Can Ireland spring more surprises?
A hard-working team, Ireland will need to get past two strong teams in Group B to make it to the knockouts

Giant killers: Can Ireland do it again? • Getty Images
Overview
Key players
George Dockrell tends to play in red boots but that is not the only eye-catching thing about him. A tall left-arm spinner, the 20-year-old impressed for Somerset during the English domestic season and was the county's leading T20 wicket-taker, despite missing finals day while on duty at the Under-19 World Cup. You don't have to be Peter Falk to work out that his form in Colombo could be crucial.Surprise package
Wicketkeeper Gary Wilson is a pugnacious batsman who has increasingly demonstrated his worth after deputising for the absent Niall O'Brien at the World Twenty20 Qualifier in March. He finished the county season as Surrey's first choice keeper and has made all three of his T20 half-centuries this year.Weakness
It seems odd to say it for one of the tournament minnows but Ireland will have to deal with the expectation that comes with being serial jack-in-the-boxes. Neither Australia nor West Indies will be taking them lightly and their chances of springing out of Group B rest on their ability to play with the same freedom that has characterised previous campaigns.World T20 history
Ireland failed to qualify in 2007 but reached the super eights two years later, beating Bangladesh out of their group. They left the Caribbean in a right funk in 2010, after rain denied them the chance to chase England's meagre total of 120 and they were eliminated on net run-rate.Recent form
A planned four-match series with South Africa A in August was abandoned due to poor weather and, prior to that, Ireland lost 3-0 at home to Bangladesh - though some measure of revenge was achieved in their final warm-up match. Ireland won 10 out 11 games at the World Twenty20 Qualifier, beating Afghanistan in the final, and have played much more T20 cricket this year than most of the Full Members.Alan Gardner is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo