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England at home, summer 2021
#41
Personal view utter pointless mismatch

England 180 for 6 (Malan 76, Bairstow 51, Chameera 4-17) beat Sri Lanka 91 (Binura 20, Willey 3-27, Curran 2-14) by 89 runs
England completed a 3-0 clean sweep over Sri Lanka in the T20I series with a crushing 89-run victory at the Ageas Bowl. It was the fourth-largest victory margin in terms of runs England have achieved in the format.
Despite the loss of both regular openers to injury, England posted a century stand for the first wicket to grasp a firm hold on the match which they were never to relinquish. Dawid Malan was named Player of the Match for a fluent innings of 76 that belied the slow nature of the pitch. Jonny Bairstow made 51. Nobody in the rest of the match passed 20.
England lost their way a little towards the end of their innings. An excellent spell of death bowling from Dushmantha Chameera, a bright spot amid the rubble of a bitterly disappointing Sri Lanka performance, saw England lose five wickets for 19 runs between the 16th and 19th overs. Chameera finished with career-best figures of 4 for 17.
Chris Jordan, however, helped England plunder 17 from the final over of the innings to take them to a total that was always likely to prove beyond the reach of a side that had failed to reach 130 in either of the first two games in the series.
So it proved as England's seamers, gaining a degree of lateral movement that is unusual with the white kookaburra ball, combined to bowl Sri Lanka out for just 91. It was the fourth lowest score Sri Lanka have made from a completed T20I innings.
Chris Woakes, Sam Curran and Chris Jordan took 4 for 36 from their 12 overs combined, while David Willey picked up three wickets.
With Jason Roy suffering from a tight hamstring, Moeen Ali was recalled to the T20I side for the first time since September 2020. But he was consigned to a peripheral role by the dominance of England's opening batters and the excellence of their seamers.
Sri Lanka also made a couple of changes. But Oshada Fernando, who took 27 balls over his 19 runs and seemed preoccupied with trying to hit almost everything through the leg side, underwhelmed and Lakshan Sandakan was unable to make any inroads with his left-arm leg-spin. Avishka Fernando was absent through injury.
Given that England went into this series without two first-choice players (in Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer) and lost Jos Buttler to a calf injury along the way, this result would seem to confirm their place among the favourites for the T20 World Cup in a few months. It is harder to find room for optimism for a Sri Lanka side that succumbed to their first clean-sweep defeat in any limited-overs series (of at least three matches) against England.
Top heavy
With Jos Buttler (calf) and Jason Roy (hamstring) absent through injury, England went into this game without either of their first-choice T20 openers. But such is their strength in depth in top-order limited-overs batting at present that Malan and Bairstow were still able to provide the perfect platform for them.
Malan, who has been batting at No. 3 of late, and Bairstow, who has been at No. 4, put on 105 for the first wicket in 11.4 overs. After taking a couple of overs to size up the bowling and the conditions, they attacked with calm precision to define the rest of the game. Their stand was 14 more than the entire Sri Lanka side managed.
It was England's first century opening stand against Sri Lanka in this format of the game and their fifth in total. Underlining that strength in depth is the observation that Alex Hales, another man who is currently deemed surplus to requirements, was involved in three of those five century stands and was busy scoring a century for Nottinghamshire while this game was being played. Realistically, Malan and Bairstow are likely to be shunted back down the order when Buttler and Roy return.
Some cheer from Chameera
This has been, in many ways, a chastening series for Sri Lanka. But the performance of Dushmantha Chameera, at least, has been encouraging. With his pace, control and variations, Chameera challenged the batters in each game. Over the series, he had an impressive economy rate of 6.26 per over.
In the third T20I, he intially impressed with the new ball. He conceded just three from the first over of the match, demonstrating an ability to gain a little movement and a sharp short ball. But it was when he returned towards the death that he excelled: mixing his quicker deliveries - he can exceed 140kph - with some well-directed slower balls, he took four wickets for six runs in those two overs and dragged back a runaway England.
If we had been told, a few years ago, that slow wide balls were the future, it would no doubt have been a surprise. But Malan, Sam Billings and Moeen Ali all spooned catches having been deceived by Chameera's slower delivery which is often wide enough that it entices batters to reach for it. So, in a disappointing series for Sri Lanka, Chameera emerged a man around whom they can build a T20 attack.
Malan makes a statement
He batted both beautifully and at an impressive tempo. His first boundary, from his sixth delivery, was a clip for six off his legs that was timed to perfection and it was followed by a succession of reverse-sweeps, drives and slog-sweeps that provided a reminder of his range and class. One lofted drive over extra-cover might have been the stroke of the day. He beat Bairstow to 50 (30 and 41 balls respectively) and demonstrated his ability as a power hitter by heaving Wanindu Hasaranga for two vast sixes in an over.

