Three days, two matches, a year older: In ‘night out’ at Pallekele, Harry Brook proves his credentials | Cricket News – The Times of India


Three days, two matches, a year older: In ‘night out’ at Pallekele, Harry Brook proves his credentials | Cricket News – The Times of India
Harry Brook celebrates his century during the T20 World Cup cricket match between England and Pakistan in Pallekele, Sri Lanka. (AP/PTI)

TimesofIndia.com in Kandy: As the adage goes, “tough times don’t last, tough people do.” It syncs beautifully with Harry Brook.In the past few months, the England white-ball captain has been in the news not for his magnificent batting but for his off-field antics. Last year, during the one-day series against New Zealand, he was involved in an altercation with a nightclub bouncer in Wellington. On the same night of the altercation, Brook and England teammate Jacob Bethell were filmed drinking, and the video was later posted on social media.

T20 World Cup: Harry Brook press conference after England vs Pakistan

Brook then lied to the media, saying that he was on his own when he got punched by the nightclub bouncer on England’s tour of New Zealand that preceded the Ashes. He later conceded that it was a lie, as there were others with him and he lied to protect them. Brook was later fined around £30,000 and was given a final warning for his future conduct by the England Cricket Board (ECB).Brook had a frustrating Ashes Down Under, where he managed to cross fifty only twice in ten innings. The, then 26-year-old, finished the Ashes 2025–26 with 358 runs from five Tests at an average of 39.77.In the last two games of the ongoing T20 World Cup, Brook, who celebrated his birthday a couple of days ago, has shown signs of maturity both with the bat and his acumen in the field, which is pivotal for a great leader.

England v Pakistan: ICC Men´s T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026

Harry Brook warms up ahead of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup Super Eight match between England and Pakistan at Pallekele. (Getty Images)

Against Sri Lanka at Pallakele in Kandy, while defending a modest total of 147, his bowling changes and field placements were right on the money. Against Pakistan on Tuesday, it was his bat that did the talking when his team was under immense pressure. Between these two matches, Brook has aged a year and grown in leaps and bounds as a leader.After his sublime century on a track where his fellow teammates struggled, the England white-ball captain admitted that it has been the “hardest” few months for him as a cricketer.“It’s probably been the hardest winter of my life to be honest,” he told reporters after England’s decisive two-wicket win over Pakistan. “There’s been a lot of stuff behind the scenes as well as not behind the scenes, but yes, it was just nice to see some rewards from my hard work away from the ground.”The chosen one

England Pakistan T20 WCup Cricket

England’s captain Harry Brook leaves the ground after losing his wicket during the T20 World Cup cricket match between England and Pakistan in Pallekele, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026. (AP)

Brook made his international debut in a T20I match four years ago in the West Indies. Since then, his graph has only gone in an upward direction.And without any doubt, he has been the poster boy of “Bazball”, the ultra-aggressive, high-risk, and positive style of play adopted by the England men’s Test cricket team under captain Ben Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum.After hitting his maiden T20I hundred on Tuesday night, Brook revealed that it was coach McCullum’s idea that he should bat at No. 3 against Pakistan, citing his good record against them. “Baz is the mastermind there. He had a discussion with me this morning about going up the order and trying to maximise the powerplay and thankfully it paid off,” Brook said with a smile on his face.Under McCullum, Brook first blossomed as a cricketer. Now, the anointed one is developing into a leader as well. McCullum had backed the youngster when he was going through a tough phase. Earlier this month, before the start of the T20 World Cup, McCullum praised the way Harry Brook has dealt with controversies but admitted his white-ball captain is a “work in progress” away from the cricket field.“He’s had a hard time of late off the field, but he’s a tough lad to be able to put that aside and still lead these boys in the manner that he did, and show the tactical nous that he has as a cricketer was outstanding,” McCullum had said after Harry Brook-led England’s 2-1 ODI series victory and a 3-0 clean sweep in T20s against Sri Lanka.“I do sometimes think that people think that Brooky’s not that clever. I couldn’t disagree with that more. He wears his intelligence lightly. He’s got a very good tactical cricket brain.“He’s a work in progress off the field. He’s not alone with that, and that’s our job to help shepherd him through. But on the field, he’s certainly excelling at the moment.”Growing in stature

Harry Brook is first captain to smash century in T20 World Cup; joins Buttler, Malan in elite list of English batters

