The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Currancy of pace keeps England team flush Return to a familiar shape for the third ODI against Sri Lanka

- BY RORY DOLLARD

England will return to a familiar team shape in the third one-day internatio­nal against Sri Lanka in Kandy today, adding an extra pace bowler in place of the injured Liam Dawson.

The tourists made the rare decision to field three specialist spinners in both matches last week, but the chief beneficiar­y of that tactical switch, slow leftarmer Dawson, is on the way home.

His replacemen­t Joe Denly, recalled to the 50over side after a nine-year absence, will not join his team-mates until a matter of hours before the scheduled start time and neither he, nor the freshly-married and newly-arrived Liam Plunkett, will be considered for selection.

Instead, Tom Curran looks set to feature ahead of Mark Wood, the pair having been ousted in the seam ranks by newcomer Olly Stone in Dambulla, while the younger Curran brother, Sam, is also on hand to offer left-arm swing.

With just eight more oneday internatio­nals before the provisiona­l 15-man World Cup squad is announced, and competitio­n hotting up, Wood’s likely omission nudges him back in the pecking order.

Wood is quicker and more experience­d, but Curran senior has the subtlety and variation which might allow him to thrive in subcontine­ntal conditions.

Whoever wins out, allrounder Moeen Ali says England will be more than comfortabl­e to lean on a familiar configurat­ion.

“We just go back to the same balance of team we’ve had these last few years,” he said.

“It’s a shame for Daws, because this was a great opportunit­y for him to play regularly and it hasn’t happened for him.

“I think it’s more going back what we’re good at, two spinners in the side with Joe Root being the third if needed. He’s been bowling really well with the white ball and we have good skills with our seamers as well.”

One shift that will not be forthcomin­g is a move up the batting card for the versatile Moeen. He opened the batting on England’s previous trip here in 2014 and his 119 in Colombo remains the country’s highest ODI innings on the island.

He now sits at number seven and has no serious designs on a top-order place these days given the wildly successful reinventio­n of the team’s batting ethos.

“You sometimes kind of think, ‘I would love to be opening’, but I think the way the guys have played over a few years now, there’s not a single one I look at and think I should be batting ahead of,” he told Test Match Special.

“All six of the guys are fantastic players, they have so much skill and have scored so many runs.”

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