skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Home »
Unlabelled »
Bell’s groundwork sets up Anderson record
Posted by Unknown
Monday, June 10, 2013
0 comments
England and Australia locked horns for the first time this summer
and Edgbaston, basking in golden sunshine for its 100th international
match, was able to celebrate the start of the sequence with an emphatic
England victory. The Champions Trophy tie - or Ashes prelim, if you
prefer - fell to England by 48 runs, reports Cricinfo.
Until England
took control, it was a cagey, tactical affair - for the neutral perhaps
the least enthralling match in the tournament so far. But who knows, it
might be that England have already made an impact on the Ashes summer.
Australia
had imagined that a powerful statement in the Champions Trophy might be
a catalyst, but their performance was limp, their captain Michael
Clarke is injured, and their hold on the Champions Trophy - as
ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball commentary put it “the last trinket on
Australia’s mantelpiece” - is now in danger of falling into the
fireplace.
For much of the day the Edgbaston crowd was able to soak
up the pleasurable sight of two of its own proceeding calmly along,
although it was only when victory was achieved that confidence reigned
that Ian Bell and Jonathan Trott, as two Warwickshire batsmen should,
had perfectly assessed batting requirements.
When Trott was caught at
the wicket for 43 from 56 balls, chasing a wide one delivered around
the wicket by the left-armer, Mitchell Starc, England’s second-wicket
pair had put on 111 in 22 overs and uncertainty hung around the ground
about whether their programmed approach, on a day when Alastair Cook’s
decision to bat first was a straightforward one, would yield the desired
outcome.
Bell departed four overs later, his 91 occupying 115 balls,
as James Faulkner bowled him with a straight ball which kept a little
low, a fact the batsman communicated somewhat theatrically by falling to
his knees after his stumps were broken. He has seemed slightly out of
sorts in recent months, but this proved to be a match-winning innings of
consummate judgment.
Australia were fined for maintaining a slow
over-rate in their defeat to England in their Group A encounter at
Edgbaston. Javagal Srinath, the match referee, found the side to be one
over of the target at the end of the game, taking allowances into
consideration. The captain George Bailey, who accepted the penalty
without contest, was fined 20% of his match fee while his team-mates
were docked 10%.
Bell’s contribution was neat and discerning, studded
by occasionally pleasing drives, Trott occupied himself diligently in
that self-absorbed way of his, his innings containing a solitary
boundary.
He was shaken out of his cocoon of contentment only once
when he seemed entirely taken aback to find Australia’s keeper, Matthew
Wade, raging at him after the pair got in a tangle as Wade chased an
inaccurate return. A few minutes later, having contemplated the mix up,
he allowed himself a slightly disturbing smile.
England’s plan was to
take advantage of the last 15 overs, beginning with the batting
Powerplay. But batting Powerplays are not often to England’s tastes. It
is as if they are contrary to the national character, resented for
artificially intruding on the normal order of things, about as popular
as a wind turbine in a Cotswold village, both having the potential to
bring energy but often bringing resentment.
Instead, they stalled.
The late-order marauders, Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler, fell cheaply
within three balls of each other and it took a judicious 46 not out from
37 balls from Ravi Bopara to heal the breach. The average score at
Edgbaston in ODIs was 224 but as the sun blazed down, this was not an
average batting day.
Things might have turned out differently if Bell
had been run-out without scoring. When Cook played Starc to backward
point, David Warner pulled off a diving stop and sprung to his feet to
throw down the stumps, with both batsmen at the wicketkeeper’s end. Cook
was just in his ground and Bell was a yard alongside him, but the ball
careered into the leg side and, much kerfuffle later, England had stolen
two overthrows.
Australia’s bowling attack sorely lacked a
specialist spinner on such a gripping surface and, among the pace
bowlers, Mitchell Starc was a disappointment.
Then with the bat they
never got going. David Warner and Shane Watson constitute as destructive
an opening pair as exists in one-day cricket, but there was barely a
whimper from either as they fell by the 15th over with the scoring rate
barely three runs an over.
Warner’s feet were fast as he carved at a
ball angled across him from Stuart Broad and presented a diving catch to
Buttler. Broad almost removed Watson, too, as a leading edge flew
beyond Cook’s grasp, diving to his left at slip. But Watson soon fell
lbw to Tim Bresnan and although Hot Spot later revealed a thin inside
edge before the ball struck his pad, he would have been out in any event
as the ball arced gently to Cook in the gully.
The balance of
England’s side gave Australia a chance with fifth-bowling duties to be
shared between Ravi Bopara and the callow offspin of Joe Root, the
latter with only one ODI wicket to his name. But this was a somewhat
abrasive pitch which aided their chances of survival release and Hughes,
losing patience, tried to pull Root off a length and was lbw.
The
wicket which as good as confirmed England’s victory - Mitchell Marsh
rattling one into Eoin Morgan’s midriff at backward point - also took
James Anderson past Darren Gough as England’s leading wicket-taker in
ODIs. Five balls later, Matthew Wade followed, albeit reluctantly,
initially hoping that Hot Spot would not reveal his thin edge, then
plotting an escape because the ball might have dropped short of
Buttler’s gloves, but umpire Dharmasena’s decision was upheld.
Bailey’s
half-century tried to hold Australia together, but he was wading
through sand and his desperate attempt to go big against James
Tredwell’s offspin caused his downfall at long-on.
BRIEF SCORE:
England 269 for 6 (Bell 91, Bopara 46*, Trott 43) beat Australia 221 for
9 (Bailey 55, Faulkner 54*, Anderson 3-30) by 48 runs
0 komentar:
Post a Comment