Harry Brook is first captain to smash century in T20 World Cup; joins Buttler, Malan in elite list of English batters

Harry Brook hit ten fours and four sixes during his sublime knock against Pakistan, and the batter also ran twos nine times, which is something that has never been seen in Brook’s batsmanship.In the last ball of the powerplay, Mohammad Nawaz fired it flat on the stumps. Brook used the depth of the crease to step back and launched the heave straight back over the bowler’s head. There was an oomph about that shot. He did go on to hit three more, but that flat-batted shot sent the signal to the Pakistan camp that, despite them being ahead in the game courtesy of Shaheen Shah Afridi’s three-wicket burst in the powerplay, England were still in the match because their captain was not giving up easily.He did agree that after he got out to Shaheen Shah Afridi and when Nawaz bagged two quick wickets in the 19th over, he started to have a flashback of the Oval Test, where Mohammed Siraj had turned the match around for India.“I thought it was going to be another Oval against India. Thankfully we managed to get over the line and Jof hit that boundary at the end. But yeah, it did get a little bit nervy there and like I said, thankfully we got the win,” he said.

Full credit to Brookie. He put his hand up today to bat at three and he led from the front today. Hopefully, he can keep going for us into the next few games

Jamie Overton

Recently, former England captain Michael Vaughan had slammed Brook for not stepping up in the big match. He did answer Vaughan’s criticism with his knock and then said, “I wasn’t even on my radar to be honest. I just go out there and try and win games of cricket for England and whichever team I’m playing for. Thankfully I’ve managed to do that tonight and we’ve got the main aim which was to get through to the semis.”Brook has also grown as a captain in the dressing room and has earned the respect of the senior pros.After the win against Sri Lanka, left-arm spinner Liam Dawson was all praise for the way the young captain operated the spinners. “I think the way Brookie captained today was phenomenal, how he used us all differently,” Dawson, who picked up three wickets against Pakistan, had said on Sunday.After the win over Pakistan, it was the turn of bowling all-rounder Jamie Overton to heap praise on the ‘skip. “It’s probably one of the best knocks I’ve seen. Full credit to Brookie. He put his hand up today to bat at three and he led from the front today. Hopefully, he can keep going for us into the next few games,” Overton told reporters in the mixed zone.“The way he approaches cricket, it’s a great feeling to be able to be a part of that side. He wants us to go out there and play with a smile on our face and enjoy cricket. That’s when we grew up playing. We wanted to go out and have fun. It feels like we’re having fun out there at the moment. He’s sort of setting the standards of what we want to do, and if he keeps playing like that, we’ll go a long way in this competition,” Overton added.

England Pakistan T20 WCup Cricket

Pakistan’s Shaheen Shah Afridi shakes hands with England’s captain Harry Brook after bowling the latter out during the T20 World Cup cricket match in Pallekele, Sri Lanka. (AP)

At the post-match press conference, after a while, the question of Jos Buttler’s horrendous form took centre stage. Buttler now has 62 runs in six innings. He has not passed 40 in his last 18 international innings.“He’s a powerhouse of world cricket. He’s done it on every stage. He’s won World Cups in ODIs and T20s, and it’s just a matter of time,” Brook defended his senior pro.“I think people have got to give him a little bit of slack to be honest. He’s played over 500 T20s, he’s played 150 odd for England, and he’s still averaging 35 while striking at 145. He’s arguably our best player, and he’s just not hitting them out of the middle at the minute. But yeah, I feel like people have probably got to cut him a little bit of slack.”In the past three days, Brook has not only grown a year older but also wiser, which is indeed a great sign for England.


‘Whenever Pakistan lose, it feels like he’s the one’: Salman Agha opens up after England defeat | Cricket News – The Times of India


‘Whenever Pakistan lose, it feels like he’s the one’: Salman Agha opens up after England defeat | Cricket News – The Times of India

England skipper Harry Brook produced a breathtaking rescue act with a 100 off just 51 balls to steer his side to a thrilling two-wicket win over Pakistan in their Super 8 Group 2 clash at Pallekele International Cricket Stadium on Tuesday. Promoted to No. 3 for the first time in his T20I career, Brook smashed 10 fours and four sixes, scoring 41 of England’s 53 Powerplay runs and almost single-handedly keeping his side in the hunt. His innings also made him the first England captain to score a T20 World Cup century.“Whenever we lose, it feels like he’s the one making the difference. But credit where it’s due – he batted brilliantly today. Hopefully, he saves some runs for the game against New Zealand. Especially in that kind of form, he plays all around the ground – 360 degrees – which makes it very challenging to set fields and execute plans. They were smart. They didn’t attack too hard, they just rotated the strike well,” said Salman Agha, reflecting on Brook’s dominance.

