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England v Australia: first men’s T20 cricket international – live


Key events

Time for some post-match yarns.

First up it’s the player of the match, selected by the Sky commentators, Travis Head:

It was a nice start. Nice to get underway. Disappointed not to go on with it. But nice to set a platform.

I was just trying to acclimatise to a pitch that had a bit of pace in it. Last week in Scotland the pitches were a bit slow. For me it was just about using the pace well. Shorty got off to a great start in the first two overs. We matched well and started the series well.

[And the secret to his free-flowing style?] I just put it down to the coaching style. I guess a bit of luck. I;ve worked hard over a period of time to play freer. Mindset, all of those things. I’d love to go out and whack it every time. I know that’s not going to be the case. I’m in some nice form at the minute and I just hope to continue that as a batter. And also taking my chances a couple of years ago.

Every Aussie bowler bagged a wicket.

  • Bartlett: 1-26 from 3.6

  • Hazlewood: 2-32 from 4

  • Abbott: 3-28 from 3.2

  • Green: 1-14 from 1.2

  • Zampa: 2-20 from 4

  • Stoinis: 1-30 from 3.

Mahmood b Abbott 12 (13) England all-out for 151

Australia win by 28 runs. Mahmood crunched a six off the first ball by standing tall and whacking a shortish ball over midwicket. His next ball he tried to paddle it over fine leg but made a mess of it and got himself bowled.

Australia win it comfortably thanks to Head’s pyrotechnics at the top of the order and an all-round bowling performance, particularly Hazlewood and Zampa.

England’s Saqib Mahmood slaps the ball into his own stumps off the bowling of Australia’s Sean Abbott to end the match and give the visitors the victory. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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19th over: England 145-9 (Mahmood 6, Topley 1) Not long now. Green grabs a goodie. Stoinis steals a scalp. England need 35 off the final over. Six sixes will do it.

WICKET! Rashid c Green b Stoinis 7 (10) England 142-9

Another stunner in the field! Perhaps Green is the only player on the park who could have held that. He misjudged it as Rashid bunts it high and not very far. Green at mid-off has to peddle back after getting stuck underneath the ball but he sticks out his long levers and holds on.

A leaping Australia’s Cameron Green catches out England’s Adil Rashid. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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18th over: England 141-8 (Rashid 7, Mahmood 4) Abbott chooses to bowl short instead of hit the stumps. Mahmood and Rashid can’t find a boundary, and they get themselves in tangles running between the wickets, but they survive and collect a single each with Mahmood also flapping one down to deep third for two.

17th over: 135-8 (Rashid 6, Mahmood 0) Some of the crowd has seen enough as large chunks of supporters start making their way out the ground. Fair enough. This game is done. So is Hazlewood who closes out with 2-32 from his four overs. Rashid spanks one down the ground for four, much to the annoyance of the fast bowler.

I’ll pass this on to the editors, Julian Diamond:

“Hi Daniel, What chance match report headlines read … “Salt gets caught short.”

16th over: England 128-8 (Rashid 2, Mahmood 0) Zampa closes out with stunning figures of 2-20 from his four overs. This last one adding one more to the wicket column and only two to the total. England are limping to a tame end here.

WICKET! Overton b Zampa 15 (9) England 128-8

Bowled him off the pads! Overton gave himself room to work it though the off-side but the zip off the deck catches him by surprise. In the end he wafts at it tamely, misses it and is bowled after a ricochet off his pads.

Australia’s Adam Zampa’s delivery dislodges the bail and England’s Jamie Overton’s innings is no more. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
Zampa (right) is congratulated by his teammates. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
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15th over: England 126-7 (Overton 14, Rashid 1) Tell you what, that’s impressive batting from Overton. After Archer fluffed Green to deep midwicket, Overton pulled hard for four, bashed another through the covers for four more, and then picked up a pair of twos to close out the over. England won’t win, needing a further 54 off 30. But Overton is going to give it a go.

WICKET! Archer c Short b Green 4 (5) England 113-7

Predictable end for Archer. But what was he expected to do? A slog off Green doesn’t come close to the middle of the bat and Short take an easy catch running in from the boundary on the leg side.

Australia’s Matthew Short (left) celebrates taking the catch to dismiss England’s Jofra Archer. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
Archer looks dejected as he trudges off to the dressing room. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
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14th over: England 113-6 (Overton 3, Archer 6) If Archer is going to bat like that then this game is well and truly done. Number eight feels too high and he’s proving that to be the case, swiping at Hazlewood with no control or confidence. Still, he manages to hack a couple down to cow corner and also picks up a scampered single. The big Aussie bowler could clean up here after castling Livingstone via an inside edge.

WICKET! Livingstone b Hazlewood 37 (27) England 108-6

Dragged on! And that could be game over. Marsh recognised that this was the moment to strike and he went to one of his trump cards. Full with extra zip, Livingstone tried to steer it down to deep third while stuck in his crease but could only catch the inside edge.

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13th over: England 108-5 (Livingstone 37, Overton 2) Abbott concedes 15 off that over but gets the big wicket that brings out England’s long tail. Curran creamed a pull to midwicket, Livingstone chunked a drive down to deep third. There was also a no-ball and two wides. But the wicket of Curran means the bowler wins the battle and Australia are zeroing in on victory. England need 72 off 42 at over 10 an over.

WICKET! Curran c Zampa b Abbott 18 (14) England 106-5

Stunned silence greets Curran’s wicket. Abbott was having a bit of a nightmare over, conceding two fours, over-stepping once and bowling two wides. But he backed himself, dug in a slower bouner and Curran had to fetch it. But rather than spanking it over the infield, he spooned it straight to Zampa at short fine leg. Australia needed that and once again this game turns.

Australia’s Adam Zampa (third left) celebrates catching out England’s Sam Curran. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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12th over: England 93-4 (Livingstone 32, Curran 13) Curran joins the party with a world class lofted cover drive off Zampa that screams to the boundary. But Zampa is world class himself and he tightens his line and only concedes four runs from the other five deliveries in the over. The required rate has been reduced but England still need 87 from 48 balls.

11th over: England 85-4 (Livingstone 31, Curran 6) Is this the over that turns things back in England’s favour? Livingstone leads the fightback by crunching a pull shot off Stoinis’ attempted bouncer in front of square for four. Then he whips a six over deep backward square that went miles in the air. A cut towards deep cover is worth two and a drive into that same region is worth four. He keeps the strike with a single off the last ball in an over that added 17 to the score.

England’s Liam Livingstone thwacks the ball towards the boundary. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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10th over: England 68-4 (Livingstone 14, Curran 6) Zampa is on the money. Even when he over pitches or drags it down, the extra zip he’s able to generate rushes the batters and they’re unable to time it as they’d like. Curran pulls in front of square for two, Livingstone gets a single to long on, Curran gets a pair of ones in the deep and Livingstone flat-bats another single to the sweeper on the off-side. Australia won’t mind conceding six an over. England now need 112 off the last 60 balls.

9th over: England 62-4 (Livingstone 12, Curran 2) Big Stoinis with his “big rig” as Ricky Ponting put it, enters the scene. Curran gets a single to long on before Stoinis digs in a bumper that crashes into Livingstone’s helmet, beating his pull. But the England batter isn’t bothered and after a concussion test climbs into another pull and hammers it backward of square for four. A swish down to deep square adds two more off Livingstone’s bat either with two wides in the mix as well. Better over for England. They’ll need more of those.

8th over: England 53-4 (Livingstone 6, Curran 1) England need a partnership. Australia are managing to pick up regular wickets and this reply is stuttering along. Like Rashid, Zampa makes an instant impact by bagging a wicket while only giving away four singles.

WICKET! Bethell b Zampa 2 (6) England 52-4

Bethell’s debut ends in disappointment! He just didn’t pick the length as he rocked back and tried to pull a ball that wasn’t short enough to do so. It skidded off the surface and hit his stumps before he knew what had happened. Great bowling by Zampa who makes an immediate impact.

The face of Australia’s wicket keeper Josh Inglis is lit up by a flying bail which means that Josh Bethell is out. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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7th over: England 49-3 (Livingstone 4, Bethell 1) Bartlett, can’t complete his over. He was two away from finishing his set but pulled up holding his side. That’s a recurring problem for tall fast bowlers. The physio comes on to usher him off the pitch. So Cam Green will round things out. After Bartlett gave up two singles, Green concedes one more. One of those singles was off Bethell’s blade as the 20-year-old punched through the covers for his first international run.

