England are out of the World Cup. On a ground that has seen humiliation heaped on them more than once in the past decade, they suffered one more ignominy, hustled out of the competition by a vibrant Bangladesh team who belied their status as whipping boys and delighted their thousands of supporters in the stands. In the end it was not even close. Set 276 to win, after Mahmudullah had underpinned the Bangladesh innings with his country’s first century at a World Cup, England were rarely in the race, subsiding not against spin, as might have been anticipated, but by urgent seam bowling that ripped out the England middle order, including the captain Eoin Morgan for a fourth-ball nought, his fifth duck in his past nine innings. Hitherto Morgan has expressed no concern for his form: he might want to reconsider that. 97 for one became 132 for five in the space of 10 overs and the game had been settled there and then. Throughout, Bangladesh were brilliantly led by Mashrafe Mortaza, their opening bowler who started the rot by dismissing Alex Hales and later returned to remove Joe Root, England’s most prolific batsman of this competition (the word prolific…