Don't fret about his having 'only' scored 76 by the time he was dismissed in the 19th over: he had been starved of the strike. On another sluggish surface, his strike-rate - 158.33 - was significantly better than anyone else who faced 10 deliveries in the match.
Sri Lanka Battered
With scores of 111 for 7, 129 for 7 and now 91 all out, Sri Lanka's batters looked strangely impotent against England in this series. They were never able to register a total that threatened England and only one Sri Lanka batter reached 40 during the series. With time running out ahead of the T20 World Cup, it's an area that will have to improve if Sri Lanka are to challenge.
Woakes' happy return
It had been almost six years since Woakes had played a T20I before this series. But, in conceding just 3.28 runs per over in the two games he played, he must have earned himself a chance of a longer-term recall. His control, skills, and variations - which seems, on this evidence, to include a new slower ball which is delivered with no change of seam position and appears tough to pick-up - and his ability to contribute with the bat, would appear to render him an attractive option.
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#42
First one-day international, Emirates Riverside:
Sri Lanka 185 (42.3 overs): Perera 73, Hasaranga 54; Woakes 4-18, Willey 3-44
England 189-5 (34.5 overs): Root 79*; Chameera 3-50
England win by five wickets; lead series 1-0

Joe Root led England to a five-wicket win against Sri Lanka in the first one-day international at Chester-le-Street.

Chasing just 186, the hosts wobbled at 80-4 in the 12th over but Root's unbeaten 79 from 87 balls saw them win with 15.1 overs to spare.

He and Moeen Ali calmed any nerves with a stand of 91 and when the latter was out for 28 the win was all-but assured.

Sri Lanka dropped Moeen first ball and put in another dismal batting effort - bowled out for 185 in 42.3 overs.

Captain Kusal Perera made 73 from 81 balls and Wanindu Hasaranga a 65-ball 54 but only one other batter made double figures.

Chris Woakes returned an impeccable 4-18 and David Willey 3-44, while there were also two run-outs and a raft of soft dismissals in a Sri Lanka batting effort weakened by three players being sent home for breaching Covid-19 protocols on Monday.

England, comprehensive winners in last week's Twenty20 series, now lead the three-match one-day series 1-0.

The sides meet again in the second ODI on Thursday at The Oval before the final match in Bristol on Sunday.



England began their chase with Jonny Bairstow racing to 43 from 21 balls, at which point it looked as though a win could be completed in quick time.

After seeing his opening partner Liam Livingstone miscue to long-on, Bairstow then played on and, when captain Eoin Morgan and Sam Billings followed within six overs, Sri Lanka had an outside chance of an unlikely win.

Had wicketkeeper Perera clung on low to his left to dismiss Moeen for a duck things may have been different.

Ultimately Root - who was reprieved on 36 when a far harder chance at fine leg was put down by Dushmantha Chameera - astutely nudged England to an easy victory.

Woakes stars as Sri Lanka batting woes continue


Sri Lanka were dismissed for their fourth-lowest total in the third T20 on Saturday and this batting effort was little better. The stand of 99 between Perera and Hasaranga saved them from similar embarrassment.

Woakes recorded five maidens in his 10 overs of exemplary line and length, and bowled a brilliant away-swinger to have Dasun Shanaka caught behind.

But he was also helped by more loose batting - opener Pathum Nissanka one of those culpable, caught at mid-wicket toe-ending a pull shot.

Debutants Charith Asalanka and Dhananjaya Lakshan made zero and two respectively and, after Hasaranga was caught top-edging a pull to deep square-leg off Woakes, Sri Lanka lost their next four wickets for seven runs, with Perera also caught in the deep.

There was still time for a comical run out, with Chameera dismissed after ending up at the same end as Binura Fernando.

The final wicket, a brilliant direct-hit run out by Billings from the edge of the 30-yard circle, summed up the difference between the two sides.


England all-rounder Chris Woakes, talking to Test Match Special: "I felt good today, it is always nice to get a couple early. It sets up your game as a bowler. It was a professional performance from the unit, it wasn't the best wicket but it wasn't the worst, so bowling them out for 185 was a good effort."

England captain Eoin Morgan: "I'm delighted. Full credit to our bowling unit today, it really did fire.

"Joe Root is one of the best in the world in most situations. He showed his class. Even yesterday at training it was notable how easy he finds things."

England bowler James Anderson on TMS: "The bowling was fantastic, the fielding was exceptional and England could just have been a bit more ruthless with the bat."
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#43
Has there been a cricket match on today? You wouldn't know. Whistle
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#44
England 244 for 2 (Morgan 75*, Root 68*, Roy 60) beat Sri Lanka 241 for 9 (Dhananjaya 91, Shanaka 47, S. Curran 5-48, Willey 4-64) by eight wickets
Sam Curran's maiden international five-for set England up for victory and their top order sealed the deal, despite Dhananjaya de Silva putting up a fight for Sri Lanka in the second ODI at The Kia Oval.
Curran took 5 for 48 from 10 overs, while fellow left-armer David Willey took 4 for 64 as Sri Lanka reached 241 for 9, largely on the back of Dhananjaya's run-a-ball 91.
But, led by half-centuries from Eoin Morgan, Joe Root and Jason Roy, England overhauled the target with seven overs to spare, winning by eight wickets to go 2-0 up in the three-match series.
Morgan's unbeaten 75 came in his 16th international innings across both white-ball formats since he had last passed fifty, while Root went past the mark for the second match in a row to remain not out 68, the pair putting on an unbroken 140-run stand for the third wicket

Sri Lanka had no answer for the swinging ball early on with Curran the chief purveyor at his home ground. At one point, he had taken three wickets for three runs in 1.3 overs as England made early breakthroughs.
Dhananjaya restored some order after the chaotic start and shared valuable partnerships with Wanindu Hasaranga and Dasun Shanaka to steady the innings, Shanaka falling three runs short of a half-century.
Willey had an lbw decision overturned on the fourth ball of the day, Pathum Nissanka successful with his review, which showed he had edged the ball onto his pad. But Curran struck four balls later, removing Kusal Perera for a second-ball duck.

By the end of the second over, Sri Lanka were 6 for 2 after Curran also pinned Avishka Fernando - unexpectedly back in the side after apparently being ruled out of the series by a thigh injury - with a ball that shaped back in and hit him in line with leg stump.
They were in disarray when Curran claimed his third, pegging back Nissanka's middle stump with a big inswinger that beat the inside edge.
That brought Dhananjaya to the middle and, having passed a late fitness test after suffering back spasms, he injected some experience to a Sri Lanka side which had blooded three players in Tuesday's five-wicket loss at Durham.
A short ball from Willey lured a mis-timed pull from Charith Asalanka - the only debutant from Chester-le-Street to hold his place - which sailed straight to George Garton, the substitute fielder at short midwicket while Morgan was off the field. With seven overs bowled, Sri Lanka were 21 for 4.
Dhananjaya and Hasaranga began salvaging the innings, the former showing strong intent as he helped himself to boundaries off Willey and Curran down the ground, through midwicket and to the off side.
They took Sri Lanka to 47 for 4 by the end of the first powerplay and, despite a near-miss when taking a single - Dhananjaya was nearly run out as well as almost colliding with Jonny Bairstow all at once - they survived. It was Bairstow who came off worse when he took Curran's wild throw awkwardly on the left thumb and had it taped before carrying on.
Hasaranga offered an early chance, edging a back-of-a-length ball from Mark Wood to Bairstow off the shoulder of the bat, but was put down as the keeper flung himself high to his right. He then hit two fours off a Curran over, pulled soundly over midwicket and driven gorgeously through cover, but it was a Curran bouncer that did him in as he took it on and picked out Sam Billings at deep square leg for 26, having put on 65 runs with Dhananj
Sam Curran acknowledges the applause for his five-for
Dhananjaya reached his fifty off 58 deliveries and Shanaka brought up the team 100 by launching Curran for a powerful six over wide long-on.
Willey ended Dhanajaya's stay with a short ball pulled poorly in the direction of deep square leg, where Root snaffled the catch. Shanaka fell to Willey, cutting another short delivery to Curran just inside the rope at cover point, and Curran claimed his fifth wicket with a bouncer that Chamika Karunaratne tried to pull, only to see it loop behind him and into Bairstow's waiting gloves.
Willey found himself on a hat-trick when he added Binura Fernando's wicket, well caught by Adil Rashid running in from fine leg, to that of Shankaka, taken on the last ball of his previous spell, but Dushmantha Chameera denied him.
Roy was in fine touch after missing the last T20I and the first ODI with a hamstring problem: by the time he reached 40, off the 26th ball he faced, he had racked up eight boundaries including back-to-back fours off Binura Fernando, bisecting fine leg and deep backward square off his pads and punishing a wider one through point to raise England's fifty.
Bairstow took longer to find his rhythm but he did so in style, taking 16 off one Asitha Fernando over with two fours and a six thundered over long-off. And, after first powerplay, England were 65 without loss.
Bairstow fell to Hasaranga for 29, though, chopping a legspinner onto his off stump, having just managed to edge the previous ball for four past the keeper.


