Daily Mail

JOS READY FOR BLAST-OFF

Buttler sets sights on matching the star quality of De Villiers after England ton-up heroics

- by LAWRENCE BOOTH @the_topspin

Jos Buttler smiled shyly when he was told that New Zealand seamer trent Boult had just compared him with AB de Villiers and Chris Gayle. the comparison was not entirely far-fetched — and the timing was understand­able. A few hours earlier, Buttler had flayed New Zealand for 129 in 77 balls to set up england’s record-breaking 408 for nine in the first one- day internatio­nal at edgbaston.

Now he was calmly soaking up the praise and attempting to deflect it towards his team-mates. But there was no hiding his quiet excitement at being at the hub of a one- day side that had been true to its promise to attack, attack, attack.

First, though, the modesty. ‘I’m not sure I’m quite at those guys’ level yet,’ he said. ‘AB de Villiers is someone who has been a role model for me for a long time, someone who has changed batting over the past few years. everyone is trying to emulate him.’

the evidence of tuesday afternoon in Birmingham was that some are emulating south Africa’s limited-overs captain better than others. For Buttler, who has now made the two fastest one- day centuries in english history — he reached three figures off 61 balls against sri lanka at lord’s last summer — the ascent might have been written in the stars.

softly spoken and possessing a West Country lilt that does not immediatel­y conjure up visions of a hard-bitten internatio­nal sportsman, Buttler has long emitted a mix of skill, nous and humility.

At 14 he made a century for King’s taunton against Millfield — the powerhouse of the school sporting scene in the south-West — but got out just before victory was completed. His response was to burst into tears.

By the time he was 16 he had convinced his coach at King’s, the former somerset and Northampto­nshire left-arm spinner Dennis Breakwell, that he was a ‘better cricketer than Ian Botham at that age’. Buttler was averaging 95.

Breakwell has even placed a bet, at odds of 14-1, on Buttler becoming england captain. He has four years to earn his former mentor some pocket money. As england’s limited- overs vice- captain, he is not far away.

to watch Buttler unfurl his repertoire at edgbaston — murderous, lofted straight drives, uncomplica­ted thwacks through the covers and the trademark ramp over the wicketkeep­er’s head that took him to 99 — was to wonder why england were reluctant last summer to blood him in test cricket.

But he has taken to the five- day game with equal facility, averaging 52 from his eight tests and demonstrat­ing that he is not merely the one- day dasher who has hit 37 sixes in 48 innings and is scoring at 114 runs per 100 balls.

thrillingl­y for england fans who have grown to regard talk of a new era in the same way that voters view the pre-election promises of politician­s, Buttler wants the De Villiers comparison to extend beyond his day out in Birmingham.

He is aiming high. De Villiers has 20 one-day hundreds to his name, an average of 53 and a strike-rate of 99. He is top of the ICC’s 50-over ranking and second in tests. At the World Cup, he smashed West Indies for an unbeaten 162 from 66 balls. Quite simply, he has it all. ‘that’s the role I want to play in english cricket,’ said Buttler. ‘I want to be that guy who can go out like I did here and play those kind of innings consistent­ly.’ With all the talk heading into the series surroundin­g the aggressive intent of New Zealand’s batsmen, it felt like a welcome role reversal to hear the tourists’ coach Mike Hesson heaping praise on one of england’s.

‘I thought it was an outstandin­g performanc­e,’ said Hesson. ‘there’s a very small margin for error with Jos: when you do miss, he’s got the ability to punish you and you need to recognise that and applaud it.’

those at somerset who knew Buttler well — before he joined lancashire because of competitio­n for the wicketkeep­ing role with Craig Kieswetter — are proud of their boy.

‘He’s reserved but strong,’ said somerset chairman Andy Nash, who has known Buttler since he was 12. ‘He’s gaining confidence. Colleagues have always liked and respected him.’

A member of the england dressing-room also mentions ‘a great sense of humour’.

And he is already verging on hero status at old trafford after hitting an unbeaten 71 off 35 balls last week to help lancashire to a lastball twenty20 win over roses rivals Yorkshire at Headingley.

Crucially, the 24-year- old finds himself part of an england set-up which has vowed to put the World Cup nightmare behind them and play with the freedom that comes naturally to him. Buttler once said: ‘If you’re only ever looking to hit a single, you can never hit a four.’

Before the edgbaston game — as if reading Buttler’s mind — standin coach Paul Farbrace told the team he would rather they were bowled out for 180 in 20 overs than dribble towards 240 in 50.

And so, when england slipped to 202 for six with 20 overs to go, Buttler and Adil rashid had the licence to counter-attack. the result was a world record seventh-wicket stand of 177 in just 105 balls.

‘If you scrape up to 250 in 50 overs, that’s not going to win you too many games any more,’ said Buttler. ‘so you have to be looking at 300-plus at least. You play to win.

‘I work really hard on my game and I want to be someone who can score quickly whatever the situation and whichever style of bowling I’m facing. that’s always going to be my mindset.

‘I’ve matured and, having played 50 games now, I think my selfconfid­ence is as good as it’s ever been in internatio­nal cricket.’

If the good times really are still to come, england fans are in for a treat.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Pointing the way: Root (right) marks his ton with Eoin Morgan
GETTY IMAGES Pointing the way: Root (right) marks his ton with Eoin Morgan
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