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September 28, 2012
Star Sport


 

Charles, Gayle lead Windies past England

West Indies' bowler Ravi Rampaul (centre) and teammates Kieron Pollard (left) and Marlon Samuels celebrate the dismissal of England's batsman Luke Wright, not seen, during the ICC World Twenty20 Super-Eight match in Pallekele, Sri Lanka, yesterday.AP

PALLEKELE, Sri Lanka (CMC):

A career-best 84 from Johnson Charles and a typically enterprising 58 from Chris Gayle trumped half-centuries from Eoin Morgan and Alex Hales to give West Indies a 15-run victory over title-holders England in the Twenty20 World Cup yesterday.

Charles smoked 10 fours and three sixes from 56 balls, earning the Man-of-the-Match award, and Gayle smashed six fours and four sixes off 35 balls, sharing 103 for the first wicket, as West Indies posted 179 for five from their stipulated 20 overs in the Super-Eight match at the Pallekele International Stadium.

Ravi Rampaul gave West Indies a bright start to their defence, removing opener Craig Kieswetter and Luke Wright for ducks from successive balls in the opening over, but Morgan gave England hope with an unbeaten 71 and Hales made 68, as the defending champions reached 164 for four in a tense finish.

Marlon Samuels conceded just eight runs from the final over with his uncomplicated off-spin darts with England needing 23 for an unlikely victory.

West Indies earned two points for the result and will face Sri Lanka in a top-of-the-table clash tomorrow at the same venue after the hosts earlier prevailed over New Zealand in a one-over eliminator.

Rampaul had Kieswetter caught at point from a miscued pull with the second ball of the chase before Wright sparred at a rising delivery and gave an edge to Gayle at slip from the next delivery, leaving England no runs for two wickets.

The momentum, however, shifted from West Indies to England when Jonny Bairstow came to the crease and put on 55 for the third wicket with left-hander Hales.

But a brilliant catch on the long-on boundary from Kieron Pollard ended Bairstow's resistance when he tried to clear the boundary with Gayle from the last ball of the 10th over.

West Indies came under attack from Morgan, whose innings included four fours and five sixes from 36 balls, and Hales with five fours and two sixes from 51 balls, as they put on 107 for the third wicket.

Samuels ended the stand with the third-last ball of the match when he had Hales stumped to formally seal England's fate.

Earlier, Charles and Gayle set West Indies up for a big total with their opening stand before a batting collapse almost undermined them.

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