JOS BUTTLER CENTURY LEADS ENGLAND TO SERIES SUCCESS
England keeper Jos Buttler hit his fifth ODI century, his slowest at 83 balls |
A scintillating century from
Jos Buttler brought England a 16-run win and a one-day international series
victory against Australia in Sydney on Sunday.
Buttler played a
majestic innings, reaching his ton from the final ball of the innings as
England posted 302-6.
The England were
189-6 on a slow pitch but Buttler and Chris Woakes (53 not out) hit 102 off the
last 10 overs.
The
hosts, set 303 to win by England after winning the toss and electing to bowl,
were always struggling in their chase and eventually managed only 286 for six.
The
result gave England an unbeatable 3-0 lead in the five-match ODI series, a
remarkable turnaround after Australia had trounced the tourists 4-0 in the
Ashes Tests.
Australia's
hopes largely rested with Steve Smith (45) and Mitchell Marsh (55), but both
were dismissed at a crucial stage of the chase, with Smith falling to a
contentious low-down catch by Buttler off the bowling of Mark Wood (2-46).
Marcus
Stoinis made a late attempt to lift Australia with a punishing 56, but England
managed to hold on despite losing pacemen Liam Plunkett to a leg injury early
in the Australian innings.
Buttler,
27, was the only batsman from either team really to get to grips with a
slightly slow pitch, and his late surge enabled England to reach a total which
had seemed out of their reach until the final few overs.
Several
English batsmen failed to capitalise on promising starts, but Buttler notched
his fifth one-day international century from the last ball of the innings as
England helped themselves to 38 off the final two overs.
Buttler
himself took 28 runs from the last 11 balls he faced. He faced 83 balls,
hitting six fours and four sixes, in a dashing innings that gathered momentum
in the last 10 overs.
Just
as England appeared to be struggling against a full-strength Australian attack,
Buttler found a willing ally in Chris Woakes late in the innings, the seamer
making 53 from 36 balls in a match-winning partnership of 113 in 11.5 overs.
Australia
recalled pacemen Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood for the match, the first time
in the one-day series that the trio of Cummins, Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc,
who spearheaded the Ashes win, had been reunited.
The
tactic appeared to be working until Buttler and Woakes came together and turned
the match on its head. The English were aided by sloppy Australian fielding,
with four missed catches and two botched run-out attempts.
The
easiest of the catches to go to grass was a howler by Cameron White, who failed
to get a hand to a skied chance from Moeen Ali when he was on one.
Marsh
was the unlucky bowler, but had his revenge a few minutes later when he bowled
Ali for six, continuing the all-rounder's wretched tour.
Smith
dropped Eoin Morgan (41) on 18 off spinner Adam Zampa, while Starc got his
fingers to a tough caught-and-bowled chance.
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