World Twenty20: England power past New Zealand to reach final
England powered into their second
World Twenty20 final as they hammered
New Zealand by seven wickets in
Delhi.
Batting first, the previously unbeaten
Black Caps raced to 89-1 after 10 overs, with
Colin Munro blasting 46.
But England came back superbly to restrict them to 153-8, with
Ben Stokes taking three wickets at the death as New Zealand scored just 20 off their last four overs.
Jason Roy hit a 44-ball 78 as England reached the target in 17.1 overs.
Eoin Morgan's side will play
West Indies or
India in
Kolkata on Sunday.
Making it to the final completes a remarkable turnaround from last year's
World Cup, where England were humiliatingly knocked out in the group stages, while New Zealand reached the final.
But
England women were unable to win their semi-final, falling to a five-run defeat by
Australia earlier in the day.
Coming into this tournament, Roy averaged just 13 from eight
T20 international innings and had never passed 30, and he was under pressure for his place after a poor limited-overs campaign against
South Africa.
But the 25-year-old Surrey batsman is now the third-highest run-scorer in the tournament after surely his finest innings in an England shirt.
Roy savaged the New Zealand bowlers from the off, taking
Corey Anderson for four fours from his first over, and never looked back.
Brutal on the pull and off-driving powerfully, he hit a total of 13 boundaries before he was bowled by
Ish Sodhi.
England's fielding fightback turns the game
At the halfway stage in
New Zealand's innings, England had conceded 12 fours and two sixes and were looking at a chase in excess of
200.
But they fought back quite brilliantly, as first spin and then outstanding death bowling from the seamers slowed the New Zealand juggernaut to a virtual halt.
Moeen Ali had been smashed for 32 runs from his two overs against
Sri Lanka, but here he wrested control, dismissing the fluent
Kane Williamson with a brilliant return catch and conceding just 10 runs from his two overs.
Corey Anderson and
Ross Taylor steered New Zealand to 133-3 after 16 overs, but from there
Stokes and
Chris Jordan destroyed their hopes of a good total.
Jordan, consistently hitting a perfect yorker length, had
Taylor caught at extra cover, while Stokes accounted for
Anderson,
Luke Ronchi and
Mitchell Santner, all caught on the boundary.
New Zealand managed just one boundary in the last four overs - the least expensive ever bowled by England in a T20 international.
New surroundings stump New Zealand
New Zealand entered the match having won all four of their group matches, and 12 of their last 13 in global tournaments.
But - just as in the World Cup final, when they froze at the
Melbourne Cricket Ground - they appeared to be
undone by a change of location, as they failed to adapt from the low-scoring conditions in which they had played their previous games to Delhi's more batsman-friendly track.
The Black Caps had defended scores of 126, 142 and
145 earlier in the tournament, but England had broken the back of the chase in amassing 49-0 by the time
Williamson turned to his leading wicket-taker Mitchell Santner after four overs.
New Zealand's defeat means that they miss out on a first World Twenty20 final, and ensures that the record of no side ever having won the tournament undefeated will continue.
The stats you need to know
England have hit 34 sixes, the most of any team in the tournament. South Africa are second with 28.
Joe Root is now the leading run-scorer in the tournament proper, with 195 runs.
Jason Roy's 78 was the second-highest score in a World Twenty20 semi-final, behind
Tillakaratne Dilshan's unbeaten 96 at the
Oval in 2009.
Ben Stokes became only the eighth bowler - and the first
Englishman - to take three wickets in a World Twenty20 semi-final.
There is guaranteed to be a repeat winner of the World Twenty20 for the first time; England were champions in
2010, India in
2007, West Indies in
2012.
What they said
England captain Eoin Morgan: "I don't think it could have been much better.
Maybe we would have liked to start better with the ball, but we did well to peg it back.
"Making a final is the kind of thing you dream of as a kid.
Everyone in the dressing room has worked tremendously hard and made a lot of sacrifices to put us in this position.