Summary

  • 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

  1. Postpublished at 09:40 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Stephan Shemilt
    BBC Sport in Adelaide

    "It's absolutely torturous if you're an England fan. Walking around an increasingly chilly Adelaide Oval, there's barely a smile for those supporting Eoin Morgan's men, watching on as Ian Bell and Joe Root hit the field with regularity. Still the Bangladesh drum beats. That fella is going to have a sore arm tomorrow."

  2. Eng 121-2 (Bell 63, Root 10)published at 09:39 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    England are struggling to pierce the outfield at the moment. The surface seems to be slowing and there's more onus on the batsmen to force things. That doesn't come naturally to Root or Bell. When do they decide to twist?

  3. Appeal - not outpublished at 09:36 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Hearts in mouths time as Bell swings and misses. Keeper and bowler go up but the umpire says no.

  4. Postpublished at 09:34 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Hello again. My wife bought a fancy new kettle recently. It has a screen telling you the temperature of the water as it comes towards boiling point. At the moment, I reckon this match it hovering at around the 75-degree mark, but given the way England are playing, it looks for all the world as though we'll see some bubbles before the morning is out.

  5. Eng 118-2 (target 276)published at 09:33 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Nice shot, Joe. A short ball from Rubel is middled to the mid-wicket boundary. Meat and drink for a batsman as good as the young Yorkie.

    To take you through to the close, here's BBC Sport's one-day finisher, Sam Sheringham.

  6. Postpublished at 09:33 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Athar Ali Khan
    Former Bangladesh all-rounder

    "Bangladesh don't produce these quicker surfaces in domestic competition - we are planning to produce these types of pitches, as it will create better cricketers for when they go overseas."

    Listen to Test Match Special commentary by clicking on the audio icon.

  7. Eng 111-2 (need 165 from 156)published at 09:29 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Neither Ian Bell nor Joe Root are showing any inclination to put their foot to the pedal. It's the type of chase an Englishman loves, none of this 380-plays-340 nonsense. To be fair, it's going well in Adelaide. England are putting in a flawless performance here - they just need Neil Fairbrother to come in and finish it off.

    When Ian Bell does decide to go aerial, the ball plugs in the outfield at long-on just inches away from the boundary, turning a four into a three.

  8. Postpublished at 09:29 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Geoffrey Boycott
    Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special

    "Bangladesh have done quite well in the last ten minutes, and the last three overs. There have been a lot of dot balls and no four balls. The Bangladesh fielders can feel the pressure and are clapping each other on. England are feeling the heat - I sense there is a lot of rattling going on from the fielders."

    Listen to Test Match Special commentary by clicking on the audio icon.

  9. Where are the sixes?published at 09:27 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Sam Sheringham, BBC Sport

    "In 33 Twenty20 internationals for England, Alex Hales has struck 34 sixes. In eight one-day internationals, he has only hit one.

    "His strike rate in ODIs is 71.83, worse than any of his team-mates except Jimmy Anderson, and considerably worse than Jonathan Trott (77.06) and Alastair Cook (77.13).

    "There were one or two encouraging signs today but Hales is struggling to live up to his reputation as an explosive top order player and you get the feeling he is going to have to let himself go a bit if he is going to nail down a place in this team."

    Alex HalesImage source, Getty Images
  10. Eng 105-2 (target 276)published at 09:24 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    It'll be a nice day in Adelaide tomorrow. How do I know? Pink sky at night, shepherd's delight. It's a lovely, balmy evening in South Australia and England continue to pace themselves towards their target. It's all very binary from Eoin Morgan's men at the moment, that over reading 1-0-0-0-1-0.

  11. Text 81111published at 09:22 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Tom in London: We aren't a great one day side but it's almost as if people want us to lose. The bowling wasn't horrendous, especially with Jimmy finding some form, and we've made a decent start. I'm putting my neck out. 276-4. 47th over.

  12. Eng 103-2 (Bell 52, Root 3)published at 09:19 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Joe Root is a bit like a meerkat while he waits for the ball to he delivered. He stands tall, looking out through his helmet grille at the predators waiting to pounce on any mistake he makes. A lofted drive brings a single and he scurries to the safety of the non-striker's end. Two singles, steady as she goes.

  13. Postpublished at 09:19 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Athar Ali Khan
    Former Bangladesh all-rounder

    "I would like to see Shakib Al Hasan replace Arafat Sunny - you need your best bowlers bowling at the new batsman."

  14. Join the debate at #bbccricketpublished at 09:18 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Mark Salen: Get ready for the England batting collapse in 3,2,1..

  15. Eng 101-2 (target 276)published at 09:15 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Ian Bell exudes control, he's knocking the ball about like he's having a net. He makes the game look so easy, but you're never quite sure if he'll lob up a catch to mid-off any time soon. England pass their team 100.

    Ian BellImage source, AP
  16. Join the debate at #bbccricketpublished at 09:15 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Juxtaposed: Tim Nielsen on TMS [entry at 11 overs] is right. Spinners try to spin balls but sometimes can't. Only commentators pretend that it was deliberate.

  17. 50 for Ian Bell (off 66 balls, seven fours)published at 09:13 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    A gentle single into the leg side, a canter to the non-striker's end and a raise of the bat. That's 34 international half-centuries for Ian Bell. Now to convert it.

    Ian Bell gets to 50.Image source, Getty Images
  18. Postpublished at 09:13 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Geoffrey Boycott
    Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special

    "England have to get five an over, keep wickets in hand then let Buttler hit a few boundaries at the end. But players like Buttler and Glenn Maxwell can't play if they fear getting out - they need to play with freedom, and have the latitude to do their own thing."

  19. Scorecard updatepublished at 09:12 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    England 97-2 (20 overs)

    Batsmen: Bell 49*, Root 0*

    Fall of wickets: 43-1 (Moeen 19), 97-2 (Hales 27)

    Bowling figures: Mortaza 5-0-30-1, Hossain 3-0-20-0, Sunny 5-0-22-0, Shakib Al Hasan 4-0-10-0, Ahmed 2-0-8-0, Rahman 1-0-5-0

    Bangladesh 275-7 (50 overs): Mahmudullah 103, Mushfiqur 89

    England won toss

    Full scorecard

  20. Eng 97-2 (target 276)published at 09:11 Greenwich Mean Time 9 March 2015

    Joe Root is greeted to the crease with a Mortaza jaffa which is millimetres away from finding the outside edge. Nervous yet?