Fifth Twenty20, Ahmedabad |
India 224-2 (20 overs): Kohli 80* (52), Rohit 64 (34) |
England 188-8 (20 overs): Malan 68 (46); Bhuvneshwar 2-15 |
India won by 36 runs |
Scorecard |
England lost their Twenty20 series decider to an India side that followed a batting masterclass with some wonderful bowling in Ahmedabad.
Virat Kohli anchored India with 80 not out from 52 balls, allowing Rohit Sharma (64 from 34), Hardik Pandya (39 not out from 17) and Suryakumar Yadav (32 from 17) to blaze around him.
The hosts’ 224-2 was their highest T20 score against England and set the tourists the challenge of their second-highest successful chase in the shortest format.
They were on course at 127-1 after 12 overs, only for Bhuvneshwar Kumar to bowl a brilliant 13th, conceding three runs and crucially having Jos Buttler caught at long-off for 52.
Dawid Malan remained, but when he was bowled by the impressive Shardul Thakur for 68, 83 from the final five overs was a huge ask.
England ended on 188-8, losing by 36 runs, with India taking the series 3-2.
A three-match one-day international series in Pune begins on Tuesday.
England fall short
England wanted this series to test them before the World Cup, with the decider delivering the stiffest of challenges.
After the India assault, Jason Roy was bowled swiping at Bhuvneshwar from the second ball of the innings, only for Malan to arrive with a fluency that was missing in the previous four games.
Buttler was typically powerful, and with Malan driving and deflecting, their partnership of 130 had England in the hunt.
However, on a run-filled pitch, it was the performance of Bhuvneshwar that proved the difference. With no great pace, he held his nerve with accuracy and trickery to return incredible figures of 2-15 from his four overs.
Thakur supported with his own changes of pace. Around the time of Buttler’s wicket, England went 22 deliveries without finding the boundary.
Jonny Bairstow, Malan and Eoin Morgan fell for two runs in the space of seven deliveries, all to slower balls, and England ground to a halt.
India blaze away
Kohli’s decision to open alongside Rohit united India’s best two players, with devastating and thrilling results.
The languid Rohit played beautifully, driving and pulling with awesome power. A wild hack to inside-edge a Stokes slower ball on to the stumps was the first mistake he made.
The first-wicket stand of 94 came in only nine overs, but there was no respite for England, with Suryakumar hitting two glorious lofted drives for sixes off Adil Rashid from the second and third balls he faced.
Kohli was the anchor, taking only 25 from his first 23 balls, then 55 from the next 29. He was joined for the final assault by Hardik, who muscled boundaries off the back foot.
England were almost powerless in the face of such destruction on a superb surface, but at times the bowling lacked variety.
Still, Chris Jordan’s outrageous moment of brilliance to remove Suryakumar will live long in the memory. Sprinting round the long-on boundary, he was in perfect control when he held Suryakumar at waist height in his right hand, the catch completed when Jordan under-armed to Roy, who could only laugh in disbelief.
What about the World Cup?
England have been keen to emphasise the importance of this series, with the World Cup in India now only seven months away.
Morgan even said it might be the last time he gets his first-choice side together before the squad for that tournament is named.
England have learnt that the express pace of Wood is a huge asset in the powerplay, while Malan gave a reminder of why he is rated as the world’s number one batsman after a run of low scores.
The tourists only won games when batting second and there are questions over the quality of their back-up bowling. Jordan and Sam Curran struggled to make an impact, while Moeen Ali never made it on to the pitch.
There is also a suspicion they are not finding the best way to utilise Ben Stokes in the shortest format.
However, England’s power-packed batting means they will always carry a threat. India will probably start the World Cup as favourites, but England are still to be feared.