Cricket-England's Brook uncertain about continuing at number three


Cricket - ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 - Super 8 - England v Pakistan - Pallekele International Cricket Stadium, Kandy, Sri Lanka - February 24, 2026 England's Harry Brook and Pakistan's Salman Agha during the coin toss before the match REUTERS/Lahiru Harshana

PALLEKELE, Sri Lanka, Feb 25 (Reuters) - ⁠Harry Brook smashed a match-winning hundred in Tuesday's Super Eight match against Pakistan ⁠after being moved up the order to number three but the England captain ‌is unsure if he will stay in the new slot for the rest of the Twenty20 World Cup.

Brook struck a two-run-a-ball hundred as England accomplished a tricky chase to be the first team to book their ​spot in the last four of the 20-team tournament.

Chasing ⁠165 for victory, England lost both ⁠their openers inside three overs and slumped to 58-4 in the eighth, but Brook's maiden ⁠century ‌in T20 Internationals set up their two-wicket victory.

Brook said it was head coach Brendon 'Baz' McCullum's idea to promote him from his usual number five slot.

"Baz is ⁠the mastermind there," he told reporters.

"He had a discussion with ​me this morning about going ‌up the order and trying to maximise the powerplay and thankfully it paid ⁠off."

Despite the spectacular ​success of the move, Brook was unsure if he would continue at number three.

"I don't know. That's something for me and Baz to chat about," he said.

"The longer I bat, the better ⁠it is for me. It's a lot easier facing ​their best bowlers through the middle period when you're already set."

England's white-ball captain has endured a torrid time since news emerged of his altercation with a nightclub bouncer in New Zealand ⁠late last year, making Tuesday's knock especially sweet.

"It's probably been the hardest winter of my life, to be honest," the 27-year-old said.

"There's been a lot of stuff behind the scenes as well as not behind the scenes, but yes, it's just nice to see some ​rewards from my hard work away from the ground."

Shaheen Afridi ⁠shook Brook's hand after dismissing him and the Pakistan speedster said the batter had played "proper ​cricketing shots" throughout his 100 off 51 balls.

"I think ‌this is the best innings of his life," ​Afridi said.

"The wicket was not easy. If we look at other batsmen, they were all struggling."

(Reporting by Amlan Chakraborty in New Delhi; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

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