The Times Sport - UK (2020-09-12)

(Antfer) #1

2 2GS Saturday September 12 2020 | the times


WEEKEND


BRIEFING


Leading man
In two remarkable years the
obsessive originality of
Marcelo Bielsa has captivated
the city of Leeds but now he
must take on the Premier
League — starting at Anfield
this evening
PAGES 4-

Rip up rulebook
In the wake of the
controversy surrounding
Own Farrell’s punishment for
a high tackle Ben Kay argues
that it is time for fundamental
change in the way discipline
is handled in rugby union
PAGES 16-

I’ll tell you one
thing. I can write
three books of
what has
happened to me
THE DRAMATIC RETURN OF
VICTORIA AZARENKA, PAGE 18

‘Jagger. Not Messi’


When not masterminding
Wycombe’s rise through the
Football League, Gareth
Ainsworth fronts his own
band. Given the choice, he
says, he’d rather have been a
rock‘n’roll star
PAGE 12

Guess the season
Aldershot go bankrupt and
resign from the league in
mid-season;
Leeds win the league title
under Howard Wilkinson;
Wrexham knock Arsenal out
of the FA Cup
ANSWER, PAGE 15

TODAY
Tennis: US Open women’s final
Amazon Prime Video, 9pm

Liverpool v Leeds Utd
Sky Sports Main Event, 5pm

TOMORROW
Gallagher Premiership:
Wasps v Bristol Bears
BT Sport Extra, 12.30pm

2nd ODI: England v Australia
Sky Sports Cricket, 1pm

Tuscan Grand Prix
Sky Sports F1, 2.10pm

Tottenham v Everton
Sky Sp Main Event, 4.30pm

On the box


battle to a competitive score. Shortly
before the halfway point they were 123
for five when Mitchell Marsh was
joined by Glenn Maxwell, batting lower
than usual at No 7. Their partnership of
126 off 113 balls — the highest for
Australia’s sixth wicket in 150 ODIs
against England — reshaped the game.
Jofra Archer and Mark Wood, both of
whom would finish with three wickets
apiece, had given England the upper
hand. Archer gave David Warner torrid
time, snaking one ball past his outside
edge before finding a perfect length and
enough movement to beat the bat and
take the top of off stump.
Wood, bowling full enough to invite

the drive but fast enough to allow little
time for the necessary footwork,
extracted Finch and Marcus Stoinis,
who was standing in for the absent
Steve Smith. Both were caught behind
by Buttler, meaning the first three wick-
ets were entirely the work of the three
England players making their first ODI
appearances since the World Cup final.
No less striking was the impact of
Adil Rashid. He was to make liberal use
of his googly and it was evident that
several of the Australians could not
pick it. Rashid was to account for
Marnus Labuschagne, leg-before to the
wrong ’un, and Alex Carey, caught off a
top-edged sweep.
While Marsh played the anchor role
in an innings of 73 spanning 100 balls,
Maxwell moved nicely through the
gears. This was one of his best counter-
attacking innings, of 77 from 59 balls;
the only shame was that he did not kick
on when a second hundred in 101 ODI
innings was there for the taking.
He twice hit Rashid for six and played
two extraordinary shots for six off
Archer, before the bowler responded
with a slower ball which Maxwell
dragged into his stumps. Wood trapped
Marsh leg-before but the 40 balls after
Maxwell departed still yielded 45.

England gave it a very decent shot but
in the end there was to be no great
escape, no miracle. Floundering at 57
for four in the 17th over in pursuit of 295
— no side had ever successfully chased
down as many to win an ODI at Old
Trafford — they appeared to have no
chance, but Sam Billings entered to play
the innings of his life and took them
much closer than they could have
possibly imagined.
Sharing a stand of 113 in 115 balls with
Jonny Bairstow, who played a fine hand
of 84 from 107 balls, Billings showed the
coolest of heads in compiling his
maiden ODI century, despite strug-
gling early on to get the ball off the
square against tight bowling.
He managed 11 from 32 balls before
taking his first three boundaries off Pat
Cummins and from there he went from
strength to strength. When he was
eventually out to the last ball of the
innings he had made 118 off 110 balls. No
wonder the Australians shook his
hands as the players left the field, Aaron
Finch’s side relieved victors by 19 runs.
Billings scored 132 runs for once out
in three ODIs against Ireland but this
was a performance on another level
altogether by a player who would
certainly not have been playing had
Ben Stokes been available.
As with Zak Crawley in the most
recent Test match, this was another
coming-of-age innings from a Kent
player — as well as only the tenth ODI
century scored by an England No 6.
That five of the previous nine were
scored by Jos Buttler is an indication of
how hard this is to do.
The Bairstow-Billings rebuild was
painstaking. After 25 overs, England
were 96 for four, but the next ten overs
brought 73 runs. Bairstow had already
put away Cummins for six and was
starting to motor. It was then, in trying
to again get after Adam Zampa, whom
he had earlier hit out of the attack with
two sixes, that he holed out to long-on.
When Moeen Ali completed another
quiet game against Australia by
slapping to cover, and Josh Hazlewood
finished with exemplary figures of
three for 26, England headed into the
final ten overs needing another 105.
Thirty-three came off the next 20 balls
but when Chris Woakes was out
Billings was left with too much to do.
England are rightly famed for their
explosive starts so 22 for two off ten
overs — their lowest powerplay total
since 2006 — was an eyebrow-raiser,
even accounting for the quality of
Australia’s attack.
Jason Roy was playing his first
innings for England in more than a
month and it showed as he mustered
one scoring shot from 11 balls before
finally connecting with a straight drive
only to see Hazlewood cling on
one-handed low to his right. Joe Root
was similarly given nothing to work
with before tickling an attempted dab
into the wicketkeeper’s gloves.
If Finch kept on Hazlewood too long
— his eighth over cost 14 — it did not
matter when Zampa chipped in with
the huge wickets of Eoin Morgan, pull-
ing an innocuous delivery to mid-wick-
et, and Buttler, miscuing to long-off.
Make no mistake, Australia had to

Emirates Old Trafford (England won toss):
Australia beat England by 19 runs

“If Archer doesn’t get you, Wood will,”
remarked Nasser Hussain on the Sky
Sports commentary, possibly with a
nod to the famous Sydney Daily
Telegraph cartoon caption during the
1974-75 Ashes — “Ashes to Ashes,
dust to dust, if Thomson don’t get ya,
Lillee must.”
Jofra Archer and Mark Wood are
clearly not Dennis Lillee and Jeff
Thomson, but the point about a pair
of fast bowlers was valid. England
possess something very special in the
pace of Archer and Wood.
Hussain was speaking just as Wood
dismissed the Australia captain Aaron

Australia


Steve James says that


while Jofra Archer could


be irresistible, he


missed a trick with


rivals wobbling


Battling Billings falls


Simon


Wilde


England v Australia


First ODI scoreboard


AUSTRALIA R B
D A Warner
b Archer

6 14

*A J Finch
c Buttler b Wood

16 25

M P Stoinis
c Buttler b Wood

43 34

M Labuschagne
lbw b Rashid

21 30

M R Marsh
lbw b Wood

73 100

†A T Carey
c Billings b Rashid

10 10

G J Maxwell
b Archer

77 59

P J Cummins
c Morgan b Archer

9 7

M A Starc
not out

19 12

A Zampa
c and b Woakes

5 9

J Hazlewood
not out

0 0

Extras
(b 8, lb 2, w 5)

15

TOTAL (50 overs; 9 wkts) 294
Fall of wickets 1-13, 2-43, 3-80, 4-103,
5-123, 6-249, 7-259, 8-273, 9-
Bowling Woakes 10-0-59-1; Archer
10-0-57-3; Wood 10-0-54-3; Ali 10-0-59-0;
Rashid 10-0-55-

Umpires R Kettleborough and D
Millns (both Eng) TV Umpire M
Gough (Eng) Series details (all Old
Traffford): Second ODI Tomorrow
Third ODI Wednesday

ENGLAND R B
J J Roy
c and b Hazlewood

3 12

J M Bairstow
c Hazlewood b Zampa

84 107

J E Root
c Carey b Hazlewood

1 11

*E J G Morgan
c Maxwell b Zampa

23 18

†J C Buttler
c Labuschagne b Zampa

1 4

S W Billings
c Warner b Marsh

118 110

M M Ali
c Labuschagne b Hazlewood

6 13

C R Woakes
c Maxwell b Zampa

10 11

A U Rashid
c Maxwell b Cummins

5 5

J C Archer
not out

8 10

Extras
(lb 10, nb 1, w 5)

16

TOTAL (50 overs; 9 wkts) 275
M A Wood did not bat
Fall of wickets 1-7, 2-13, 3-55, 4-57, 5-170,
6-182, 7-223, 8-
Bowling Cummins 10-0-74-1; Hazlewood
10-3-26-3; Zampa 10-0-55-4; Stoinis 2-0-
15-0; Maxwell 3-0-19-0; Marsh 5-1-29-1;
Starc 10-0-47-0.

Warner is bowled
by Archer for six
as England’s pace
attack made a
good start
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