Cape Times

Aussies find some comfort after the pain of Ashes defeat

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LONDON: Australia thrashed England by eight wickets in their fifth and final one-day internatio­nal at Old Trafford on Sunday to win the series 3-2 and take some consolatio­n for the pain of Ashes defeat.

The result looked inevitable long before lunch, with England dismissed for 138 and captain Eoin Morgan retiring hurt after being hit on the head by a bouncer from Australia’s Mitchell Starc in the seventh over.

With England winning the toss and opting to bat, Australia’s bowlers let rip and seized crucial early wickets - reducing the hosts to 22/3 and 72/6 before wrapping up the England innings in only 33 overs.

Both England’s openers fell for four, Jason Roy given out lbw to Starc, although had he gone to the third umpire he may well have been reprieved. Alex Hales went shortly after, slicing a John Hastings delivery to point.

Only Ben Stokes offered any real resilience but when he was lbw to Mitchell Marsh for 42, leaving England on 85-7, the hosts were already staring at a crushing defeat.

Marsh also took the wickets of Jonny Bairstow, Moeen Ali and David Willey for a haul of 4/27.

Adil Rashid hung around for 35 but England were all out before the scheduled interval.

Australia, who had Aaron Finch 70 not out in a 109-run unbroken partnershi­p with George Bailey, cruised to victory with more than half their overs to spare.

Fielders rushed to help Mor- gan after he was struck on the back of the head, with Starc visibly shaken by the incident. The captain was replaced by Bairstow at the wicket while James Taylor assumed his role.

“It was a nasty knock and I really hope his health and wellbeing is OK,” said Steve Smith after his first series win as fulltime Australia captain.

“This team’s been through a few tough things, none more than last summer and you never want to see anything like that happen out on the cricket field.

“It was a tough couple of moments but I thought the boys put in a really good effort today.”

Taylor said Morgan was groggy and being treated for concussion.

Last November, Australian internatio­nal Phillip Hughes died two days after being struck on the head by a ball while he was batting in a firstclass state match in Sydney.

“The way Morgy had to depart was unfortunat­e and I think that probably cost us,” said Taylor. “Then we lost clumps of wickets, which you can’t afford to do against the world champions”.

Smith hailed his bowlers, with Marsh Man of the Match.

“I think that’s one part of the series we haven’t done so well in the first four games, starting with the ball and we addressed that,” he said.

“Today we were able to get out there and hit some good areas and let the wicket do the work. It was an early morning start and it was probably a good toss to lose in the end.” – Reuters

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