Indian cricket team arrives for nets in Chennai

The chase began with drama as Shaheen Afridi removed Phil Salt for a golden duck and Jos Buttler under-edged the next delivery for just 2. Shaheen accounted for Bethell as well, finishing with 3 wickets in the Powerplay. But Brook weathered the storm, punishing spin and pace alike. He launched Mohammad Nawaz for 4, 4, and 6 in a single over and smashed Shadab Khan for a 96-metre straight six, effectively turning the contest on its head.“Started well with the bat, but we couldn’t finish the way we wanted. At the end of the day, you have to give credit to the opposition. The way Harry Brook batted was outstanding – he completely took the game away from us,” Agha said after the match, underlining the impact of Brook’s innings.Brook’s century helped England reach 166-8 in 19.1 overs, with Will Jacks adding 28 crucial runs. Pakistan’s Usman Tariq fought valiantly with two key wickets, but Brook remained unflappable, guiding his side to victory with just five balls to spare and securing England’s fifth consecutive men’s T20 World Cup semifinal berth.“It was a mixed surface, but I thought we bowled really well up front. Then Harry came in and played an outstanding innings. We threw everything at him, but he was simply too good for us today,” added Agha, summing up England’s performance and Brook’s match-winning display.Pakistan now need to beat Sri Lanka and hope for favourable results.


Sri Lanka vs England: Adil Rashid–Maheesh Theekshana battle on cards amid Kandy rain threat | Cricket News – The Times of India


Sri Lanka vs England: Adil Rashid–Maheesh Theekshana battle on cards amid Kandy rain threat | Cricket News – The Times of India
Sri Lanka’s Maheesh Theekshana, left, and captain Dasun Shanaka (AP Photo)

Dark clouds have loomed over Kandy this week, with rain sweeping across the Hanthana mountain range and keeping the covers on at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium on Saturday.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!More showers are expected on Sunday, threatening to intrude on this T20 World Cup Super 8 contest between Sri Lanka and England. If the weather relents, a duel of spin could define the clash.England return to familiar territory after brushing aside Sri Lanka 3-0 in a T20I series here earlier this month. That success provides reassurance, especially after a stuttering group-stage campaign in which they edged Nepal by four runs, lost to West Indies by 30, then beat Scotland by five wickets and Italy by 24 runs.

Heavy rain forecast in Sri Lanka | Pakistan T20 World Cup dream over?

England captain Harry Brook conceded that his team were “too careful with the bat” in the group stage. “We’ve been too careful with the bat. We can probably be a bit more brave in certain situations and have more faith in the guys behind us to be able to put up a decent score,” he said, adding, “We probably underestimated a few of the teams and they put up a really good fight. Thankfully, we are in the Super 8s.”Sri Lanka’s journey has followed a similar arc of promise and pause. Comfortable wins over Ireland and Oman set the tone and a chase of 182 against Australia at this venue showcased their credentials. Yet, a stumble against Zimbabwe in Colombo has stalled their momentum.

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Who do you think will win the Super 8 match between Sri Lanka and England?

For the co-hosts, much rests on opener Pathum Nissanka, who struck an unbeaten 52-ball century against Australia. With 199 runs in the group stage, he sits among the leading scorers. Brook reckoned Nissanka’s form will be a threat and said England have plans to remove him early. Kusal Mendis, with three half-centuries in four innings, adds gravitas at the top of the order.However, the absence of pacer Matheesha Pathirana, ruled out for the remainder of the competition, has dented their bowling resources. Maheesh Theekshana’s six wickets, meanwhile, underline his importance.With the ball, legspinner Adil Rashid remains vital to England’s plans, supported by Jofra Archer’s pace. Rashid has six wickets in the tournament, including 2/16 against West Indies, highlighting his threat on surfaces that grip. Asked if Jacob Bethell is fit to bowl, Brook said: “Not sure yet, he’s got a decent cut in his finger. If there’s some way we can get around that, then we’d bowl him.”

