The Phnom Penh Post

England beat Aussies in final ODI to end on a high

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ENGLAND finished their testing tour of Australia on a high yesterday with a thrilling 12-run win in the fifth and final oneday internatio­nal in Perth.

In the first match at the new Perth Stadium, the tourists set Australia 260 to win in front of a record West Australian cricket crowd of 53,781.

Despite resting frontline bowlers Chris Woakes and Mark Wood, and having quick Jake Ball struggling with illness, the tourists managed to defend their total.

Young seamer Tom Curran was the match-winner with five wickets as Australia were dismissed for 247 with 10 balls remaining.

England, beaten 4-0 in a lopsided Ashes Test s er i es, bounced back to claim the limited-over series 4-1.

The result continued the dismal recent run of the World Cup holders in one-dayers, and Australian captain Steve Smith was again left frustrated with both batting and bowling.

“We thought we’d pulled it back really well, but we didn’t start well with the ball – been a bit of trend,” he said.

“Again we lost wickets in clumps and you can’t do that. Our batting again wasn’t good enough – these lapses are happening way too often in oneday cricket.”

Australia, thanks largely to Marcus Stoinis who was promoted to No3 and made 87, looked to be cruising to victory on 189 for four.

But the loss of Stoinis, caught at long-on off leg-spinner Adil Rashid, proved crucial.

Curran returned to the attack and removed Glenn Maxwell (34) and Mitchell Starc (0) in the space of three balls as Australia lost their way.

When Tim Paine and Adam Zampa threatened to snatch the match with a gritty ninthwicke­t sta nd, Cur ra n ca me back into the attack and clean bowled t he lat ter w it h h i s t hird ball.

In just his third one-day internatio­nal and his first of the series, the 22-year-old then delivered the last rites by bowling Paine for 34.

Curran finished with 5-35 and also had two catches dropped from his bowling, both by the normally reliable Jonny Bairstow.

Curran, man of the match, was ecstatic with the result.

“Watching the boys play one-day cricket recently has been a pleasure, and to come in and try and take my chance is a great feeling,” he said.

“I’ve been training hard. To come and play the first oneday internatio­nal at this unbelievab­le stadium, in front the ‘Barmy Army’ [England fans] . . . the game was unbelievab­le – what a finish.”

Moeen Ali’s horror tour with the bat continued when he went cheaply in the English innings. But he claimed 3-55, including the crucial wickets of Smith (12) and Mitch Marsh (13) – the latter falling to a superb reflex return catch.

Dashing Roy

Curran’s heroics came after the tourists failed to capitalise on a fast start after being sent in to bat.

Test captain Joe Root made a typically busy 62, but the English appeared to have fallen apart after a flying start when they were bowled out for 259 in 47.4 overs.

The English openers blazed away early in a polar opposite to their nightmare start in Adelaide on Friday.

In that game they were 5-8 and went to suffer their first defeat of the series, but there were n o s u c h p r o b l e ms yesterday.

Jason Roy led the charge and enjoyed some good fortune when he was brilliantl­y caught behind by Paine off Starc, only for it to be ruled a no-ball.

The dashing Roy went on to make 49 off 46 balls before being the first man to fall, caught by Josh Hazlewood off local rookie Andrew Tye to end a 71-run partnershi­p with Bairstow (44).

A number of England batsmen made similarly good starts but only Root went on to make a significan­t score.

Much to the delight of the crowd, Perth Scorchers righthande­r Tye was the star with the ball, cleaning up the English tail to finish with 5-46 off 9.4 overs.

 ?? AFP ?? England players celebrate after beating Australia in the fifth one-day internatio­nal at the Optus Perth stadium yesterday.
AFP England players celebrate after beating Australia in the fifth one-day internatio­nal at the Optus Perth stadium yesterday.

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