WC 2015 AUS vs BAN: Australia-Bangladesh game abandoned due to rain

Brisbane washout has piled pressure on England

Update: 2015-02-21 14:10 GMT
The World Cup match between Australia and Bangladesh in Brisbane on Saturday was abandoned without a ball bowled because of rain. (Photo: AP)

Brisbane: The World Cup match between Australia and Bangladesh in Brisbane on Saturday was abandoned without a ball bowled because of rain.

That meant both sides collected a point apiece for a no-result at the Gabba ground and left them on three each in Pool A, with runaway leaders New Zealand topping the group with six points following three straight wins.

(Photo: AP)

"We both get one point, don't we?," said Australia's Steve Smith.

"It was obviously disappointing not to get out there today. It's a place that we play really well out here at the Gabba but we can't control the weather," he added.

"We'll take the point. Hopefully, we'll continue to play some good cricket throughout the rest of the tournament."

One concern for tournament favourites Australia is they will now have a long gap between their opening 111-run win over England in Melbourne on February 14 and their next match against New Zealand, their fellow co-hosts, in Auckland on February 28.

Brisbane washout piles pressure on England:

The beleaguered England team found themselves under even more pressure after rain forced Australia's World Cup match against Bangladesh in Brisbane on Saturday to be abandoned without a ball bowled.

A point apiece for the no-result at the Gabba saw both Australia and Bangladesh move to three points, three behind Pool A leaders New Zealand with a game in hand.

England are languishing in last place in the seven-strong group after big losses to both Australia (111 runs) and New Zealand (eight wickets), with Eoin Morgan's side unable to afford many more slip-ups if they are to claim a top-four finish that will see them into the quarter-finals.

Brisbane had been lashed by rain in the two days leading into the match, due to the effects of Cyclone Marcia, a category five storm off the central Queensland coast.

There had been some hope the match night go ahead if conditions improved and, at one stage, the groundstaff began preparing the outfield as rain eased during the afternoon.

However, it soon picked up again and it became obvious that there would be no chance of staging even a 20 overs per side game, the minimum required to constitute a result in a one-day international.

The washout favoured Bangladesh, who were given no chance of beating tournament favourites Australia but who must now be thinking of reaching the last eight ahead of England.

"We still have to win two or three matches and we're looking forward to it," upbeat Bangladesh captain Mashrafe Mortaza said.

"I can't say that England is under pressure from us, but we are looking forward to playing against England, or against Sri Lanka, or even against Scotland.

"It's all about preparation -- we're trying to get our best preparation to play against them," he added.

"And if we play at our best we have a chance."

Mortaza said the Tigers' biggest disappointment was not being able to play at the famous Gabba ground.

"We were looking forward to it because we don't get enough chances to play on that sort of field against a team like Australia," he said.

"We could have got some experience out there that would have helped us in the future.

"But you can't do anything with the rain, you have to accept it, and we are looking forward to the next match," added Mortaza.

Saturday's washout would have also disappointed the many Bangladesh supporters who had come from all over Australia to support the Tigers.

"The fans have been really good," Mortaza said.

"When we landed in Australia all the supporters were coming and supporting us, and even in this match a lot of the crowd was from Bangladesh."

Bangladesh next take on Sri Lanka in Melbourne on Thursday. They play England in Adelaide on March 9 in a match that could have a key bearing on which sides qualify out of Pool A for the knockout phase.

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