logo
England launch Harry Brook era with crushing win over West Indies

England launch Harry Brook era with crushing win over West Indies

England's latest white-ball reboot under new captain Harry Brook started in stunning fashion as they thrashed the West Indies by 238 runs at Edgbaston.
A decade on from posting a 400-plus total in ODIs for the first time in Birmingham to kick-start Eoin Morgan's revival of the limited-overs sides, England piled up 400 for eight in this Metro Bank ODI series opener despite no one reaching three figures.
Brook was one of four batters to pass fifty – all of the top-seven made at least 37 – as he recorded 58 off 45 balls but Jacob Bethell stole some of his thunder by top-scoring with 82 off 53 deliveries.
Ollie Pope and Zak Crawley may have quietened their critics with centuries against Zimbabwe last week but calls for Bethell to return to the Test side against India this summer are only likely to grow.
This was a classy innings which included five sixes and eight fours but was also paced perfectly before the Windies were skittled for 162 in 26.2 overs as England snapped a seven-match losing run in style.
Saqib Mahmood and Jamie Overton claimed three wickets apiece as a record win was in the offing when the Windies lurched to 102 for eight, but the tail wagged and England settled for their second biggest ODI victory – bettered only by the 242-run margin by which they beat Australia in 2018.
Brook, who inherited an ODI side in disarray following a dreadful Champions Trophy that led to Jos Buttler's resignation as skipper in March, claimed a record-equalling five catches to complete a memorable day.
It started by losing the toss but England's new-look opening pair pierced the in-field at will, with Jamie Smith showing off his range in his 37 after being dropped on one and Ben Duckett was customarily strong on the cut and pull in his 60 before both perished to outstanding catches inside the ring.
Joe Root made a typically unobtrusive 57 then nicked off, while Brook took 13 singles from his first 19 balls before thrashing five fours and three sixes, including a couple of stylish whips over fine-leg.
However, his uppish cut was taken well by a tumbling Keacy Carty and Buttler was also caught in the deep for 37 in his first innings back in the rank-and-file, leaving England vulnerable to a collapse with none of the top-five kicking on after getting in.
Having missed the Champions Trophy because of injury and last week's Test win over Zimbabwe owing to his Indian Premier League commitments, Bethell was not so charitable in his first England innings in three months.
He warmed to his task gradually before upping the ante with a mighty slog sweep for six off the underused Gudakesh Motie – the only boundary the wily slow left-armer conceded in seven tidy overs.
Bethell cut loose with four sixes off the quicks in the final powerplay in an explosive 98-run stand in 44 balls alongside Will Jacks, who contributed a rapid 39, including 22 in an over off the expensive Matthew Forde.
Needing 18 from the final over for a first international century, Bethell instead got a feather to Seales' wider off-cutter but England got to 400 – their sixth in ODIs – with four byes off the last ball.
Any hopes the Windies had of recording their highest ODI chase appeared to rest on captain Shai Hope anchoring the innings but his pull off Mahmood's bouncer led to a stunning catch from Brydon Carse over his head, reminiscent of Ben Stokes' unforgettable leaping grab in England's 2019 World Cup opener.
Hope's departure for 25 gave the bustling Mahmood his third wicket, having had Justin Greaves and Carty caught at mid-off by Brook, who dived to take a sharp chance off 18-year-old Jewel Andrew.
Brook took a couple more before Motie and Seales hit out down the order as the Windies avoided their heaviest defeat. England, though, sealed a commanding victory when Adil Rashid castled Alzarri Joseph.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Charley Hull charges into Women's Open contention at Royal Porthcawl
Charley Hull charges into Women's Open contention at Royal Porthcawl

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Charley Hull charges into Women's Open contention at Royal Porthcawl

