3rd ODI icc Match ENG vs IND 2018




ENG vs IND mtach

England Beat India  

In

3rd ODI Match




England won by 8 wickets
ODI 3 of 3 (ENG wins 2-1)


England - 260/2 44.3/50 ov RR: 5.84     
                                      
                                                          India - 256/8 50/50 ov RR: 5.12                     



v England win toss and elect to bowl
v Hosts are set 257 to win
v Kohli falls to phenomenal Rashid delivery on 71, England complete excellent bowling display
v Bairstow falls for rapid 30 early in England reply, Vince run out for 27
v Root (100*) and Morgan (88*) see England through to comfortable eight-wicket victory  

England Batting
R
B
4s
6s
S/R
James Vincerun out (Hardik Pandya/MS Dhoni)
27
27
5
0
100.00
Jonny Bairstowc Suresh Raina b Shardul Thakur
30
13
7
0
230.76
Joe Root NOT OUT
100
120
10
0
83.33
Eoin Morgan CPTNOT OUT
88
108
9
1
81.48
Ben Stokes
-
-
-
-
-
Jos Buttler WKT
-
-
-
-
-
Moeen Ali
-
-
-
-
-
David Willey
-
-
-
-
-
Adil Rashid
-
-
-
-
-
Liam Plunkett
-
-
-
-
-
Mark Wood
-
-
-
-
-
Extras(nb 1, w 5, b 3, lb 6)            15
Total  (2 wickets, 44.3 overs)       260    



India Batting
R
B
4s
6s
S/R
Rohit Sharmac Mark Wood b David Willey
2
18
0
0
11.11
Shikhar Dhawanrun out (Ben Stokes)
44
49
7
0
89.79
Virat Kohli CPT b Adil Rashid
71
72
8
0
98.61
Dinesh Karthik b Adil Rashid
21
22
3
0
95.45
MS Dhoni WKTc Jos Buttler b David Willey
42
66
4
0
63.63
Suresh Rainac Joe Root b Adil Rashid
1
4
0
0
25.00
Hardik Pandyac Jos Buttler b Mark Wood
21
21
2
0
100.00
Bhuvneshwar Kumarc Jonny Bairstow b David Willey
21
35
1
0
60.00
Shardul Thakur NOT OUT
22
13
0
2
169.23
Kuldeep Yadav
-
-
-
-
-
Yuzvendra Chahal
-
-
-
-
-
Extras   (w 5, lb 6)   11       
Total  (8 wickets, 50 overs)          256    



England have won the ODI series 2-1, making it one series apiece after India triumphed by the same scoreline in the T20s, to set things up perfectly for the Test series! That gets underway on August 1 at Edgbaston and we'll be here to keep you up-to-date with all the action as it happens.
Adil Rashid and David Willey took three wickets each before a mammoth partnership between Joe Root and Eoin Morgan sealed victory with ease.
England won the toss and elected to chase, something they have seemed less sure of than batting first recently. Twice against Australia they came close to losing after fielding first, while against Scotland they went one worse, falling just short of chasing 372 against the team north of the border.

This then will be a performance to savour, a consummate performance against the other main contenders for next year’s Cricket World Cup, coming under pressure in a series decider, and in conditions which should have favoured their opponents.
There was turn to exploit, but it was England who utilised it better, Rashid taking three wickets to curb a promising India start, the early wicket of Rohit Sharma, who smashed Willey down deep square’s throat for 2, and Shikhar Dhawan’s dismissal, briiliantly run out by Ben Stokes, not preventing them from marching inexorably to 125/2.


The leg-spinner bowled Virat Kohli for 71 and Dinesh Karthik for 22 before having Suresh Raina caught behind for 1, and in quick time India were 158/5; they never recovered. That dismissal of Kohli, pitching leg, gripping, and hitting off, deserves to be replayed over and over, as does Kohli’s stunned reaction.
MS Dhoni attempted a rescue act but could only manage a slow 42 before edging an excellent ball from the enterprising David Willey behind, and though Bhuvneshwar Kumar blocked diligently, and Shardul Thakur thwacked two sixes, India’s 256/8 looked a long way under-par.
How they started with the ball didn’t help their cause. James Vince, playing in place of Jason Roy, ruled out with a cut finger, caressed the first ball of the chase, a long hop, to the fence, and much else followed that was too long or too short as Jonny Bairstow raced to 30 from 12 deliveries. From his 13th he fell, chipping tamely to midwicket, while Vince’s dismissal was tamer still, a lazy second run seeing him run out, yet another caught out by the speed at which Dhoni brings the ball back to the stumps.


At that stage England were 74/2, and India still needed a few more wickets to truly stake a claim. But none were forthcoming, Root and Morgan adding 186 to see their side home without further loss. India’s wrist-spinners toiled without reward, the pair playing them as well as perhaps anyone has since their emergence. They underlined their importance to the side, as did the stat that in the course of their partnership they overtook Ian Bell and Alastair Cook as the pair who had added the most runs for England together in ODI cricket.
By the end, the only question was whether Joe Root would reach a richly deserved second hundred in succession, which he duly did with a boundary from the last ball of the innings, followed by a bat drop. He and England couldn’t have planned it any better.

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