England was anxious for most of the day, thanks to the weather. It had already suffered one washout – its opener against Scotland – and a second washout in four group games would have sent it home.
Because of what was at stake, the umpires waited as long as possible at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium to get play under way.
England lost the plot early. Only one run was taken from the opening over bowled by 39-year-old David Wiese, captain Jos Buttler was bowled for a duck by fast bowler Ruben Trumpelmann, and Wiese returned to nick out the other opener, Phil Salt.
England was 13-2 after 13 balls.
Jonny Bairstow and Harry Brook counterattacked. Bairstow made 31 off 18 balls just before the last rain delay. Brook finished with an unbeaten 47 off 20, and had late support from Moeen Ali and Liam Livingstone, who both contributed to taking 21 runs off the last over.
Namibia’s chase was relatively fast but not fast enough. Opener Michael van Lingen, after 33 off 29, was pulled out under the pretense of retiring hurt, and Wiese inserted to up the run rate. He duly delivered 27 off 12 but it was too late.
India washout
The India-Canada game in Florida was abandoned without a ball bowled.
The outfield in Broward County Stadium was too wet for play, and the match was called off only an hour after its scheduled morning start.
While there was light rain in the morning, the outfield was damp from showers the day before which led to a second straight abandoned game at the venue. The United States-Ireland game on Friday never started. Pakistan and Ireland are scheduled to play at the ground on Sunday.
While the teams waited for a decision, India’s Rishabh Pant and coach Rahul Dravid went to the boundary to sign autographs, and Virat Kohli posed with some of the Canada players.
Unbeaten India had already qualified for the Super Eight as the Group A winner. Canada finished group play with only a precious win over Ireland.
India starts the Super Eight against Afghanistan on Friday (NZT) in Barbados.