England are set for a Sunday showdown with West Indies in the ICC World Twenty20 final. Eoin Morgans men reached the showpiece game with a clincial win over New Zealand on Wednesday, while West Indies sealed their spot a day later with a stunning triumph over hosts India.England ran into a rampant Chris Gayle when the sides met earlier in the tournament, the Jamaicans 47-ball ton condemning them to a six-wicket defeat, so can they gain revenge when it matters most?James Anderson, Kumar Sangakkara, Bob Willis and many more pundits have their say... Alex Hales and Jason Roy celebrate a boundary against New Zealand JAMES ANDERSONI think England have showed more consistency than West Indies throughout the competition and they clicked brilliantly in the semi-final against New Zealand, while West Indies lost to Afghanistan and have been a bit more iffy. West Indies batted very smartly against India but I think England have a great chance.MATT PRIOREngland are flying, have peaked at the right time and are living the dream, quite frankly, so I think they have a very good chance. West Indies have played brilliantly throughout the whole competition and are not a one-man band - they are a team and they work as a team.However, having missed out against India and Afghanistan, Chris Gayle will be very motivated, so that is a big worry - England will also have his big innings against them earlier in the competition in their mind. If you want to win a big event, though, you have to beat the best and I think England are going to win. Bob Willis has urged England to bowl full and straight at Chris Gayle KUMAR SANGAKKARA The troubles West Indies had just before the tournament brought them very close together and they are motivated to win for the Caribbean but also perhaps to show the West Indies cricket board that they know what they are doing and are focussed on winning. Both teams have explosive hitters so the bowling is going to be the issue - whoever bowls the best, executes in the first six overs, controls the middle, and bowls exceptionally at the death will probably win.MARK BUTCHERI think England have won already just by getting to the final, something I dont think many would have put them in before the tournament. West Indies will sky some chances and their running is not as sharp as other teams, so if England can put in the sort of fielding performance they did against New Zealand and cling on to catches like Joe Roots against Sri Lanka they will be well on their way.However, as my old captain Adam Hollioake used to say, whoever hits the most sixes wins. West Indies have hit 32 and England have hit 34 - by far and away the most in the tournament - so there is an even chance. Jos Buttler could be a key man for England in Kolkata BOB WILLISEngland are overjoyed to be in this final and have an even chance of winning it, though there will definitely be some nerves so they will have to show plenty of mettle. They will have to be very careful with the new ball against Chris Gayle and I dont necessarily want to see David Willey trying to swing the ball against him. Those deliveries could end up going in the stands so I would get it up in the blockhole. As for the result? England!MICHAEL ATHERTONWest Indies beat England in Mumbai but they played less-good cricket against Afghanistan in Nagpur, albeit when they were already through, and on a holding pitch they are not quite the same side. England havent yet played on a turning pitch either but deep down they will feel that, in Kolkata, they have a better chance of lifting the trophy against West Indies than if they were playing India.Will England win the World T20? Find out by watching their match with West Indies from 1.30pm, Sunday, Sky Sports 2. Before then see if West Indies Women can overcome Australia Women in the Womens World Twenty20 Final, live on Sky Sports 2 on Sunday from 9.30am. Watch the West Indies players celebrate in style after their World T20 semi-final win over India Also See: Eng v WI: Key battles Sky Cricket Podcast Swing could silence Gayle Colly: How we won World T20 Stitched Athletics Jerseys . 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There were a number of stand out performances across the board in Saturdays Autumn Internationals but who was your pick of the bunch?Beauden Barrett: New ZealandThe All Blacks fly-half showed why he was awarded the World Rugby Player of the Year a week earlier with a superb all round performance. Scored a try, and played a role in two others, Barrett also got his kicking radar sorted with three conversions and a try saving tackle on Sean OBrien.Tevita Kuridrani: AustraliaDisplayed ridiculous strength and skill to somehow score in the corner against France. For the second week in a row his individual brilliance has been the difference between a Wallabies win and defeat.George Ford: EnglandHad plenty of room to pull the strings against a ragged Fiji side. Was targeted defensively but made amends with some pin point passing that led to a few tries out wide.Sean OBrien: IrelandWorked admirably in tandem with Jamie Heaslip. Got through a mountain of work with big carries and tackles in his first big Test match in over nine months. If only he scored that try...SSergio Parisse: Italy The veteran no.dddddddddddd 8 put in a trademark shift to guide the Azzurri to a famous win. Missed a tackle that led to a Springboks try but was otherwise mistake free and led from the front.Greig Laidlaw: ScotlandPlenty of ticker for the Scotland captain to kick the winning penalty especially after missing an attempt a few moments earlier. Marshalled his troops around Murrayfield and was effective with a couple of sniping runs.Sam Davies: WalesA young player who deserves more time on the field. Only got 13 minutes against Japan, but brought a real impetus and direction for Rob Howleys side who were staring down the barrel of an embarrassing defeat. Great temperament to step up and kick the winning drop goal.Noa Nakaitaci: FranceThe French back three were causing the Wallabies all sorts of problems and Nakaitaci was central to that. Made the most metres in the Test with 13 runs and seven defenders beaten. ' ' '