Daily Mail

ALI’S GOT HIS MOJO BACK

He passes test of nerve as England thrive

- LAWRENCE BOOTH

As Moeen Ali ran back towards long-off on saturday night, peering skyward in search of evin lewis’s miscued drive off Chris Woakes, there was time for many thoughts to fill his mind. Chief among them, presumably, was: don’t drop it.

The narrative of a difficult year seemed to demand just that. But Moeen clung on superbly, setting the tone for a faultless fielding performanc­e by england. His off-breaks soon removed lendl simmons and shimron Hetmyer in one of his best T20 spells.

if Adil Rashid grabbed the attention with figures of four for two in a dismal West indian total of 55, it was Moeen who paved the way — and Moeen who walked off with the man of the match award.

‘A catch like that gives you a bit of confidence,’ he said. ‘i think it settled my nerves.’

And nerves were understand­able — even for a player whose religious faith famously keeps his cricket in perspectiv­e, and helped him cope with being dropped midway through england’s 50-over World Cup-winning campaign in 2019.

More recent events, too, might have gnawed away at a less equable soul. earlier this year, his tour of sri lanka was ruined by a positive Covid result, and shortly after a miscommuni­cation by Joe Root gave the impression he wanted to leave the Test series in india. in fact, he was simply being rested-and-rotated out of the party, as per the pre-tour plans.

When Moeen returned, eoin Morgan ignored him for the five-match Twenty20 series.

Behind the scenes, Moeen’s belief in his captain was wavering. Then came his Test retirement, and general agreement that he had been exciting, exasperati­ng and probably unfulfille­d. But he enjoyed an uplifting time at the iPl, and played a big part in the final as Chennai super Kings saw off Morgan’s Kolkata Knight Riders. He joined his england teammates with a spring in his step.

on saturday, for the first time in his england career, Moeen bowled unchanged from the first over, and finished with two for 17 — his most economical four-over spell. For a player who in 2020 would regularly be taken off after six balls, it was a significan­t developmen­t.

‘He’s on top of a wave at the moment,’ said england head coach Chris silverwood. ‘He’s enjoying himself. He sees a real purpose to what he’s doing, and he sees how he fits into that team. Whenever he’s in that position, he’s a very dangerous character.

‘Around the dressing-room he adds a lot of value — the knowledge he’s got through cricket — but he’s also very good at pulling people together, which is an important cog in the wheel. With the form he’s in, the character in him is coming out. it’s great to see. He’s so much fun to have around, but we’re seeing that fun coming out on the field as well, so we’ve got to try to keep him in that position.’

A few months ago, the talk was that liam livingston­e might be edging Moeen out. now, on the slow pitches of the Middle east, and with livingston­e enduring a mini-slump after his high-voltage summer, it’s clear that Moeen is an integral part of england’s multi-pronged bowling line-up.

‘We watched the iPl very closely, how the wickets behaved, how you adapt to conditions,’ said silverwood. ‘We’ve got variation in the attack — left-arm, right-arm, spin, pace, whatever it may be, we’ve got everything there to cover every eventualit­y.’

Mark Wood missed the demolition of West indies because of his troublesom­e left ankle. While silverwood played down concerns, Wood is unlikely to be risked against Bangladesh in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday. But, unlike the current Test squad, england’s T20 group do not rely exclusivel­y on Wood for pace, and silverwood described the prospect of teaming him with the rapid left-armer Tymal Mills as ‘exciting’.

‘You can see once the pace cranks up, people do strange things,’ he said after Mills took care of Chris Gayle and nicholas Pooran.

‘Pace does that to people. To have someone with that ability, and from a left-arm angle as well, is a real asset for us.’

so, too, is a cheery, engaged Moeen Ali. At 34, he may not have long left in internatio­nal cricket. But the early signs are that he is keen to make the most of it. DUBAI: West Indies 55 (14.2 overs; Rashid 4-2, Moeen 2-17, Mills 2-17), England 56-4 (8.2 overs). England won by six wickets.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Spin to win: Moeen stars with the ball
GETTY IMAGES Spin to win: Moeen stars with the ball

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom