World Twenty20 2012: England capitulate against India

England in a spin as Colombo capitulation gives India momentum heading into Super Eights

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UPDATED:

17:01 GMT, 23 September 2012

England were comprehensively beaten by India in their World Twenty20 Group A match in Colombo on Sunday.

Having been set an achievable 171 to win, Stuart Broad's side capitulated against spin as they were skittled out for just 80 runs.

Shocker: Hales (above) and Morgan (below) are both clean bowled

Shocker: Hales (above) and Morgan (below) are both clean bowled

Shocker: Hales (above) and Morgan (below) are both clean bowled
SCORECARD

Click here for the full scorecard from Colombo

Rohit Sharma passed 50 for India, whose leading wicket-taker was Harbhajan Singh with four.

More to follow…

Plenty to ponder: Luke Wright trudges back to the pavilion

Plenty to ponder: Luke Wright trudges back to the pavilion

Kumar Sangakkara makes Wisden history

Sangakkara makes history as Sri Lankan is nominated for two Wisden awards

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UPDATED:

08:47 GMT, 11 April 2012

Sri Lanka batsman Kumar Sangakkara has become the first man to be named simultaneously as Wisden's leading cricketer in the world and one of its five cricketers of the year.

The elegant left-hander compiled 2,267 international runs in the three formats last year – no other player broke 2,000 – with five centuries and 13 fifties, and uniquely reached four figures in both Tests and one-day internationals for the third time.

A century in probably his last Test on English soil at Hampshire helped ensure he was named as one of the cricketers of the year, the award conferred by the publication's editor – a mantle taken on this year by Sportsmail's Lawrence Booth – on the individuals who have most shaped the English cricketing summer, and which a player can win only once.

Making history: Sangakkara (left)

Making history: Sangakkara (left)

'I had always wanted a Test hundred at Lord's but, if that was not to be, then anywhere in England,' Sangakkara tells David Hopps in the Almanack, published on Thursday.

'The Rose Bowl felt as if it might be my last opportunity.'

Sangakkara also won praise for his delivery of the MCC's Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture, reproduced in part in Wisden, in which he confronted the level of government interference in his country's cricket.

'Writing that speech became a deeply personal experience,' he adds.

'I knew there were ways it could be misinterpreted, but it was a story I felt I needed to tell.'

Elegant: Sangakkara on his way to a century at the Rose Bowl last summer

Elegant: Sangakkara on his way to a century at the Rose Bowl last summer

Joining the 34-year-old as cricketers of the year are fellow veterans Glen
Chapple, Lancashire's title-winning captain and talisman, and
Worcestershire seamer Alan Richardson, the leading wicket-taker in
Division One of last season's LV= County Championship with 73.

England pair Alastair Cook, with 927 Test runs at an average of 84 in addition to his return to the one-day international side as captain, and Tim Bresnan – who took 21 Test wickets at 19, scored 189 runs at 63 and finished the summer with a 100 per ceny winning record from 10 Tests – complete the quintet.

Richardson said: 'To be recognised along world-class cricketers such as Alastair Cook, Tim Bresnan, Glen Chapple and Kumar Sangakkara is a real honour.'

Elsewhere in the Almanack, Booth uses his first editor's notes to address a wide spread of topics, most notably the global shifting of focus towards Twenty20 cricket and the role of the Board of Control for Cricket in India in the governance of the world game.

Nominated: Glen Chapple (right)

Nominated: Glen Chapple (right)

Describing T20 as 'a Pandora's Box masquerading as a panacea', Booth adds: 'Outside England, the Test match increasingly resembles the quiet zone of world cricket's gravy train: respected in theory, ignored in practice.

'The real damage is being done by the prevalence of the two-match series. For any series not involving Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, three Tests must be the minimum.'

On the BCCI's power, Booth – the youngest Wisden editor in 72 years – writes: 'India have ended up with a special gift: the clout to shape an entire sport. But too often their game appears driven by the self-interest of the few.

'Other countries run the game along self-serving lines too … but none wields the BCCI's power, nor shares their responsibility.'

Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2012: 149th Edition, published April 12, 2012 by John Wisden & Co.

Prizefighter: Adil Anwar wins over Tyrone Nurse

Anwar sets sights on British title after thrilling Prizefighter win over Nurse

Champion: Adil Anwar won Prizefighter

Champion: Adil Anwar won Prizefighter

Adil Anwar is gunning for a British title shot after defeating Tyrone Nurse in the final of the Prizefighter Light Welterweights II at Wolverhampton’s Civic Hall.

Leeds' Anwar went into the competition unbeaten and maintained his fine record with a convincing win over Nurse, who suffered defeat for the first time in his professional career.

Anwar used his jab to keep Nurse at bay and rocked the
22 year-old with a late flurry to secure a unanimous decision that he believes
pushes him into title contention, with Brit king Ashley Theophane the chief
target.

'Tyrone is a good operator but I was a lot faster and a lot slicker,' said Anwar. 'The jab was the secret tonight and now I want to test myself against the bigger names. I won the English Welterweight title under the radar and I've been avoided. Now I have won Prizefighter live on Sky Sports – without getting out of second gear – I've shown I bring a lot to the table.

'This was my first televised performance and that has been frustrating for me as I think that I've got the lot, and that people will want to watch me. I bought a lot of great fans down with me but at the end, everyone was supporting me because I'm entertaining, and that's what it's all about.

'I wanted to shine and I think I have. I'm a risk taker and tonight could've been seen as a risk, but I was hugely confident of winning this and I think this will open big doors for me now.

'I want to fight Ashley Theophane but I don't care who I fight really. I know I have the goods and now I've won this, I don't need to go hunting, I've proved I've got the what it takes to do big things.'

Kell Brook and Matthew Hatton performed the live draw and the 24 year-old was picked to face Barry Morrison in the third quarter-final of the night and the Leeds man started as he meant to go on with his slick work dominating the former British champion.

Blow: Anwar beat Tyrone Nurse in the final at Wolverhampton's Civic Hall

Blow: Anwar beat Tyrone Nurse in the final at Wolverhampton's Civic Hall

Anwar then met a fresh John Watson in the second semi-final, after the Liverpudlian took just 100 seconds to defeat local favourite Dean Harrison, with Watson flooring the Wolverhampton fighter then unleashing a barrage of punches that forced referee John Keane to step in – Harrison announced his intention to hang up his gloves shortly after.

Although Watson had saved some energy with the early stoppage, Anwar won every round with the judges in their semi-final, and was beginning to enjoy himself as he found Watson’s style to his liking and mixed great movement with some flashy shots.

Nurse’s journey to the final was a trickier affair having drawn one of the favourites in Dale Miles in the second quarter-final. Their fight moved into what looked like a winner-takes-all final round but Miles had already been cut above the right eye and a clash of heads in the final stanza opened it up again, forcing a disappointing end for Miles in what was building into a cracking final three minutes.

Nurse then faced the experienced Young Mutley in the first semi-final of the night after Mutley had edged a cagey opening bout with Mark Lloyd on a split decision. Nurse was impressive in withstanding a late rally from Mutley, with the youngster using his superior speed and movement to take the opening rounds to reach the final.