Daily Mail

The joy of six!

Liam loves battle with Buttler to hit most maximums

- LAWRENCE BOOTH in Amsterdam

Liam Livingston­e has spoken of his six-hitting rivalry with Jos Buttler as England attempt to take one-day batting to stratosphe­ric heights.

The pair added a staggering 91 off 32 balls in the first one-day internatio­nal against the Netherland­s last week to establish a world-record total of 498 for four — with Buttler smashing 14 sixes and Livingston­e six from just 22 balls.

Afterwards Buttler — who could lead England in today’s third ODI if Eoin morgan fails to recover from a groin strain — claimed Livingston­e was the bigger hitter, but Livingston­e said that did not tell the whole story.

‘I’m not going to argue with that, but he wouldn’t be this modest one-on-one with me,’ he said. ‘it’s actually quite fun. We play golf together and it’s basically just a long-drive competitio­n. it’s entertaini­ng, isn’t it?

‘ I didn’t watch too much cricket during the IPL, but when Jos was batting i’d switch on the TV. and that’s what we want to do — be entertaini­ng for people.

‘Certainly, one he hit the other day was pretty big, but don’t tell him i said that!’

With the Test team starting to go hell for leather under Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes, six-hitting is all the rage in English cricket right now — and there may be no better exponents in the world game than Buttler and Livingston­e.

At the recent IPL, they were first and second in the tournament’s six-hitting table. But although Buttler’s tally of 45 came out on top, Livingston­e’s 34 arrived at a faster rate — one every seven balls, compared with Buttler’s one every 13. Livingston­e had the higher strike-rate too: an eye-watering 182 to Buttler’s 149.

One of the most notable features of his unbeaten 66 last Friday was that he was in the groove from the start. after taking a single off his first ball from Pieter Seelaar’s left-arm spin, he clattered 32 in the next over from leg- spinner Philippe Boissevain — four sixes and two fours.

‘it’s something i’ve tried to work on for the last couple of years, and it has probably got me into this team,’ he said.

Had the 28-year-old managed to score two runs from his 15th delivery, from seamer Shane Snater, he would have broken AB de Villiers’s record for the fastest ODI half-century of all time. But Livingston­e had no idea he was on the verge of history — nor that England were on 488 with two balls to go.

‘ i actually didn’t know we needed 12,’ he said. ‘We were pretty much trying to hit every ball for six at the end, anyway. it was only when the last ball went for six and we walked off, and i saw 498.

‘You always think, “Where were the two runs that we needed?”. We keep improving. Hopefully we’ll get there one day.’

morgan and fast bowler reece Topley were the only members of the 14-man squad to miss optional nets yesterday.

England will today consider handing a first cap to Gloucester­shire’s David Payne, one of five left-arm seamers on the tour.

ENGLAND (possible team): 1 Jason Roy, 2 Phil Salt, 3 Dawid Malan, 4 Jos Buttler (capt), 5 Liam Livingston­e, 6 Moeen Ali, 7 Sam Curran, 8 David Willey, 9 Brydon Carse, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 David Payne.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Go big or go home: Livingston­e on his way to a destructiv­e 66 off 22 balls in the first ODI against the Netherland­s
GETTY IMAGES Go big or go home: Livingston­e on his way to a destructiv­e 66 off 22 balls in the first ODI against the Netherland­s
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