Roy took another 21 deliveries to make the 10 runs needed to reach his half-century and he didn't hit another four until the 17th over when he struck Hasaranga for two in as many balls, over midwicket and straight down the ground.
That was the precursor to his demise which came when he walloped a back-of-a-length Karunaratne delivery to short midwicket, where Dhananjaya took a stunning catch leaping to his right.

But with England 104 for 2 and Root, whose unbeaten 79 saw England home in the opening ODI, accompanying Morgan with more than 32 overs remaining, there was no sense of urgency.
Morgan brought up his fifty off as many balls with a single edged past the keeper off Hasaranga shortly after hitting the same bowler for six over cow corner. Root guided Dhananjaya behind point for his half-century.
Needing 18 off the last 10 overs, the two England captains got there with ease, Morgan cracking the winning runs to rope at deep backward square off a Binura Fernando short ball, having worn the previous delivery somewhat painfully on his thumb before it almost rolled onto his stumps.
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#45
Third one-day international, County Ground, Bristol:
Sri Lanka 166 all out (41.1 overs): Shanaka 48*, T Curran 4-35, Willey 2-36, Woakes 2-28
England: Did not bat
Match abandoned

England won their one-day international series against Sri Lanka 2-0 after the third match in Bristol was washed out.

England, who also won the Twenty20 series 3-0, looked well-placed for another victory when they dismissed a sorry Sri Lanka cheaply once more - the tourists all out for 166 in 41.1 overs.

But heavy rain arrived soon after 15:00 BST, during the change of innings, and no further play was possible.

The match was abandoned at 16:15 with puddles forming on the outfield.

In another strong England bowling performance, Tom Curran impressed with 4-35 in his 10 overs.

Curran ripped through Sri Lanka's middle order after Chris Woakes and David Willey had reduced the tourists to 42-4.

England will likely face a far sterner test on Thursday when they play Pakistan in the first of three ODIs. A three-match T20 series follows afterwards.

Rain arrives but not before another Sri Lanka collapse
This has been a miserable tour for Sri Lanka whose only relief is that the rain allowed them to escape before what would almost certainly have been a sixth defeat in six games.

In the first ODI in Chester-le-Street they were 46-3, the second at The Oval 21-4, and here they were four down within nine overs.

Woakes in particular managed to swing the ball throughout but the majority of wickets fell to bad shots rather than good bowling.

Dhananjaya de Silva, who made 91 in the previous game, was one of two batters out on the hook, Oshada Fernando smashed Curran to mid-off to make the score 63-5 and the final wicket came in comedic fashion when Asitha Fernando was run out.

So poor was the opposition, England have learned little from the series but four wickets were a welcome boost for Curran.

The Surrey bowler, whose brother Sam took 5-48 at The Oval, had only taken three wickets in his previous 11 ODIs.

He was helped by wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow, who took a brilliant diving one-handed catch to dismiss Chamika Karunaratne for Curran's third.

The win extends England lead at the top of the Super League, which acts as qualification for the next 50-over World Cup. Sri Lanka are 11th and in danger of not qualifying for the 2023 showpiece should their results not improve.

'I don't feel I've done anything different' - reaction
England bowler Tom Curran: "It is disappointing. We sort of knew there was a bit of rain, but I didn't quite think it was going to come down that hard, that quickly, but look it was nice to contribute with a few wickets.

"I don't feel like I've done anything different, it is a funny game. I've felt pretty good for a while to be honest, and I just haven't quite been getting the wickets."

England captain Eoin Morgan: "We're delighted with the series win, and more so today with the way we started.

