ODI World Cup digest: Stunning Maxwell demolishes Netherlands; England try to get off the canvas

It was the most brutal of one-twos. First came David Warner with the jab, then Glenn Maxwell with the "lights out" uppercut. A 104 from the opener had the Netherlands weary, but it was Maxwell's astonishing 106 from just 44 deliveries that administered the most devastating of knock-out blows. Australia posted 399 for 8, standing victoriously at the midway stage over stunned rivals, who couldn't ascend off the material, in the end capitulating to a rebuking 309-run rout - the biggest in edge in men's ODI World Cup history. 29 balls into his innings, Glenn Maxwell is pausing. His legs separated, confronting the bowler front-on, wrists positioned, right one got over the left. In his own particular manner, he is prepared. He is in the most hyper of this World Cup's innings, wherein he would proceed to wreck the record for quickest World Cup hundred, set just 17 days prior. Two balls before this, he has switch cleared a full ball on leg stump from seamer Bas de Leede way into the stands behind in reverse point. India allrounder Hardik Pandya will miss a second successive game at this World Cup - Sunday's match against Britain - as he keeps on recuperating from the lower leg injury he endured against Bangladesh in Pune. Shakib Al Hasan, Bangladesh's skipper at the World Cup, has made a trip to Dhaka to prepare with his tutor Nazmul Abedeen Faheem even as the remainder of the group showed up in Kolkata in front of their matches in the city against Netherlands