Sunderland Echo

Ali hails Buttler for putting faith in spin as England level the series

- By Rory Dollard nep.sport@jpimedia.co.uk

Moeen Ali praised England’s stand-in skipper Jos Buttler after he trusted his slow bowlers to spin it and win it in the second Twenty20 against Pakistan.

Defending a total of 200 all out, built around his own free scoring 59, Butt l er relied on his trio of tweakers to deliver more than half of the overs in baking conditions at Headingley after stepping in for the rested Eoin Morgan. No England captain has ever used as much spin in T20 cricket as the 11 overs sent down by AdilR as hid, Matt Park in son and Moeen.

Between them they took five wickets for 87, slowing down the tourists’ chase and making important breakthrou­ghs that paved the way for a 45-run win.

“I don’t think it was a game plan, it was just Jos playing the conditions,” said Moeen, who dismissed Mo ham mad Ha feez and Fakhar Zaman in his second over.

“I don’t think it was risky at all. It was great conditions to be a spinner. Having batted on it for a while himself he felt like facing spin was quite tough and it did spin. It thought our legspinner­s bowled fantastica­lly well, Parky and Rash compliment­ed each other brilliantl­y. They’ re both very different, but both very skilful.”

Moeen also enjoyed his most impactful recent performanc­e in England colours, bowling more than a solitary over for the first time in 10 matches and hitting a feisty 36.

He has struggled to lock in a defined role in the past couple of years but, at 34 years old, is trying not to let his changing circumstan­ces affect his ability to perform. “Being an allrounder you want to bat and bowl as much as you can and it’ s been quite difficult and tough ,” he explained.

“Sometimes in the past I could have let it put me down a bit mentally, in terms of not playing and getting frustrated,

but now I am a little bit wiser I try to keep feeling confident and playing well. It does make you feel like the role I have is bits and pieces, but there will be times I’ll be up the order. I do see myself as a bit of a utility player.”

Moeen has seen his place come under growing pressure from Li am Living stone’ s rising status. As a big-hitting batsman who can also bowl spin, he is clearly looking to occupy some of the same space and saw his stock rise exponentia­lly with a 42-ball century in the series opener at Trent Bridge.

He followed that with 38 in Leeds, including a staggering hit off Haris Rauf that soared

over the newly developed Football End Stand.

“I have watched it 20 times on Twitter – it is just mad! What golf club would you need to get it over that stand? I have not seen a bigger six – the height, the elevation, the distance,” England Test bowler Stuart Broad said.

Moeen, meanwhile, felt a certain sense of deja-vu when the ball disappeare­d out of the stadium. “It was huge. But I’ve seen him do that a couple of times now,” he said.

“I played with him in( South Africa’s) Mzansi Super League and he hit one out of Johannesbu­rg! He’s playing so well and is a fantastic player who gives us that power we need sometimes.”

Delving even further into the memory banks, Moeen added: “I saw Graeme Hick hit one here a few years ago, a half volley off the back foot… he hit Goughy (Darren Gough) over the stadium. This one was just as big.”

 ??  ?? England batsman Liam Livingston­e hits a six over the Rugby stand during the Second Vitality Blast IT20 clash against Pakistan at Emerald Headingley Stadium.
England batsman Liam Livingston­e hits a six over the Rugby stand during the Second Vitality Blast IT20 clash against Pakistan at Emerald Headingley Stadium.

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