"We looked to be aggressive, create pressure and create opportunities. We're delighted that we continued to be ruthless and disciplined in the nature that we showed."
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#46
Pakistan in England - One Day Records


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Highest Totals Batting First

1. England 444-3 - Trent Bridge, 30th August 2016
2. England 373-3 - Southampton, 11th May 2019
3. England 363-7 - Trent Bridge, 20th August 1992 [off 55 overs]
4. Pakistan 358-9 - Bristol, 14th May 2019
5. England 351-9 - Headingley, 19th May 2019


Highest Successful Chases

1. England 359-4, needing 359 - Bristol, 14th May 2019
2. England 341-7, needing 341 - Trent Bridge, 17th May 2019
3. Pakistan 304-6, needing 303 - Cardiff, 4th September 2016
4. England 295-6, needing 295 - Headingley, 12th September 2010
5. Pakistan 274-8, needing 272 - Southampton, 5th September 2006


Lowest Totals

1. Pakistan 85 - Old Trafford, 24th May 1978
2. Pakistan 135 - Southampton, 22nd September 2010
3. Pakistan 151 - Headingley, 16th June 1979 [off 56 overs]
4. Pakistan 154-8 - The Oval, 26th May 1978 [off 55 overs]
5. Pakistan 154-9 - Edgbaston, 10th September 2006

6. England 156 - Headingley, 17th June 2001


Highest Individual Scores

1. Alexander Hales 171 - Trent Bridge, 30th August 2016
2. Imam-ul-Haq 151 - Bristol, 14th May 2019
3. Fakhar Zaman 138 - Southampton, 11th May 2019
4. Marcus Trescothick 137 - Lord's, 12th June 2001
5. Jonathan Bairstow 128 - Bristol, 14th May 2019


Best Bowling Figures

1. Waqar Younis 7-36 - Headingley, 17th June 2001
2. Umar Gul 6-42 - The Oval, 17th September 2010
3. Christopher Woakes 5-54 - Headingley, 19th May 2019
4. Robert Willis 4-15 - Old Trafford, 24th May 1978
5. Michael Hendrick 4-15 - Headingley, 16th June 1979


Most Runs In A Series

1. Andrew Strauss 317 - 2010
2. Sarfaraz Ahmed 300 - 2016
3. Jason Roy 277 - 2019
3. Babar Azam 277 - 2019
5. Joseph Root 274 - 2016


Most Wickets In A Series

1. Umar Gul 12 - 2010
2. Waqar Younis 11 - 2001
3. Graeme Swann 11 - 2010
4. Stuart Broad 11 - 2010
5. Christopher Woakes 10 - 2019


Most Runs In Total

1. Joseph Root 630 - 2016-present
2. Eoin Morgan 610 - 2010-present
3. Sarfaraz Ahmed 541 - 2016-present
4. Mohammad Hafeez 519 - 2003-2019
5. Babar Azam 500 - 2016-present


Most Wickets In Total

1. Waqar Younis 24 - 1992-2001
2. Christopher Woakes 22 - 2016-present
3. Shoaib Akhtar 19 - 2003-2010
4. Umar Gul 17 - 2003-2016
5. Stuart Broad 16 - 2006-2010


Highest Respective T20 Totals

England 199-5 - Old Trafford, 30th August 2020
Pakistan 195-4 - Old Trafford, 30th August 2020


Highest Respective Individual T20 Scores

Mohammad Hafeez 86* - Old Trafford, 1st September 2020
Tom Banton 71 - Old Trafford, 28th August 2020


Best Respective T20 Bowling Figures

Timothy Bresnan 3-10 - Southampton, 7th September 2010
Wahab Riaz 3-18 - Old Trafford, 7th September 2016
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"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley
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#47
444-3. That was a right innings.
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#48
Oof. Three England players and four coaching staff have tested Covid positive, so the entire existing squad now has to self-isolate. A fresh squad will be named shortly and captained by Ben Stokes for the Pakistan matches. Chance for some new call-ups and fringe players to prove themselves, I guess. If nothing else, it's high time they rehabilitated Halesy. He was a silly boy who did a few lines of charlie; two years out and a missed World Cup win is more than ample punishment.
"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley
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#49
Could be very interesting

I've got so far the players likely to get called up as

Stokes
Vince
Pope
Crawley
Parkinson
Mahmood

With then the likes of Hales, will jacks, Adam lyth, Tom Moores, James bracey and even Samit Patel and Rory burns being other options.

Would like jacks to get a call up in all fairness, he's been looking good in the white ball format so far
Another day, another door, another high, another low
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#50
Looking purely at the T20 Blast averages, there's an argument to be made for Harry Brook and young Jordan Cox at Kent. In good form, plenty of recent runs. On the bowling side, they could also fall back on Jake Ball.
"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley
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