Yorkshire Post

Star Billings makes case for England place following Root’s delayed arrival

- RORY DOLLARD

SAM BILLINGS ensured England’s one-day tour of India began with a win, anchoring a successful pursuit of 305 against Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s India A in Mumbai.

Billings, fresh from a Big Bash stint with Sydney Sixers, may have owed his place in the side to the delayed arrival of new father Joe Root, but made a compelling case with a measured 93 as England squeezed home by three wickets.

Billings faced 85 balls and hit eight fours, but fell before the job was done, Chris Woakes claiming the winning boundary with seven deliveries to spare to lay down a strong first marker before the series proper.

For this was no ordinary warm-up outing, Dhoni leading an India side for probably the final time following his resignatio­n as ODI captain and joined for the occasion by a host of seasoned internatio­nals and more than 20,000 adoring fans.

India A showed their calibre with the bat as Ambati Rayudu retired on 100, Shikhar Dhawan and Yuvraj Singh made halfcentur­ies and Dhoni, inevitably, capped things with 68 unbeaten runs at the close.

But England showed calm heads to make their way past a challengin­g target, with Jason Roy (62), Jos Buttler (46) and Liam Dawson (41) backing up Billings’ centrepiec­e.

Roy kicked off the pursuit by driving Ashish Nehra’s first ball back down the ground for four, setting the tone for an explosive start to the chase. The Surrey man contribute­d 34 of England’s 58 runs in the first 10 overs, picking on Nehra with disregard.

The arrival of Mohit Sharma brought Alex Hales into play, with four fours and a six off the seamer seeing him to 40 before Yadav struck with just his third delivery.

Roy reverse swept his way past 50 in just 49 balls then lifted Yuzvendra Chalal over the square-leg ropes for six. But his adventurou­s side cost him in the end, Yadav picking up a second wicket as a mighty heave resulted in a tame top edge.

England were well ahead of the rate, but Eoin Morgan’s first England innings in four months – the captain having sat out the Bangladesh tour on safety grounds – was a brief one.

Morgan was hardly to blame though, Dhawan pulling off a blinding catch at slip from the Irishman’s reverse-sweep.

That left a rebuilding job for Buttler and Billings, who performed diligently before some long straight hits from Buttler and Billings’s wristy reverse sweeps upped the ante.

Buttler had deposited Yuvraj for successive sixes, but came undone seeking a third off Yadav and was held at long-off for 46.

Moeen Ali was lbw for a duck two balls later, giving Yadav four wickets, and once again Billings was left to steady things. He found a doughty ally in Dawson, with the pair running hard and often to keep ahead of the game as boundaries became scarce.

Billings looked in control and successive fours off Nehra in the 40th over left England needing 59 from the final 10, just under one-per-ball.

The straightfo­rward path was never likely and first Dawson, then Billings, stumbled before the line. The latter lost his leg stump to Pandya, shuffling across the crease.

Woakes ensured there were no further dramas and a wellearned win was England’s in the penultimat­e over.

 ?? PICTURE: RAJANISH KAKADE/AP ?? KEY MAN: England’s Sam Billings reverse sweeps against India A during the tourists’ warm-up match in Mumbai. Billings fell just short of a century, dismissed for 93, but laid the foundation­s for a successful chase of the target set by India A’s 304-5.
PICTURE: RAJANISH KAKADE/AP KEY MAN: England’s Sam Billings reverse sweeps against India A during the tourists’ warm-up match in Mumbai. Billings fell just short of a century, dismissed for 93, but laid the foundation­s for a successful chase of the target set by India A’s 304-5.

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