cup. For West Indies, Gudakesh Motie (3/33) and Roston Chase (2/29) were the key performers with the ball.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Brook's admission is honest, but "being careful" chasing 197 at Wankhede? That's a tactical error. The pitch has been playing true this season. England misread the conditions completely. Credit to Rutherford for that fantastic innings under pressure.
A
Ananya R
Yaar, this makes Group C so interesting now! Scotland above England? 😲 Windies look like serious contenders. Their middle order firepower is scary. Hope India is taking notes on how to handle such aggressive batting line-ups.
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Vikram M
The difference was the finish. Windies got 54 in last 4 overs! Holder's assault on Curran was the turning point. England's death bowling, especially from Archer, was expensive. In India, you simply can't afford to leak that many at the death.
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Karthik V
Respectful criticism for Brook: blaming the lack of dew sounds like an excuse. Good teams adapt. Our Indian team also sometimes falls into this trap. You have to play the pitch in front of you, not the one you expected.
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Priya S
Sam Curran fought well at the end, but it was too little too late. The collapse after Salt's wicket was painful to watch. It reminds me of some of our Indian batting collapses in the past! Hope England can bounce back, makes for a better World Cup.

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