Dublin downpour leads to Ireland-England washout
Sellout crowd disappointed as heavy and persistent rain prevents any action at Malahide
Matt Roller
19-Sep-2025 • Updated 4 hrs ago
The rain won the day in Malahide • Gareth Copley/Getty Images
Ireland vs England - Match abandoned without a toss
Persistent rain wiped the second of three T20Is between Ireland and England out before a ball was bowled. Heavy overnight rain in the Dublin area left patches of the outfield totally sodden at Malahide Cricket Club, and a planned 1.30pm inspection was pushed back indefinitely until umpires Aidan Seaver and Jonathan Kennedy eventually called the game off at 3.47pm.
It made for an anticlimactic afternoon, not least with a "sold out" sign plastered onto the ticket booth and a crowd of more than 4,000 expected. After three washouts against West Indies, Ireland have now lost four out of their eight home men's internationals this summer to the weather; the only consolation is that the forecast for Sunday's match is more promising.
Brian MacNeice, Cricket Ireland's chair, said that their insurance policy mitigated the financial impact of the abandonment. "We have a policy that covers it," MacNeice said. "There's no financial impact to us, other than potentially a slightly more expensive insurance policy next year."
The wash-out was particularly frustrating for Ireland as this series was initially pencilled in for June, only to be shifted back to September at the ECB's request. "Even in the middle of the summer, you can't predict that you're going to get perfect weather," MacNeice said. "We didn't have a problem having the games here at this time."
England had planned to rotate their side for the second T20I, with Sonny Baker and Jordan Cox both in line to feature before the weather intervened. They may win opportunities on Sunday, but one man who will not is the uncapped Scott Currie, who has been released from the squad to play for Hampshire in Saturday's Metro Bank One-Day Cup final at Trent Bridge.
Wednesday's series opener saw England take a 1-0 lead over Ireland, chasing 197 with 14 balls to spare thanks to Phil Salt's innings of 89. It meant a winning start to Jacob Bethell's short tenure as stand-in captain, deputising for the rested Harry Brook.
Matt Roller is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98