Yorkshire Post

Roy determined to take his T20 scoring to the next level

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ONLY TWO men have ever scored a Twenty20 hundred for England but after hitting form in India, Jason Roy has set his sights on joining the club.

Alex Hales was the first man to reach the three-figure milestone, making a thrilling 116 not out in a World Cup clash against Sri Lanka

in 2014, but there has been only one further century in the seven years that followed.

That was scored by Dawid Malan against New Zealand in 2019, with the Yorkshire batsman also finishing unbeaten on 99 against South Africa in December.

Their current opponents India, by contrast, boast seven hundreds including four from the bat of Rohit Sharma and two by KL Rahul.

Roy has top-scored for the tourists in their first two matches in Ahmedabad, 49 in a winning cause followed by 46 in a losing one, but hopes to take his scoring to the next level with three games to go.

His current best sits at 78 but he knows exactly what it takes to go on, scoring four tons in domestic T20s and another nine in England’s all-conquering 50-over side.

“Those forties are great and look good on the scoreboard but for a team to get 180s, 190s and very competitiv­e totals in T20, you need someone to go on and get a big score,” he said ahead of today’s clash at the Narendra Modi Stadium.

“I’d say it’s been a bit of a stopstart T20 internatio­nal career for me, really.

“I haven’t quite got going properly with those big scores, there’s been no hundreds, so that’s my target.

“To score a hundred in the T20 format, you have to be ultra-aggressive.

“You’re looking at facing a maximum of 60 balls, really: start in sixth gear up to the sixth over, then go down the gears and then back up again.

“It’s a mixture of aggression and pretty calculated stuff if you want to get those big scores.”

Surrey batsman Roy heads into the third match of the series just 15 runs away from reaching 1,000 in the format, and could become the fifth man to do so after current captain Eoin Morgan, Hales, Kevin Pietersen and team-mate Jos Buttler.

“My mindset is to go out there, get the best possible start for the team and put aside what I might be feeling,” he said.

“My job is to not mess about, really.

“That’s just the way T20 goes, and you’ve got to... if you live by the sword, you’ve got to be willing to die by it.”

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