Warne: Moores in troublepublished at 12:27 GMT 9 March 2015
Australia legend Shane Warne on Twitter: England had the wrong team, the wrong style of play & everyone could see it. Tonight's result not a shock, I feel for Morgan, coach is in trouble.
England knocked out of World Cup
Bangladesh beat England by 15 runs
Bangladesh reach quarter-finals
Bang 275-7: Mahmudullah 103, Mushfiqur 89
England 260 (48.3): Buttler 65, Rubel 4-53
NZ, Aus & Sri Lanka also qualify from Pool A
Sam Sheringham and Marc Higginson
Australia legend Shane Warne on Twitter: England had the wrong team, the wrong style of play & everyone could see it. Tonight's result not a shock, I feel for Morgan, coach is in trouble.
Geoffrey Boycott
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"You need individuality, originality, flair, and you need different players. The task is to get the players to play their own way, to their full ability, without fear."
Still reeling? It's time to get voting. We want to know just how bad England's World Cup elimination is. Are you shocked, or did you expect this? You can vote on this web page, or by using the voting tab on mobile, and the vote will close at 12:45 GMT. Terms and conditions are here.
Here's some reaction from listeners to the BBC's Bengali Service on Facebook:
Peter Sajib Bairagee: "Well done Bangladesh… you are sons of tigers!"
Arundhuti Chowdhury: "Breathtaking moments like today are the key elements that make sport so wonderful. Congrats Bangladesh."
England head coach Peter Moores, speaking to Sky Sports: "We feel hollow, we haven't played well enough. I don't know what to say, what to feel... you feel like you've let people down. I don't think we bowled as well as we could have done in the middle but we started well and ended well. The bowlers haven't bowled as well as they wanted to do, that's been reflected in results.
"We should have chased that down tonight. We haven't got a settled team, we lost two key players at the top of the order - Jonathan Trott was our number three - we accept that and move on from it. We picked the side we thought was the best team. We went for more explosive batters but we know historically we were taking a risk because more experienced teams do better in World Cups.
"I don't think Eoin Morgan is a bad captain, just because we lost tonight. The analysis we do is not how it is talked about in the press. That's not the issue, we just haven't played well enough."
Mick in Tunbridge Wells: We have eleven players who appear to be talented cricketers, but they make silly mistakes and don't know how to time run chases. Suggests the coaching is at fault to me.
Tom in Cambridge: After the arrogance of sacking KP, this is exactly what England deserve.
Alwyn Peter Otter: Get rid of the useless lot and start again picking the best players not just their favourite yes men.
The heart bleeds Peter. I hate to say it, but judging by our inboxes you're not getting much sympathy from Joe Public.
England coach Peter Moores, speaking to TMS: When you exit a World Cup and don't get through to the quarter-finals, of course you look at what you could have done better. We will do that, but now is not the time to do it - from a personal point of view, it is too emotional."
TMS sign off. "Join us on Friday if you can bear it," says Aggers, clearly relishing that Afghanistan showdown
Moores is talking to TV now. "We'll have to analyse the game data," he deadpans. Therein lies the problem, methinks.
Ex-England all-rounder Ian Botham on Twitter: Well done Bangladesh! England pathetic! When are we going to pick the selectors to pick a team for the one-day format? Time for change.
Talkback radio station 3AW in Melbourne: "JUST IN! Bangladesh has avoided embarrassment, holding off a brave challenge from World Cup minnow England by 15 runs in Adelaide."
Image source, Getty ImagesI wonder what Alastair Cook is feeling as he muses between squeezes on the udders of the cows at his wife's farm. Things certainly couldn't have gone any worse with him in a charge.
England coach Peter Moores, speaking to TMS: "It is hard to get round it - I thought 275 was chaseable and we didn't do it. It is hard to analyse anything at the moment. I have been in the dressing room and everybody has their heads down. They are all gutted. We got off to a reasonable start - most people thought spin would be the problem on that pitch but we got bowled out by the seamers. At some point we have to look at one-day cricket full stop and where we go with it."
England 260 all out (48.3 overs) - Bangladesh won by 15 runs
Fall of wickets: 43-1 (Moeen 19), 97-2 (Hales 27), 121-3 (Bell 63), 121-4 (Morgan 0), 132-5 (Taylor 1), 163-6 (Root 29), 238-7 (Buttler 65), 238-8 (Jordan 0), 260-9 (Broad 9), 260-10 (Anderson 0)
Not out batsman: Woakes 42
Bowling figures: Mortaza 10-0-48-2, Rubel 9.3-0-53-4, Sunny 8-0-42-0, Shakib 10-0-41-0, Taskin 9-0-59-2, Sabbir 2-0-13-0
Bangladesh 275-7 (50 overs): Mahmudullah 103, Mushfiqur 89
England won toss
TV are replaying the scenes from the final wicket. As the Bangladeshi players rejoiced, Joe Root - sitting alongside coach Peter Moores - blew a bubble with the green gum in his mouth. It inflated briefly, then popped and flattened against his lips. A fitting metaphor, for England's run chase, and indeed their entire World Cup.
Geoffrey Boycott
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"They looked more energetic, they put in a lot of effort and I thought they were up for it. The pitch was flat and the outfield was quick, and you get 275 more often than not. They did alright until the Bangladesh seamers started bowling tight to Bell and root, and the batsmen could not rotate the strike."
England captain Eoin Morgan, speaking at the presentation: "It was pretty poor, to be knocked out of the World Cup is unbelievably disappointing. At half-time I thought the boys had bowled well but with the short boundary and with the wicket with playing the way it was, the target was within reach.
"I'm gutted, we've struggled and fallen away since we arrived here. We wanted to get to the quarter-finals and from there fight through three games. The changes which we made at the start of the tournament were necessary and I believe they were right to be made. It comes down to performance, some of our guys performed but we didn't do it as a unit.
"That's happened too often since we landed in Australia. I've no idea what happens from here. It's a surprise we've been knocked out so early."
Presentation time. Here comes the England skipper Eoin Morgan, his dead eyes betraying the bitter disappointment of his team's utter failure. "I've no idea what happens from here," he mutters. Here comes more...
Geoffrey Boycott
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"You just play the reserves against Afghanistan, pick anyone who hasn't played a game against them - some of the players won't get up for this properly. They will try, and they will go through the motions, but this is as low as you can get."
Listen to Test Match Special commentary by clicking on the audio icon.
Bangladesh centurion Mahmudullah: "The way the boys fought in the middle was very special. We still believed that if we got the wickets, we would have a chance to get in again. If we play to the best of our ability we can beat anyone."