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England have discovered to cope with their imperfections within the T20 World Cup following New Zealand win – however their luck should run out finally, writes RICHARD GIBSON

England have spent this entire Twenty20 World Cup talking about playing the perfect game, yet remain firmly in the hunt to become the first country to win the tournament three times because they have learned to deal with their imperfections.

This astonishing late heist against New Zealand kept up their 100 per cent record in the Super Eight stage, meaning Harry Brook’s team will, barring some extraordinary results this weekend, be heading for the second semi-final in Mumbai on ­Thursday — where the prospect of a frenzied atmosphere against co-hosts India or a replay of their group-stage meeting with West Indies, their only defeat here, awaits.

More top-order failure meant that for much of a chase of 160, it looked like they would be destined for Kolkata instead, until a seventh-wicket union between Will Jacks and the recalled Rehan Ahmed worth 44 off just 16 deliveries catapulted them to victory.

It speaks of the dysfunctional aspects of this team that Jacks, their No7 batsman and sixth bowler, has won four man-of-the-match awards in 20 days. On the balance of probabilities, their luck must run out eventually.

‘Yeah, you’re right, because ideally I would do nothing, and I’m kind of at some stage the extra bowler and the extra batter. If I didn’t bowl and didn’t bat, we’d have had that perfect game that we keep speaking about,’ Jacks said, following two for 23 with an unbeaten 32.

‘We’ve won six out of seven games and qualified for a semi-­final. We obviously want to play well but we’re not gutted we ­haven’t been perfect. What we’ve done well is in the key moments, we’ve kept a calm and clear head and managed to get those rewards.’

Will Jacks starred with both bat and ball as England beat New Zealand at the T20 World Cup

Will Jacks starred with both bat and ball as England beat New Zealand at the T20 World Cup

England required 42 off 17 when Ahmed, preferred to Jamie Overton because the match was contested on a used pitch, got off the mark by launching a 103-yard six off spinner Glenn Phillips, who had been reintroduced to the attack for his ability to dart the ball in from around the wicket, cramping his opponents for room.

It was almost fantasy cricket: as he left the dugout at 117 for six, all-rounder Ahmed received a walkie-talkie message from coach Brendon McCullum to bat like India great Virender Sehwag.

Two balls later, Jacks sent a skyscraper of a hit over the midwicket boundary to truly seize the momentum and with New Zealand reeling, he powerfully pierced the field for back-to-back fours.

When Ahmed danced down the track to hit a second six from the final ball of the penultimate over, sent down by the usually parsimonious Mitchell Santner, they were on the verge of a victory set to an all too familiar template: Nepal, Scotland and Italy discomforting them until late in proceedings in the group stage.

However, after New Zealand followed the way of Sri Lanka and Pakistan, captain Santner said of England: ‘If you can get yourselves out of a tricky position to end up winning it does a lot for the team, and a lot for the confidence.

‘There’s no better team at finding a way to win from anywhere. There’s different guys stepping up at different times, which is what you want. I wouldn’t want to face them, if we’re in the semi-finals.’

The Kiwis face a nervous wait as defeat has presented the outside possibility of Pakistan pipping them for the last four. To do so, Pakistan must defeat Sri Lanka by a minimum of 64 runs or chase down their target in 13.1 overs in Pallekele today.

In England’s favour is an extraordinary belief that they can win from anywhere, and an enviable team spirit. ‘This is the era of Harry Brook as white-ball captain,’ said Jacks, as if to emphasise the captain’s popularity within a youthful squad.

Rehan Ahmed put on a more-than-useful partnership wirth Jacks to steer his side to their sixth win from seven games

Rehan Ahmed put on a more-than-useful partnership wirth Jacks to steer his side to their sixth win from seven games

But members of the old guard are an issue: the opening partnership of Jos Buttler and Phil Salt averages just 12 in the tournament, and Buttler has just 62 from seven visits to the crease.

England have been effective at the start of bowling innings, taking 18 powerplay wickets in the tournament, before this fruitless return against Tim Seifert and Finn Allen.

Jofra Archer’s form bodes well whichever opponents await. Here, he started with a maiden featuring a successful Seifert review for caught behind, but did not bowl out, as Brook opted to send down a record 16 overs of spin.

Things will get tougher but despite being outhit by opponents, England’s engine room has fired.

In addition to Jacks, who has figures in the Sri Lankan leg of 10-0-72-5, Sam Curran followed closing out the last-ball thriller versus Nepal with handy runs, and combined in a 42-run stand with Tom Banton that kept the prospect of another dramatic England win alive.