Jason Roy overcame a dizzy spell to lead England's charge to a 44-run
win under the Duckworth/Lewis/Stern method in a rain-marred first
One-Day International (ODI) against Pakistan at the Rose Bowl in
Southampton on Wednesday (August 24). Roy's quickfire 65 fired England
towards an initial victory target of 261 after Pakistan had made 260 for
six, with captain Azhar Ali top-scoring with 82.
But
following a third and final rain interruption, the umpires eventually
called the game off with England 194 for three. Eoin Morgan, the England
captain, was 33 not out and Ben Stokes 15 not out when the decision was
taken.
Roy and Joe Root (61) took England to the brink of
victory with a second-wicket stand of 89 in 14 overs. The 26-year-old
Roy sparked England's chase with three fours in four balls off Umar Gul.
But there was a worrying moment when Roy, on 20, needed several
minutes' on-field treatment for a dizzy spell.
"It was a case
of not having enough sugar on me apparently, that's it plain and
simple," Roy told reporters. "I had a headache, felt a bit dizzy, they
got the physio and the doctor on, they told me to get some sugar on
board.
"I was able to get my bearings, settle and re-set myself and just go again," he added.
Meanwhile
opening partner Alex Hales, who managed just 145 runs during the
preceding 2-2 drawn Test series against Pakistan, fell cheaply again. He
was out for seven when he guided Gul straight to Mohammad Hafeez at
first slip.
Mohammad Amir had five catches dropped off his
bowling during the Test series and the Pakistan paceman's bad luck
continued on Wednesday. Roy, on 24, skied left-arm quick Amir high on
the leg side. The ball appeared to be heading straight to Gul at square
leg. However, wicket-keeper Sarfraz Ahmed called for the catch, only to
make insufficient ground and drop the chance despite getting both gloves
to the ball.
Pakistan may have recently climbed to the top of
the Test rankings, but this was the kind of fielding error which had
helped leave them languishing in ninth place in the equivalent ODI
standings. Roy swept left-arm spinner Imad Wasim for the first six of
the match before completing a 43-ball fifty, a knock featuring five
fours.
But his innings ended when a lofted drive off spinner
Mohammad Nawaz was brilliantly caught just inside the boundary by Babar
Azam, running round from long-off. Root, England's star batsman in all
three formats, was untroubled while hitting six fours in his 72-ball
stay at the crease. But when Morgan dropped the ball into the offside
and set off, Root failed to beat Azhar's direct hit.
Earlier, Azhar won the toss and led from the front in an innings where Sarfraz made 55 and Azam was unluckily lbw for 40.
Pakistan
were going well at 173 for three after 35 overs but then lost Azhar,
who felt his side had fallen short with the bat. "300 obviously, we
always look to score 300, but definitely 280-290.
"One of your
top order has to score and bat long, triple figures would be nice and
you always build a total when the top order perform," he said.
Azhar,
however, was twice dropped on nine. Hales floored a relatively routine
chance in the gully before wicket-keeper Jos Buttler could not hold a
more difficult left-handed catch down the leg side. Babar was given out
lbw to leg-spinner Adil Rashid by Australian umpire Simon Fry, even
though replays clearly showed an inside edge.
But by that
stage Pakistan had used up their lone review of the innings. Azhar
pressed on to a relatively sedate 84-ball fifty before upping his tempo.
But he fell when top-edging a slog-sweep off Rashid (two for 51) to
Moeen Ali at short third man.
The five-match series continues at Lord's on Saturday.
Brief Scores:
Pakistan 260/6 in 50 overs (Azhar Ali 82, Sarfraz Ahmed 55; Adil Rashid
2-51) lost to England 194/4 in 34.3 (Jason Roy 65, Joe Root 61) by 44
runs (D/L/S method)
No comments:
Post a Comment