The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

England take opener in thrilling T20 finish

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England fought back impressive­ly with the ball to beat Australia by two runs in a thrilling Twenty20 internatio­nal at the Ageas Bowl to move one up in the three-match series.

Aaron Finch’s side looked set to chase down 163 when he was going well alongside David Warner, but Jofra Archer dismissed the opening duo and four wickets for only nine runs turned the tie around.

With 15 needed off the last over, Tom Curran restricted Australia to 12 and it made Dawid Malan’s 66 earlier in the day even more crucial.

The Yorkshire batsman helped rescue England’s cause after Jos Buttler had crunched 44 in rapid time before a collapse left them struggling on 108 for five.

Malan stuck around and reached 50 for the eighth time in his short T20 career to help his team post 162 for seven before Eoin Morgan’s bowlers recovered from a poor start to hold their nerve at the death.

Australia won the toss and bowled first with Buttler, Archer and Mark Wood returning to play white-ball cricket for the first time this summer after previously being part of the bio-secure Test bubble.

It was Buttler’s first T20 match since February but it was like he had never been away as he smashed Ashton Agar for two maximums in the second over.

Mitchell Starc suffered similar punishment, with the England opener finding the boundary twice more to move onto 35 from 15 balls.

But after Buttler’s scoring slowed, he tamely picked out Pat Cummins at mid-wicket to go for 44 and give

Agar some revenge and fellow opener Jonny Bairstow was already back in the pavilion by this point.

After being 62 for one, England went on to lose four wickets for 44 runs with Tom Banton, Morgan and Moeen Ali all going cheaply and the latter duo out to Glenn Maxwell, who would finish with two for 14 on his return to the white-ball side.

Malan remained unflustere­d and after biding his time, upped the ante against Adam Zampa, hitting his final over for 22. The Yorkshire batsman was out for 66 but England set Australia 163 to win.

A lack of wickets in the powerplay overs had been a recent problem for Morgan’s side and even Archer and Wood’s return could not change their fortunes in that department.

Adil Rashid’s first over only went for five and yet his second saw Australia’s captain slog through mid-wicket for six before he collected back-to-back boundaries.

England needed to make the breakthrou­gh and Morgan turned to Archer, who delivered when Finch found Jordan at mid-off to exit for 46.

Rashid claimed Smith’s wicket and finished with two for 29 after Maxwell drove straight to Morgan.

When Warner played on for 58 off Archer Australia were reeling and the collapse continued asWood bowled Alex Carey in a spell where four wickets were taken in 14 balls at the expense of only nine runs.

The onus was on Marcus Stoinis and Agar, but Jordan ran out the latter at the end of the penultimat­e over and Curran held his nerve to secure victory.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Chris Jordan runs out Australia’s Ashton Agar.
Picture: PA. Chris Jordan runs out Australia’s Ashton Agar.

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