SL vs ENG


T20 World Cup: We haven’t played our best cricket, but we’ve got through: Brook


T20 World Cup: We haven’t played our best cricket, but we’ve got through: Brook

England’s Harry Brook during the England vs Italy T20 World Cup match in Eden Gardens, Kolkata, on February 16, 2026.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

England captain Harry Brook expressed satisfaction after his side qualified for the Super 8 stage of the ongoing T20 World Cup after beating Italy by 24 runs in Kolkata on Monday (February 16, 2026).

Brook said they’re happy to have qualified despite not playing their best cricket. He noted their batting hasn’t clicked consistently, calling T20 a “fickle game” where fortunes swing fast. Brook urged the team to stay brave and keep taking their chances.

The Harry Brook-led England opted to bat first after winning the toss and set a big target of 203 runs for the fellow European side. Then they successfully defended the target and won the match.

“We haven’t played our best cricket, but at the end of the day, we’ve made it through, and we’re heading to Sri Lanka, so we can be happy about that. It’s been a little bit of a trend so far in this competition. We haven’t managed to string together the scores that we’d like to do as a batting unit, but that’s part of T20 cricket. It’s a fickle game. One day you can smack a hundred, and the next day you can get out first ball. We’ve just got to keep on being brave and taking our options on,” Brook said after the match.

Will Jacks made an unbeaten 53 off just 22 balls, which helped England cross the 200-run mark. With the ball, Jacks also scalped a wicket, which helped him earn the Player of the Match award.

Speaking after winning the POTM award, Jacks said, “We spoke about the last few games, keeping our intent up. I think we’ve been a little bit static at times, and we understood it was a very good surface, and we know this is incredibly fast scoring ground. So you never know, batting first, what is enough. So that was the intent the whole way through.”

“Yeah, it feels like that’s been a long time coming. There have been a few role changes in there and taken a while. So it’s nice to get that one. I feel like I’m settling into my role down the order quite nicely now,” he added.

Italy will play their last group-stage match against the West Indies on Thursday (February 19, 2026) at the same venue, while England have played all its group-stage matches.


Will Jacks stars as England seal Super Eights spot with 24-run win vs Italy | Cricket News – The Times of India


Will Jacks stars as England seal Super Eights spot with 24-run win vs Italy | Cricket News – The Times of India
England’s Will Jacks (AP Photo/Bikas Das)

Will Jacks produced a blistering all-round display as England cricket team defeated Italy national cricket team by 24 runs to book their place in the Super Eights of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, in their Group C fixture at Eden Gardens on Monday.Asked to bat first, England surged past the 200-mark for the first time in this edition, finishing on 202 for 7. The charge was led by Jacks, whose explosive unbeaten 53 came off just 22 balls and included four sixes and three fours. His late assault rescued England after they had slipped to 105/5. Sam Curran added a valuable 25 from 19 balls as the pair combined for a rapid 54-run partnership off only 25 deliveries for the sixth wicket.

Axar Patel press conference: ‘We see them as a team, don’t see rivalry’ after India beat Pakistan

Earlier, Phil Salt had set the tempo with 28 off 15 balls, helping England cross 50 inside five overs. However, Jos Buttler’s lean run continued as he departed for three, dismissed by Grant Stewart. Salt later fell to Ali Hasan, while Jacob Bethell (23 off 20) and Harry Brook (14 off 9) also failed to convert starts. Tom Banton contributed a fluent 30 off 21 before holing out to Manenti.Italy’s chase began in dramatic fashion. Jofra Archer’s searing opening over at 146kph reduced them to 1/2, soon becoming 22/3. Anthony Mosca fell first ball, while JJ Smuts edged to first slip. Harry Manenti followed, leaving Italy reeling.Yet the debutants responded bravely. Ben Manenti launched a stunning counterattack, smashing 60 off 25 balls, including a 22-ball fifty — the joint-fifth fastest of the tournament and joint-second fastest by an Associate batter in its history. He hammered five sixes and four fours, taking 21 runs off one Jacks over. Justin Mosca supported well with 43 off 34 as the pair added 92 in 48 balls to revive hopes.Jacks broke the stand by dismissing Ben, caught by Banton, before Adil Rashid removed Justin. Grant Stewart then reignited the contest with 45 off 23, striking two sixes off Archer and three against Rashid.However, Curran halted the surge with two wickets in two balls on his way to 3/22, while Jamie Overton claimed 3/18. Italy were bowled out for 178 in 20 overs, and England advanced with their Super Eights spot secured.