T20 World Cup: England's clash with Australia abandoned in Melbourne to leave Group 1 wide open
29 October, 2022
England move to second in Group 1, based on their superior net run-rate, while Australia also sit on three points following abandonment; rain also washes out Ireland vs Afghanistan earlier in the day at the same venue
England's hopes of returning to winning ways at the T20 World Cup were ruined by rain as their Super 12s clash against Australia was abandoned without a ball being bowled in Melbourne.
The scheduled toss at 6.30pm local time (8.30am BST) was pushed back due to persistent rain at the MCG, which had already seen Ireland's clash with Afghanistan at the same venue cancelled without any play.
A pitch inspection took place an hour later and the umpires returned for a second time at 8.15pm (10.15am BST) to assess the outfield, which remained extremely damp in several areas despite the rain temporarily halting. The match was eventually abandoned after a third inspection at 9.50pm local time, shortly after another heavy shower, with the pitch deemed unsafe for any play to take place.
The decision came nearly an hour before the scheduled cut-off time, although it was decided the pitch would not have dried enough to get a minimum of five overs per side required to constitute a game.
What does a no-result mean?
Defeat for either side would have severely hampered their hopes of progressing to the semi-finals, while a share of the spoils offers both teams a reprieve with two rounds of fixtures in the Super 12s remaining.
Both sides earn one point from the no-result and England, who suffered a shock defeat to Ireland in another rain-affected match on Wednesday, move to second in the Group 1 table based on their superior net run-rate.
Australia, who also won and lost once in their opening two matches before today's abandoned clash, remain level on three points with England and Ireland but sit in fourth ahead of their final Super 12 fixtures.
MCG surface 'was going to be a real issue'
England's Jos Buttler: "It was due to a be a massive occasion, a full house against Australia, one of the biggest games of your career, so we are very disappointed.
"We have retained full faith in the group, we haven't become a bad team overnight, we are full of match winners and are looking forward to the rest of the tournament."
Australia's Aaron Finch: "The outfield was drenched, it was as wet as I have ever seen it. I think the run-ups were an issue and the inner circle. It comes down to player safety. If you are trying to run out there, it was going to be a real issue."
Source: www.skysports.com