WICKET! Salt c Short b Abbott 20 (12) England 46-3

Salt can’t believe what he’s done! He holds his head with his hands but he has to go. Abbott, after bowling four dots to Livingstone and then conceding a single to Short at fine leg, drags one down and Salt sets the pull short. But rather than belt it, he merely guides it to Short who takes a good grab above his head. Like Australia, England lose a wicket with the final ball of the powerplay but they’re 43 runs short of where the Aussies were and have two more back in the shed.

6th over: England 46-3

England’s Phil Salt looks dejected after losing his wicket to Australia’s Matthew Short. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
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5th over: England 45-2 (Salt 20, Livingstone 1) Salt is batting like a dream. He closes this over with a perfectly timed drive on the up that beats the diving fielder in the covers. Cox was finding his groove and spanked a lofted drive over extra cover before he fell to a worldie grab from David having skied a hack into the leg side.

WICKET! Cox c David b Bartlett 17 (12) England 40-2

WHAT A STUNNER! I’m sure you’ve read a whole bunch of hyperbole on the OBO over the years but that is genuinely one of the best catches I’ve ever seen. Cox hit this into the stratosphere. David, at midwicket, has to turn and chase it over his shoulder. It screams back down to Earth and the Aussie shot out both hands, got around the ball, rolled with the momentum and held on. Unreal.

Australia’s Tim David takes the catch to dismiss England’s Jordan Cox. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
David (centre left) celebrates with teammates after his fine catch. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
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4th over: England 34-1 (Salt 16, Cox 11) Salt climbs into Hazlewood’s half-volley and sweetly times it through the covers for four. That was delicious! Cox gets his first boundaries in international cricket but they’re not how he imagined they’d come. Both are off the inside edge as they race down to fine-leg. Cox pulls his helmet over his eyes in embarrassment. Don’t mind that Jordan. They all count. Salt makes in an expensive over as he ends the set with a lovely late cut that beats the man at short-third. 18 from it.

3rd over: England 16-1 (Salt 7, Cox 2) Australia’s openers are not making the same mistakes that their English counterparts made. Where Archer, Mahmood and Curran went short, Hazlewood and Bartlett are going full. Well, around a good length. Buttler begins this over by dropping a very sharp return catch with one hand. He then strings together another two dot balls and ends with another. Between them he gives up just two singles. Great bowling.

2nd over: England 14-1 (Salt 6, Cox 1) Quality from Hazlewood as he starts with a wicket and concedes just three runs. Made it look simple. A good length at a decent pace around a fourth-fifth stump line. Sounds easy when you spell it out like that.

WICKET! Jacks c Short b Hazlewood 6 (7) England 13-1

Soft from Jacks as he spoons a sitter to fine leg. Hazlewood landed it on a Test length and Jacks slid across his crease to make room. But Hazlewood followed him which meant he landed in an awkward position and couldn’t get hold of the whip.

Australia’s Matt Short catches out England’s Will Jacks. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
Australia’s Josh Hazlewood celebrates with team-mates after taking Jack’s wicket. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
Whilst Jacks looks dejected as he heads back to the dressing room. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
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1st over: England 11-0 (Salt 6, Jacks 4) Salt is caught first ball! But it’s a no-ball! Marsh didn’t hear the call from the umpire as he pouched Salt’s skewed skier at mid-off. Jacks slashes at the next and gets away with it as another skier lands where a point would have been. There are two more edges that fly towards that point region but there isn’t anyone there, so they both trickle for singles. Bartlett drags his final delivery down and Salt can rock back and pull it in front of square for four.

This is more than gettable for England.

Salt and Jacks have taken guard and are ready to go. Bartlett, listed as right-arm fast, will open.

Smylers (no last name give) wants to make sure more people see Ireland’s stunning victory:

“Hi, Daniel. If anybody hasn’t seen today’s ODI between Ireland Women and England Women, don’t look at the result; just watch the final three overs on YouTube and enjoy.”

Speaking of remarkable turnarounds, how about Ireland’s first ever win over England?

After losing by 275 runs in the previous match, a sensational final three overs saw Ireland claim a historic triumph in Belfast.

