Yorkshire Post

Bairstow and Root both endure golden ducks as England are overwhelme­d

ENGLAND V INDIA T20 INTERNATIO­NAL

- DAVID CLOUGH

ENGLAND’S WINNING whiteball run came to a juddering halt at Old Trafford as India stormed into a 1-0 lead at the start of the Vitality IT20 series.

Jos Buttler’s seventh Twenty20 half-century in his last eight attempts, dating back to his Indian Premier League heroics for Rajasthan Royals, hinted at much better than England’s eventual 159-8 after being put in.

Kuldeep Yadav did the damage with some brilliant variations and deceptions for his maiden five-wicket haul at this level, and then on a glorious evening KL Rahul (101no) made short work of the chase as India prevailed with eight wickets and 10 balls to spare.

In front of a noisy 23,000 crowd, apparently dominated by Indian support, the conclusion was long foregone once Rahul raced to his 50 from just 27 balls in a second-wicket partnershi­p of 123 with Rohit Sharma.

He escaped one chance when Jason Roy put him down at point off David Willey on 17, but was otherwise imperious as he cashed in his second Twenty20 internatio­nal hundred with 10 fours and five sixes on a very good batting surface.

Whereas England’s spinners could make no difference, Kuldeep had stopped the home batsmen in their tracks as they lost three wickets in one over and 5-22 after reaching 95-1.

The home innings was very much one of two halves – before and after the left-arm wristspinn­er’s interventi­on.

In the second instalment there were three golden ducks and only one double-figure score between eight batsmen after Buttler (69) and Roy had shared a 50 opening stand.

Kuldeep (5-24) conceded a boundary to Buttler, perfectlyp­laced between long-on and deep midwicket, from his first delivery.

He then mixed up his pace wonderfull­y, however, to flummox Alex Hales, who was eventually bowled round his legs trying to sweep, ending his laboured contributi­on of eight from 18 balls.

Roy was his usual flamboyant self until he edged an attempted pull at Umesh Yadav down on to his stumps.

It was not until Kuldeep took over, though, that England hit the skids.

Captain Eoin Morgan promoted himself above Joe Root, but mistimed an attempted slog-sweep to his opposite number Virat Kohli running in from deep midwicket.

That was the first ball of Kuldeep’s third over, and by the end of it he had two more wickets in two balls as Jonny Bairstow and then Root went in all-Yorkshire golden-duck action replay – both stumped off googlies.

Moeen Ali could not stop the rot and Buttler was Kuldeep’s last victim when he was caught at long-on by Kohli.

David Willey had got off the mark with a pick-up six first ball off Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar at the start of the 17th over – which cost 20 runs – and England’s No 8 hit an unbeaten 29 from just 15 balls.

It seemed briefly that it might be enough to challenge India a little.

Rahul quickly put paid to that theory, though, coming to the crease after the early loss of Shikhar Dhawan, edging on to Willey.

Then even after Rohit drove Adil Rashid into the hands of extra cover, Kohli duly helped to administer the necessary, passing 2,000 runs in this format along the way.

England were therefore left to contemplat­e a reality check following last month’s sixgame white-ball whitewash of Australia.

Captain Morgan is hoping England can bounce back from the defeat with a result in Friday’s second day/night match in Cardiff.

He said: “They played well. It wasn’t our day but hopefully we can turn it around for the next game.”

 ??  ?? KULDEEP YADAV: His brilliant variations and deceptions bamboozled England.
KULDEEP YADAV: His brilliant variations and deceptions bamboozled England.

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