Leicester Mercury

Day/night fans left short-changed as England fail

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ENGLAND were blown away for 110 as a reunion of their first-choice batting line-up fell flat in a 10-wicket defeat to India, writes Rory Dollard of PA.

After three years of being kept apart by a combinatio­n of Covid-19 protocols, squad rotation and availabili­ty, England were able to put five of their top six from the 2019 World Cup triumph back together – with recently retired skipper Eoin Morgan the only absentee.

But a return to 50-over duty for Test captain Ben Stokes and in-form pair Jonny Bairstow and Joe Root could not stop a rampant India, who shredded a formidable-looking batting order in just 25.2 overs.

As if things couldn’t get any worse for England, the visitors’ openers then knocked off the required runs in just 18.4 overs.

Four of England’s top order were sent packing for ducks, with Jason Roy, Root, Stokes and Liam Livingston­e all failing to score, effectivel­y wrecking the game as a contest.

India seamer Jasprit Bumrah returned a career-best haul of six for 19, topping and tailing the innings, with the England attack looking toothless by comparison as Rohit Sharma’s dominant 76 and Shikhar Dhawan’s 31 finished things decisively.

With muggy conditions and a green track, Rohit opted to bowl first and did not have long to wait for Bumrah to get things moving.

Roy got away with one mis-timed drive but not a second, dragging down his stumps as he pursued a ball from well outside off. That brought Root to the crease, with an open invitation to anchor the innings in his usual methodical manner, but he lasted just two balls.

Looking to access his favourite scoring area towards third man he played away from his body and grazed a lifter from Bumrah for the first of three catches for Rishabh Pant.

In came Stokes, no stranger to a crisis, but his first ODI innings in a year lasted exactly one delivery.

Mohammed Shami attacked from round the wicket, jagged it in hard off the seam and clipped the inside edge. It still needed a sharp diving catch down the leg side, but Pant obliged.

The trio of zeros on the scorecard told a sorry tale for England, with back-to-back boundaries off Jos Buttler’s first two balls barely even registerin­g.

Bairstow had seen the chaos unfold from the non-striker’s end but was soon an active participan­t.

Fresh from a career-best run of red-ball form, he wafted at the relentless Bumrah and was gone for seven as Pant dived in front of slip to make it 17 for four.

The worst dismissal was still to come, Livingston­e trying to force his way through the tricky situation by charging Bumrah. He overcommit­ted, over-balanced and left his stumps fatally exposed in an ugly exit.

Moeen Ali was spared the fate of becoming England’s fifth duck when a half-chance evaded the wicketkeep­er, but it was not long before he fed a low return catch to Prasidh Krishna.

England were burning through their options in a hurry and lost their last hope when Buttler top-edged Shami to deep square. He had been relatively immune until then, his 30 coming at almost a run-a-ball.

When Shami bowled Craig Overton to make it 68 for eight, a new record appeared to be incoming, but David Willey (21) and Brydon Carse shared a risky stand of 35 to at least break the 100 barrier.

Bumrah returned to see off both, leaving the openers - Rohit and Dhawan - with a simple task. They almost started with a run out off the first ball, but that was a red herring as they progressed with ease.

India sprinted over the line, Rohit on 76 not out and Dhawan on 31, with seven extras, leaving the fans 334 balls short and the advertised day/ night match barely stretching into early evening.

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