Ireland's Stirling Rues Missed Chances, Death Bowling in T20 WC Loss

Ireland captain Paul Stirling pinpointed poor execution in the death overs and sloppy fielding as key reasons for his team's 20-run defeat to Sri Lanka. He acknowledged that Sri Lanka's experience, particularly in closing out both innings, was the decisive difference in the match. Stirling admitted his team felt they were in a good position but couldn't match Sri Lanka's intensity at the crucial moments. He also highlighted that spin bowling is likely to dominate phases of play throughout the tournament.

Key Points: Ireland Captain Stirling Analyzes T20 World Cup Defeat to Sri Lanka

  • Death bowling execution cost Ireland
  • Fielding was sloppy and disappointing
  • Sri Lanka's experience proved decisive
  • Spin bowling to be key in tournament
2 min read

T20 WC: Ireland captain Stirling rues missed chances, awry execution in death overs

Paul Stirling reflects on Ireland's 20-run loss, citing poor death bowling and fielding lapses. Read his full post-match analysis.

"I think when the match was on the lines, we probably weren't as clinical as we wanted to be. - Paul Stirling"

Colombo, Feb 8

Ireland captain Paul Stirling admitted his side fell short in key moments during their 20-run defeat to Sri Lanka in the 2026 Men's T20 World Cup Group B clash, saying missed chances in the field and execution going away in death overs with the ball caused their downfall.

"To be honest, probably halfway through, we thought maybe they got 15-20 too many. So look, I think at the very start of the day, we would have been happy chasing 160. That's sort of what the note said on the wicket out here, that 160 was chaseable. So yeah, I think we could find 20 runs pretty much anywhere in the match," said Stirling in the post-match presentation ceremony.

Reflecting on their poor death overs bowling, which led to Sri Lanka making 163/6, especially after not giving a single boundary in the middle overs, Stirling said, "I think when the match was on the lines, we probably weren't as clinical as we wanted to be. A little bit sloppy in the field, which is disappointing, but plenty of areas that we need to come back with in a couple of days' time against Australia.

"Look, I think experience told today - Sri Lankan teams at the end, in both innings, I think that was the difference really. Those 20 runs they defended well at the backend. We had plenty of wickets in hand. We thought we were in good positions all the way through, and then they really upped the ante and put that squeeze on."

Asked about the decisive moment in the game, Stirling said, "Oh, a bit of everything, to be honest. I think you could sit back and reflect and pick those 20 runs out of anywhere. But at the end of the day, it felt like they were 20 runs better than us throughout the whole match. So plenty for us to work on and come back stronger."

He also underlined the role of spin in the tournament. "I think spin is going to be a challenge in this competition. Certainly, it wasn't coming on to the bat as much as we thought it could have been. So looks like spin is going to be dominating parts and phases of this game."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
He's right about spin dominating. Asian teams always have that edge in these conditions. Ireland's death bowling was poor, but full credit to Sri Lanka for holding their nerve. Good learning experience for the Irish side.
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Rohit P
As an Indian fan watching, this just shows how crucial the last 5 overs are in T20. One bad over can lose you the match. Ireland will be kicking themselves. On to the next one!
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Sarah B
Respect to Stirling for being so honest in the post-match. Many captains would make excuses. Identifying death bowling and fielding as issues is the first step to fixing them. Tough loss.
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Vikram M
"Experience told today" - that's the key quote. Associate nations often play well but lack that final killer instinct that teams like Sri Lanka have developed over decades. The gap is closing, though!
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Karthik V
While I appreciate the analysis, I feel the captain is being a bit too kind. Saying "they were 20 runs better" sounds like accepting defeat easily. At this level, you need to be ruthless and pinpoint exact failures, not generalise. Just my two cents.
M
Michael C
Interesting point about the wicket playing slower than expected. Shows how important adapting to conditions

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