England's Charley Hull climbed into contention at the AIG Women's Open after a superb third-round 66 left her three shots behind leader Miyu Yamashita. Hull began the day at Royal Porthcawl on even-par, 11 shots off the lead, but launched her charge with seven birdies and one bogey as her six-under score catapulted her up the leaderboard into a tie for fourth place. Japan's Yamashita, who led by three shots overnight after a bogey-free 65 on Friday, carded a two-over 74 and saw her lead cut to one shot after South Korea's Kim A-lim posted a five-under 67 to climb into outright second. American Andrea Lee also shot a 67 and sits third, while Japan's Minami Katsu sank seven birdies and an eagle for a brilliant 65 – spoilt by two birdies – to climb alongside Hull, American Megan Khang (68) and Rio Takeda (74). When world number 20 Hull was asked if she would go for victory on Sunday, she told the media: 'Yeah, 100 per cent. I've got nothing to lose have I? 'I hit it in the bunker on the first and made a good up and down there. Then I just made birdies when I gave myself an opportunity to make a birdie, apart from the last hole. 'I just kind of enjoy chasing. It's quite fun. I like it. It's more fun that way. I like hunting someone down.' England's Georgia Hall, Open winner in 2018, also climbed up the leaderboard, a four-under 68 leaving her tied in eighth place with Taiwan's Hsu Wei-ling (69) and Switzerland's Chiara Tamburlini (72). Lottie Woad, in just her second event as a professional after winning the Scottish Open last week, is a shot further back on three under after shooting a 71. The pre-tournament favourite from Surrey, who birdied the final hole after squandering several other chances, is among a group of seven tied in 11th after her one-under round alongside England's Mimi Rhodes (70). World number one Nelly Korda finished two over for the day after a 74 and sits in a group tied in 36th place, which includes New Zealand's defending champion Lydia Ko (70).

Zak Crawley falls to last ball of day with England set 374 to win fifth Test
Zak Crawley falls to last ball of day with England set 374 to win fifth Test

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Zak Crawley falls to last ball of day with England set 374 to win fifth Test

England will need to rewrite the record books with another spectacular chase after India left them chasing a mammoth 374 in the series deciding fifth Rothesay Test. The ground record at the Kia Oval stands at 263 and has stood since 1902 and an already epic challenge became even more difficult when Zak Crawley was cleaned up by a perfect Mohammed Siraj yorker with the last act of day three. Crawley and Ben Duckett chalked up the half-century before that last-gasp sucker punch, leaving 324 still to get with England closing on 50 for one. Yet a fearless England do not have far to look for inspiration, having chased 373 for five at Headingley in the first match of this series and their highest ever, 378 for three, against the same opponents at Edgbaston in 2022. That the target is so steep will still be a source of regret, India putting a patched up attack to the sword at several key moments. Yashasvi Jaiswal hit an unflappable 118 to lead the way, including a morale-crushing stand of 107 with nightwatcher Akash Deep in the morning session. Deep's colourful 66 was his highest score in any professional cricket and there was more pain to come from the bat of all-rounder Washington Sundar, who smashed four huge sixes in a late flurry worth 53 in 46 balls. England dropped three more catches on the day, taking their tally to six for the innings, adding to the work of their weary three-pronged seam attack. With Chris Woakes unable to bowl due to a dislocated shoulder, a trio thrown together hastily this week due to the absence of Ben Stokes, Jofra Archer and Brydon Carse were found wanting at times but kept charging in. They got through 79 overs between them, Josh Tongue claiming five for 125, Gus Atkinson three for 127 and Jamie Overton managed two for 98. The tourists were just 52 ahead and two down overnight but England were insipid in the opening session as they allowed India to add another 114 for the solitary wicket of Deep. Having been sent up the order on Friday evening to shield his captain, Deep fully embraced his free hit. He began with a handful of agricultural slogs across the line, most of which went in his favour, and eventually graduated to steering the ball to third man with soft hands. He should have been gone for 21, narrowly surviving Tongue's lbw shout on umpire's call and then edging the next delivery to third slip. But after a hat-trick of handling errors on day two, Crawley produced another as he failed to hold on. Ollie Pope disappeared to the dressing room 40 minutes into the session, seemingly to seek advice from head coach Brendon McCullum, but India continued to progress as a flurry of steers and thick edges skimmed into the same gap between third slip and gully. Deep passed fifty with three fours off the tiring Atkinson – showing off unexpected range with a square cut, an uppercut and a pull – but finally succumbed by popping a short ball from Overton to backward point. Gill arrived at the crease needing 32 to beat Sunil Gavaskar's national record of 774 runs in a series but fell for just 11 when Atkinson nailed him lbw with the first ball after lunch. Dismissing the prolific skipper lifted English spirits, with Atkinson adding Karun Nair for 17 when he edged behind, but Jaiswal's relentless march to the first hundred of the match dampened the enthusiasm. He was put down on 20 and 40 earlier in his innings but moved serenely to a 127-ball ton before Duckett's fumble at leg-slip gave him a third reprieve of the innings on 110. He ran out of lives when he slashed Tongue to deep third, with Overton the man to cling on, but a weary England had more problems to contend with. India added another 123 for their last four batters, taking the target from awkward, to tough and all the way to fiendishly difficult. The most galling damage was done by Sundar, one of last week's antagonist centurions at Old Trafford. While protecting last man Prasidh Krishna he smashed a furious 53, with four massive sixes and four fours, before finally underhitting one off Tongue to complete his five-wicket haul. Crawley and Pope both went for the catch, ending up in a tangle on the floor, but the former emerged with the ball safely pouched. There was enough time for 14 overs before stumps and England's top two did well to survive 13.4 of them before Siraj produced a magic ball to send India into day four with the wind in their sails.