Here’s Raf Nicholson’s report:

Loads of players deserve credit. Archer and Mahmood for cleaning up the tail. Livingstone for bagging a bunch of wickets when things threatened to spiral out of control.

But the man who truly turned things round was – once again – Adil Rashid who claimed 2-23 from his four overs while conceding just one boundary.

Guy Hornsby has some love for the veteran leggie:

“I’m still not over Jimmy, of course Daniel, but I wonder when we’re going to mourn his white ball cousin, Adil. His control and variety is unequalled for England and he’s been one of the best spinners in the modern era of short form cricket. An all-timer. 120 wickets in T20s at 24, at 7.3 economy and a 20 ball strike rate. And he’s showing no signs of slowing down. When he’s gone it’s going to be an almighty hole to fill. What a player.”

WICKET! Zampa run-out Cox/Salt 4 (2) Australia all-out 179

What a remarkable turnaround that is! It ends with Zampa run-out after trying to eke out an extra run but Cox did well to pick up cleanly and throw in accurately on the bounce.

Australia had 86 from the first six overs for just one wicket. They managed 93 for nine from the remaining 14.

Phil Salt sends the bails airborne as he runs out Adam Zampa to conclude the Australian innings. Photograph: Mike Hewitt/Getty Images
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19th over: Australia 173-9 (Hazelwood 1, Zampa 0) Mahmood concedes just one run as he gets his second wicket. To the crowd’s relief he doesn’t get another as that means Archer is on a hat-trick first up next over.

WICKET! Green b Mahmood 13 (16) Australia 172-9

A TEAM HAt-TRICK! Three wickets in three balls for England and Australia are on the ropes. Another perfect yorker, this time from Mahmood. And that’s his second in two balls so he’s on a hat-trick himself.

England’s Saqib Mahmood (centre) celebrates taking the wicket of Australia’s Cameron Green. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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WICKET! Bartlett b Archer 0 (1) Australia 172-8

Two in two! That was a gem! If the first wicket was slightly fortunate as it was a full toss this was inch perfect. So fast, so accurate, so good!

18th over: Australia 172-8 (Green 13)

Australia’s Xavier Bartlett is dismissed by England’s Jofra Archer. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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WICKET! Abbott b Archer 4 (5) Australia 172-7

Full, straight, fast, OUT! Just too quick for Abbott who shifted across his crease and tried to flick it over fine leg. In the end it was a full toss but it was always beating the bat and made a mess of the sticks. Australia are collapsing.

Bails, and a stump, go flying courtesy of England’s Jofra Archer, as Australia’s Sean Abbott loses his wicket. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images
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17th over: Australia 166-6 (Green 11, Abbott 1) A fantastic return from Curran. He started his over with a wide and he must have thought this just wouldn’t be his night. But he backed himself and went to the back-of-the-hand slower ball. Once he cramped Green and then, after bringing deep third up, beat Inglis’ reverse scoop and took the top of his off-stump.

WICKET! Inglis b Curran 37 (28) Australia 165-6

Inglis falls looking for a reverse scoop! Curran, who got obliterated in his first over, returns with what could be a game-changing scalp. Slightly slower, I think, which meant Inglis lost his shape as he waited to execute his premeditated stroke. It bit into the surface and clipped the top of off. That could be the difference between chasing at 10 an over or eight an over.

England’s Sam Curran celebrates taking the wicket of Australia’s Josh Inglis. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PA
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16th over: Australia 161-5 (Inglis 36, Green 9) Rashid completes his set with figures of 1-23 from his four overs. What a player. His final six balls cost a miserly six runs and no boundaries. Inglis keeps things ticking along with Green keeping pace, flicking a couple past midwicket and running hard.

15th over: Australia 155-5 (Inglis 34, Green 5) Livingstone continues, and why not? But Inglis steps up and unfurls a truly majestic inside-out lofted cover drive that gets to the rope with just one bounce. That was gorgeous! There’s a wide down leg but otherwise Livingstone is tidy, conceding four singles and a couple as Inglis bisects two fielders in the deep on the leg side.

14th over: Australia 144-5 (Inglis 26, Green 3) Bethell isn’t having as much joy as the leggies. Another drag one – his customary one for the over – is given the business by Inglis he swivels and lifts it over wide fine leg for six. 10 off this over as well. That’s three consecutive overs from Bethell that cost double digits.



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