England produce remarkable fightback to beat Australia in first T20

4 years ago 269
First Twenty20, Ageas Bowl, Southampton
England 162-7 (20 overs): Malan 66 (43) Buttler 44 (29); K Richardson 2-13, Maxwell 2-14
Australia 160-6 (20 overs): Warner 58 (47), Finch 46 (32)
England win by two runs
Scorecard

England pulled off a remarkable fightback to beat Australia by two runs in a thrilling first Twenty20 international at the Ageas Bowl.

Chasing 163, Australia were cruising to victory - needing just 39 from 38 balls with nine wickets remaining.

But the wicket of Steve Smith, one of two wickets to fall in Adil Rashid's final over, sparked a collapse of 4-9 in 14 deliveries.

Ashton Agar was run out from the final ball of the penultimate over leaving the tourists needing 15 from the final six balls.

Marcus Stoinis hit a six from the second delivery of Tom Curran's over but still needed five from the final ball. Curran perfectly executed a yorker to see England take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

England had earlier been grateful for 66 from Dawid Malan and 44 from Jos Buttler in their own underwhelming batting performance.

The second match is on Sunday - live on BBC One from 13:50 BST.

England capitalise as Australia implode

England's bowling improved significantly from the beginning of the Australia innings but they were only able to take victory thanks to an implosion by the tourists.

Opener David Warner and Aaron Finch plundered the bowling to begin with. putting on 98 as Mark Wood and Jofra Archer bowled too short - the batsmen repeatedly hitting fours square off the back foot.

Even when Finch hit Archer to long-off for 46, Smith looked comfortable. He pulled his first ball - a 94mph delivery from Wood - for four.

What followed was remarkable. Smith top-edged a sweep off Rashid when on 18 and Maxwell hit the final ball of the leg spinner's spell to extra cover - a tactical error which proved crucial.

Warner departed for 56 two balls later - bowled off his pads by Archer - and in the following over Alex Carey was also bowled by a fast delivery from Wood.

The wickets fell and runs dried up. There was not a boundary hit after a Smith six in the 14th over until Stoinis' big hit over extra cover with five balls left.

Stoinis had attempted to play himself in, backing himself to hit the required runs from the final over. He cleared the ropes once but also missed two other deliveries trying to power the ball away. Curran held his nerve where the Australia all-rounder did not.

This was Australia's first competitive match for almost six months because of the coronavirus pandemic, one mitigating factor.

Malan proves worth again

England's total did not look enough at halfway, never mind when Warner and Finch were were racing, seemingly, to victory.

Buttler had given England a quick start, seven boundaries coming in his 29-ball knock including two straight sixes off spinner Ashton Agar in the second over that went for 16 runs.

England were 64-1 when Buttler hit leg-spinner Adam Zampa to deep mid-wicket and afterwards had a collapse of their own. Eoin Morgan's side lost 5-60 as canny Australia bowling, largely spin and slower balls, proved effective.

It was left to Malan, retained in his position at number three, to muster a score for the hosts.

As wickets fell around him he was calm. He batted with relative composure until launching an attack against Zampa in the 18th over. He hit two sixes - one over mid-wicket and one over long-off - in an over that cost 22 and boosted England's failing innings.

It was Malan's eighth score of 50 or more in 14 T20 internationals.

England still have players to come back - Jason Roy and Ben Stokes were missing from this game - but Malan, who made a match-winning knock in the second T20 against Pakistan, is fast making himself undroppable.

'The bowlers came good' - reaction

England captain Eoin Morgan: "The bowlers really came good in the last eight overs. It's always difficult coming in, under lights, pressure on, on a slow wicket.

"Tom Curran followed on from a fantastic winter. It's great to see him calm in execution in the past few overs."

Australia captain Aaron Finch: "We knew England would keep coming hard and we probably struggled to find the boundary in that 12 to 18-over mark. That's something to work on.

"I would probably be more critical of myself and Davey, who got us off to a good start but couldn't go on to make the match-winning contribution."

Man of the match Dawid Malan: "I don't know what the secret is, but it's working so far.

"This white-ball team has been the strongest England have ever had. I don't know where I slot in."

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