Charley Hull surges into contention at Women's Open as leader wobbles
Charley Hull surges into contention at Women's Open as leader wobbles

The Guardian

time28 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Charley Hull surges into contention at Women's Open as leader wobbles

There are few things more exciting in golf than a marauding Charley Hull. Not only did we witness precisely that at Royal Porthcawl, but Hull sent an errant shot whizzing past the head of Minjee Lee for added theatrical effect. Hull had been battling to make the Women's Open cut for much of Friday afternoon. She started her third round 11 shots adrift of Miyu Yamashita. Within nine holes, Hull was five under par and on the charge. Further birdies at the 12th and 13th meant the Englishwoman was only four behind Yamashita. Hull did bogey the 14th, meaning a 66, but Yamashita's failure to build on her 36-hole position suddenly makes this a highly intriguing scene. Yamashita had just one player within six strokes of her at halfway. A messy 74 means Yamashita leads by a single shot. Her short putting touch totally deserted her over Saturday's closing stretch. Hull is only three behind Yamashita. On the penultimate hole, Yamashita outrageously saved par from 40ft. This was a rare highlight. Thoughts of a procession have quickly vanished. Back to back nines of 37 saw to that. The prospect of wind and rain on day four means this could turn into an epic scrap. Hull was in wonderfully bullish mood. 'I just enjoy chasing,' she said. 'It's quite fun. I like it. It's more fun that way. I like hunting someone down.' Will Hull go for it on Sunday? What a silly question. '100%,' she added. 'I haven't got anything to lose, have I?' It would, in one sense, be ridiculous if Hull ends her wait for a major on the Welsh coast. She has never been a huge fan of links golf and entered this Women's Open nursing a back problem. Hull had also admitted she lost four kilograms because of an illness which saw her removed from the course at the Evian Championship on a medical cart. 'Kind of like playing golf with your mates,' said Hull of her mindset for the final round. 'You just want to make birdies on every hole. That's how it feels tomorrow.' Unsurprisingly, she now feels as strong as ever. At Porthcawl, Hull came close to injuring another member of the field. A rare loose shot, at the 4th, went flying past Lee after a single bounce as she addressed her ball on the 17th tee. The ball rebounded from signage at the back of the tee, meaning Hull was spared a shot from deep rough. 'I like Minjee, I wouldn't want to take her out,' said Hull with a smile. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Lee was unperturbed by the incident. 'It was nothing major,' said the Australian. 'I was glad the ball bounced. I'm pretty focused. I just reset and then just go hit the ball.' This is not just the Yamashita and Hull show. Yamashita's Saturday wobbling brought a host of players back into the tournament. Kim A-lim is the closest player to Yamashita's nine under. Andrea Lee is a shot further back at minus seven. Megan Khang, Rio Takeda and Minami Katsu are alongside Hull at six under. Georgia Hall will fancy her chances from four under. Hall is a shot ahead of Lottie Woad. Twenty three players are within seven of what is now very much an under pressure leader.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store