Australia’s Josh Hazlewood says to knock England out of the T20 World Cup would be “in our best interests as well as probably everyone else” after thrashing Namibia.
Australia chased down Namibia’s first-innings total in just five overs and four balls to stay unbeaten in the T20 World Cup on Tuesday.
Adam Zampa took 4-12 from four overs as they stormed into the Super 8s with one Group B match to spare.
Australia’s final Group B match against Scotland in St Lucia on Saturday could now decide England’s fate, with skipper Jos Buttler knowing they must beat Oman and Namibia in their remaining group matches.
“In this tournament, you potentially come up against England at some stage again. And as I said, they’re probably one of the top few teams, on the day or, you know, we’ve had some real struggles against them in T20 cricket,” said Hazlewood.
“If we can get them out of the tournament then that’s in our best interests as well as probably everyone else.
“It’s a weird thing to say. I’ve never really been in this position before as a team. I don’t think so. Whether we have discussions or not or we just try and play it again the way we did tonight. Again, that’ll be up to people, not me.”
Australia’s final Group B match is against Scotland in St Lucia in the early hours of Sunday from 1am BST, while England face Namibia in Antigua on Saturday at 6pm – live on Sky Sports. First, England take on Oman on Thursday at 8pm.
Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from the Premier League and EFL, plus darts, cricket, F1, tennis, golf and so much more.
England Women head coach Jon Lewis says his side are in "a really good place" for the upcoming Ashes series in Australia, which he
ODI squad: Heather Knight (captain), Tammy Beaumont, Lauren Bell, Maia Bouchier, Alice Capsey, Kate Cross, Charlie Dean, Sophia Dunkley, Sophie Ecclestone, Laur
England have named their squads for the Women’s Ashes, beginning in Australia next month. Heather Knight will lead all three teams as England and Australi
Daily life is less glamorous for Bal. He works as an accountant, though he is also a semi-professional cricketer, playing for Didcot and having recently signed