da premier bet: So unexpected was England’s six-wicket triumph over Sri Lanka at the Wanderers, that hindsight might even afford it JFK status, as in where were you when it happened
da brdice: Osman Samiuddin in Johannesburg26-Sep-2009Not that supporting England has ever been a neutral’s thing to do but few will quibble over the significance of England’s six-wicket win over Sri Lanka at the Wanderers. Hindsight might even afford it JFK status, as in where were you when it happened, so unexpected was the triumph. But for now it has blown open Group B and that is precisely how any good tournament should be; that it is this Champions Trophy of all trophies makes it timelier still.Minor battles were won everywhere – James Anderson with the new ball;Stuart Broad’s death overs spell; Owais Shah not getting himself or anyoneelse run out despite his best efforts; Ajantha Mendis seen off, Muttiah Muralitharan conquered; they even had someone in Eoin Morgan who resembledsomething of a modern – and thus not very English – ODI batsman; Paul Collingwood even hit a cover drive for four, which should tell anyone that something out of the ordinary is on the cards.Collingwood was at its centre without ever looking remotely like he hadbeen there, which is generally how he goes about it. His thrust helped setup England’s chase, an unusually fluent hand free of stiff-elbowed chipsand nudges and lit up immeasurably by a monster six over midwicket. He isa likeable sort, with an agreeable wit and a nice line inself-deprecation. So Mendis was thus repelled: “We watched a lot offootage on the computers,” Collingwood said. “When his three fingers are up, we thought: ‘right, it’s going to go away from you’. Then we got out in the middle andit was absolutely….(laughs).”Soon to be England’s most-capped ODI player and one of the rare ones whoplay all three formats, Collingwood had just come off a break enforced upon him by the captain and coach. “You’re going to put two and two together, I guess. Idon’t know if it’s just coincidence or what, but I feel pretty good at themoment. The body feels good. The knee was pretty sore at Hampshire.Straussy [Andrew Strauss] and Andy [Flower] made a strong decision there that I was to be given a good week off. Thankfully, I managed to get the body back into decent shape.”Andrew Strauss’s response, whatever the result, is likely to have beenunderstated and two wins in a row doesn’t yet wipe out their horrors,recent or otherwise. Still, areas will concern him, such as the briefly andwildly schizophrenic nature of their pace attack after Anderson had giventhem such a start.; Graeme Onions and Broad both went for runs, the latterstruggling to find the right length until the death overs.”Sometimes it’s hard to bowl on wickets that are doing a bit,” Strausssaid. “You have to bowl pretty straight and if the ball sort of nips thewrong way, it can go down the leg side. I think we could have been a bitmore disciplined with the ball. But we’re splitting hairs there a littlebit because we started off exceptionally well and that made a bigdifference in the context of the game.”But at least one of his batsmen, Morgan, stayed the course, going on tofinish a game. More often than not Strauss’s batsmen have let him down.Not so here: “Overall, I was just very happy with the intent the batsmenshowed. They took the game to the Sri Lankans. They didn’t let thespinners bowl at us. Colly and Owais Shah played very valuable innings,and then Eoin Morgan did a great finishing job. So, a lot to be pleasedabout and I think we can take a lot of confidence from it.”If we play like that, we’re a dangerous side. We’re not going to betouting ourselves as the winners of the competition at this stage but ifwe can keep getting better, then we’re going to be hard to beat.”This may yet prove to be nothing more than a blip on a radar ofmediocrity, and Strauss’s refusal to be bullish is well-earned. But bybeating Sri Lanka, England have already had an effect on this tournamentand that is something almost no one expected them to do before tonight.






