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Pakistan's Mohammad Hafeez celebrates after winning the match against England in the semi-finals of the Champions Trophy tournament. Photo: Reuters

Pakistan crush England to reach Champions Trophy cricket final for the first time

Captain Eoin Morgan unhappy with wicket as England lose one-sided semi-final

Pakistan thrashed England by eight wickets with 12.5 overs to spare at Sophia Gardens on Wednesday to reach the final of the Champions Trophy for the first time.

Openers Azhar Ali (76) and Fakhar Zaman (57) made it a comfortable chase from the start as Pakistan reached 215 for two in 37.1 overs in reply to England’s unimpressive 211 all out – from 128 for two – with one ball left.

It was an unexpectedly one-sided semi-final as two-time finalist England continues their quest for a global 50-over title in any tournament.

India play Bangladesh on Thursday at Edgbaston in the other semi-final match with India the clear favourites – but so were England.

The final is at The Oval on Sunday.

England captain Eoin Morgan said Pakistan “played brilliantly” but he appeared unhappy with the wicket.

“I don’t think there was any home advantage ... We knew that we were going to play on a used wicket at some stage in this tournament, and certainly we found out the other day that today was going to be on a used wicket. And having watched the game against Sri Lanka, we actually didn’t think it was that bad.

“But certainly today it was – coming from Edgbaston (against Australia), it was obviously a big jump in pace and bounce and too much of for us to adjust to really.”

England's Eoin Morgan, Joe Root, Moeen Ali and Alex Hales look dejected after losing their semi-final match to Pakistan. Photo: Reuters

Earlier, Hasan Ali took three for 35 as Pakistan won the toss and bowled out a badly misfiring England.

Joe Root top-scored with 46 off 56 balls before being caught behind off Shadab Khan, but England’s innings – for once in this tournament – never really accelerated. The hosts started solidly to reach 118 for two in their first 25 overs and then lost eight wickets for 93 runs in the next 25.

Man-of-the-match Hasan became the tournament’s highest wicket-taker with key dismissals of Jonny Bairstow (43 off 57), Eoin Morgan (33 off 53) and Ben Stokes (34 off 64).

Bails fly as Pakistan's Azhar Ali loses his wicket for 76. Photo: AFP

Medium-fast Rumman Raees took two for 44 off nine overs on an impressive ODI debut, being called up late to replace Mohammad Amir.

“I think he (Amir) has a little bit of back spasm. Hopefully, he will recover for the finals,” Pakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed said. “Obviously he’s our main bowler. He’s our best strike bowler.”

But Ahmed wasn’t taking anything away from his bowlers’ performance.

“Credit goes to the bowlers. They bowled really well, especially in the middle part, starting with Shadab. They bowled really well,” he said. “They took Joe Root. Then Hasan came in, and he took wicket. Then Junaid Khan, Rumman Raees – all credit goes to the bowlers.”

It was just too easy for Pakistan, which won its third straight game at the tournament. Mark Wood (0-37) started the bowling for England with a wide and was then hit for six in the same over by Fakhar Zaman. Azhar Ali smashed Stokes for another six and a four in the 13th over as Pakistan moved to 78 for no wicket. The first wicket ended on 118 when Ball (one for 37) bowled Azhar, and Zaman was stumped off Adil Rashid (one for 54) but the result was never in doubt.

Pakistan's Mohammad Hafeez jumps in the air as he celebrates his team winning. Photo: AP

If Hasan was man of the match, Stokes was likely the most disappointed player in the Welsh capital. He is No 7 in the ICC all-rounder rankings but had an all-round miserable game. Unable to hit out with the ball at the risk of England not using all their overs – despite constant temptation from Pakistan’s well-drilled attack – Stokes did worse with the ball, going for nought for 38 in his 3.1 overs.

Mohammad Hafeez (31 not out) hit Stokes for a boundary to seal the win, sharing a 42-run partnership for the third wicket with Babar Azam (38 not out).

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