ADVERTISEMENT

Australia beats England by 1 wicket in last over

January 17, 2014 03:10 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 06:03 pm IST - BRISBANE, Australia

England's Ian Bell crashes to the ground as he is run out from a direct hit by Australia's Michael Clarke during the second one-day international cricket match between England and Australia at the Gabba in Brisbane, Australia, Friday, Jan. 17, 2014. (AP Photo/Tertius Pickard)

James Faulkner smashed an unbeaten 69 off 47 balls to give Australia an unlikely one-wicket win over England in the second one-day international for a 2-0 lead in the five-match series.

Man-of-the-match Faulkner smashed five sixes and three boundaries in a 57-run partnership with Clint McKay in the final five overs to lead Australia to its victory target of 301 with just three balls to spare.

After Alastair Cook won the toss and elected England to bat, Eoin Morgan scored a dashing century and Ian Bell had 68 in a very competitive 300—8.

ADVERTISEMENT

Australia made a disastrous start in reply when Aaron Finch was caught one-handed by Gary Ballance off Chris Jordan (2—53). Jordan soon struck again when he caught-and-bowled David Warner for 18.

Earlier, Eoin Morgan smashed a dashing century to lead England to a competitive 300-8.

Morgan hit four fours and six sixes in his knock of 106 before he was caught by Michael Clarke off James Faulkner (2—71).

ADVERTISEMENT

Ian Bell made 68 to steady the innings after the early loss of Alastair Cook (22) and Joe Root (2) before being run out by Clarke.

Morgan earned an early reprieve while on 1 when he lofted a Clarke ball to deep mid-wicket for a simple catch but it was deemed not out because Australia had set too many fielders outside the inner circle.

Cook had another disappointing day after winning the toss and electing to bat first on a dry and flat Gabba wicket. The England captain again went cheaply, caught and bowled by Glenn Maxwell (2—31).

Joe Root fell shortly after, trapped lbw off Ashes hero Mitchell Johnson.

Gary Ballance made just 9 before being caught out of his crease by wicketkeeper Brad Haddin off Maxwell, leaving England looking vulnerable on 73—3.

Bell then set about restoring the innings with a solid knock that included five boundaries.

Ravi Bopara made 24 before being caught by George Bailey off Faulkner.

Jos Buttler made 49, with his score revised upward by a post-innings review which found a shot that had seemed to be knocked back into play by Shaun Marsh was actually a boundary.

Ben Stokes was caught for a duck by Maxwell off Coulter—Nine and Morgan was finally dismissed in the final over.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT