Sunderland Echo

Dawson admits frustratio­n of ‘being on the periphery’

- David Charleswor­th Press Associatio­n

Liam Dawson acknowledg­ed being on the periphery with England can be "frustratin­g" although he relishes staying in the set-up after playing his first internatio­nal match since October 2018 in Barbados.

With Liam Livingston­e laid low by an illness unrelated to Covid, Dawson got a rare opportunit­y in the first of five Twenty20s at the Kensington Oval against the West Indies, who thrashed England by nine wickets on Saturday evening.

Dawson made just two off nine balls before being run out as England were dismissed for a paltry 103 in 19.4 overs in front of a Covid-reduced crowd at Bridgetown.

But the all-rounder was miserly with his left-arm spin, conceding just 12 runs in four overs, and he was unfortunat­e not to make inroads into the home side's batting.

Since Dawson last turned out for England, he has collected a 50-over World Cup winner's medal in 2019 as an unused squad member and has regularly been involved in the white-ball parties without being needed.

He is phlegmatic about how his internatio­nal career has unfolded – this was just his 13th appearance in all formats dating back to his debut in July 2016.

"I think you're very lucky to be in any England squad

any time in your career," he said. "You know it's never a given so to be in the squad is always brilliant.

"You're potentiall­y only ever an injury away from playing. It's frustratin­g at times but you put that back in your mind, train as hard as you can and hopefully you do get an opportunit­y at some point.

"It just shows how strong England have been in whiteball cricket, especially with Mo (Moeen Ali) and Rash (Adil Rashid) as well. I'm just

very happy to get an opportunit­y here.

"It's obviously been a while but it's great to get another opportunit­y. I've really enjoyed it."

Brandon King's unbeaten 52 from 49 balls underpinne­d a restrained chase from the Windies, who took few risks as they overhauled a paltry target with 17 balls to spare.

Englanddon­othavemuch time to lick their wounds as they are in action again on Sunday, but Dawson sees the

upside in a swift return.

"It's a good thing," he said. "We've got another opportunit­y to learn and put it right and get a win on the board. All the boys will be really excited to go again."

England were in trouble almost from the off, stuttering to 10 for three then 49 for seven as their Ashes batting woes transferre­d formats to the Caribbean.

At one stage, a new alltime low benchmark was in the offing but Chris Jordan's 28 from 23 balls and

Rashid's 22 from 18 deliveries ensured that remains the 80 they made against India at the 2012 World Twenty20.

Jason Holder finished with format-best figures of four for seven in 3.1 overs, twice taking two wickets in as many deliveries, as a newlook Windies side, without the likes of Chris Gayle and Dwayne Bravo, drew first blood.

"Everything clicked for us, things went our way and the guys really ran with it," Holder said.

 ?? ?? England's Liam Dawson puts his hands to his head as Brandon King get runs during West Indies' crushing T20I win at Kensington Oval in Barbados.
England's Liam Dawson puts his hands to his head as Brandon King get runs during West Indies' crushing T20I win at Kensington Oval in Barbados.

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