Key events
9th over: Australia 108-2 (Short 36, Inglis 9) With chaos swirling around him, Rashid still exudes calm and control. And even though Inglis whacked him for four down the ground with a lovely swing of the bat, the leggie still looked dangerous, keeping Australia to three singles throughout the rest of the set.
8th over: Australia 101-2 (Short 35, Inglis 3) Bethell’s first over in international cricket ends with two boundaries as he drags down to Short. First he’s cut through point and then he’s popped over the infield on the leg side between the boundary riders. Otherwise it was tidy, but those two fours means he concedes 10 runs as Australia bring up three figures in a flash.
7th over: Australia 91-2 (Short 27, Inglis 2) Great start from Rashid who knocked over the Australia skipper with one that went on with the arm while only conceding five runs. Inglis, the new man, gets off the mark with a swishing drive down the ground for two.
WICKET! Marsh b Rashid 2(3)
Adil knocks him over! From the very first ball Marsh didn’t look comfortable facing the world’s best T20 bowler. The Aussie skipper plants his front foot and takes a mighty swipe at it but misses by some distance as the leg spinner finds his off-stump.
WICKET! Head c Cox b Mahmood 59 (23)
Head holes out! After spanking Mahmood for a six to bring up his fifty off just 19 balls, and then taking two more boundaries – rather cheaply down to fine leg as Mahmood lost his line – Head goes again but can only sky it out to deep midwicekt where Cox holds onto one that came down with icicles.
Still, that’s unquestionably Australia’s powerplay.
6th over: Australia 86-1 (Short 26)
Head reaches 50 off 19 balls
“Simply incredible ball-striking,” says Eoin Morgan. That’s for sure. Another six – a swivel-pull off Mahmood – brings up his half-century.
5th over: Australia 71-0 (Head 25, Head 45) Sam Curran now and he is welcomed into the attack with a spanking. Well, six spankings, actually. It’s not good bowling. He’s far too short and Head pulls a slower ball for four, cuts for four more and then pulls a six backward of square. Curran corrects his length but it doesn’t change the outcome. Head flicks a six over midwicket and then over deep point. He ends the over with a four to deep mid-off. 446664. What an over from Head!
4th over: Australia 41-0 (Short 25, Head 15) Mahmood into the attack and he is smoked through the covers by Short who stands tall and unleashes his arms at a short and wide one. Head survives a caught behind decision having reviewed the instant the finger went up. No controversy there, it clearly hit his jumper. Short cracks two more into the covers but they’re both stopped. Not a bad first over from Mahmood.
3rd over: Australia 35-0 (Short 20, Head 15) Archer beats Head’s outside edge with his first two balls but the next two fly away to the fence. Neither are out the middle of the bat but Head gives them both a proper thwack – first over cover off the front foot, then off the back foot over backward point. That forces Archer to bowl from round the wicket to reduce the width but Head is up to the task as he tucks the final delivery through midwicket for another four.
2nd over: Australia 23-0 (Short 20, Head 3) Topley from the other end offers a different prospect than Archer. He’s looking to swing it back into the right hander with his left arm but gets too straight on two occasions and Short clobbers him for back-to-back sixes. The first is over deep square leg, the second is even bigger over fine leg. Four singles elsewhere in the set means it’s an expensive start for Topley.
1st over: Australia 8-0 (Short 7, Head 1) Archer with some zip opens up. His first ball is back of a length and Short swivel-pulls it past the man at midwicket who misfields as it bobbles for a couple. An inside edge gets Short off strike before Archer beats Head with a beauty that lifts from a good length. The next squirts off a leading edge that would have landed on a regulation backward point’s nose. Instead Head picks up a single to the sweeper and Short gets a pair of twos through the off-side.
An eventful and steamy opening from Archer.
Can confirm that the shirts aren’t classics. England in bright red with blue trousers. Australia in dark green with yellow embellishments. Actually the Aussie kit isn’t so bad.
Anyway, enough of that. It’s Archer with the new ball. He’ll be tearing into Short first up.
Almost there. They’re clearing the ground staff, ushering the Sky pundits off the pitch and setting things up. Not long now.
Jacob Bethell is on screen chatting to Mark Butcher and he seems like a lovely young lad!
I hope that comes across sincerely. Speaks well, backs himself and exudes a real love for the game. He’s just 20-years-old and has already shone under the bright lights of The Hundred, scoring fast runs and plucking sensational catches on the boundary.
There’s been loads of positive noise around him. Let’s hope he goes well.
Despite fielding three debutants and an unfamiliar top order, I’m really excited to see England bowl.
Adil Rashid is the world’s number one ranked T20 bowler and how good is it to see Jofra Archer fit and ready to go? Saqib Mahmood and Reece Topley are handy – and tall – operators as well. Australia will have to bat this evening.
England win the toss and bowl first
“The venue suits bowling first,” says skipper Phil Salt as three players – Jacob Bethell, Jordon Cox and Jamie Overton – make their debut in Brendon McCullum’s first white ball game in charge.
Mitch Marsh, Australia’s captain with a mighty moustache, also would have bowled first.
England: Phil Salt (c, wk), Will Jacks, Jordon Cox, Liam Livingstone, Jacob Bethell, Sam Curran, Jamie Overton, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid, Saqib Mahmood, Reece Topley.
Australia: Travis Head, Matthew Short, Mitchell Marsh (c), Josh Inglis (wk), Marcus Stoinis, Tim David, Cameron Green, Sean Abbott, Xavier Bartlett, Adam Zampa, Josh Hazelwood.
Andrew Kitching has a very particular wish:
“I’d love one of the old MCC touring jerseys. Love the red and yellow piping. Far better than the home version.”
Well Andrew, perhaps someone out there has just what you’re looking for.
What will the players be wearing?
That might not matter now, but in 10, 20, 30 years from now, perhaps these strips will be considered vintage classics.
Hopefully future generations have an easy time locating them. At least easier than the challenge me and my fellow collectors face whenever we search for holy grails and white whales.
For a better idea of what I’m on about, take a read of this week’s Spin column, penned by yours truly:
The Sky feed has just flicked on and it’s sunshine and blue skies!
Looks lovely down on the south coast.
It’s probably not the smartest decision but there’s something special about a player heroically limping out to bat at No 11 for the good of the team.
Here’s Tom Banton doing so for Somerset:
Rain in the air and moisture on the ground means there’ll be a delay to the toss and start time.
It was scheduled for 6 pm but it’ll now be 6:15 pm.
Play will get underway at 6:45 pm.
Can’t wait for that first ball?
Well, if you’re hankering for some cricket on the go, Tom Davies is on top of all the County Championship action here:
Preamble
Daniel Gallan
I never thought I’d say this but I’m glad the Test schedule is over and we can get stuck into some white ball action.
No really, I am. It’s not only because the six England Tests against the West Indies and Sri Lanka were plodding affairs. No disrespect to the opposition who, thanks to deep inequities in the game, arrived to a gun fight with little more than wooden swords. But of course the lack of a proper battle diluted the whole affair.
Australia’s white ball players will offer a much tougher test of England’s mettle and it’s for that reason that I’m jazzed about this contest.
As Geoff Lemon writes, there’s been a bit of change in both camps as “two quite aged teams are becoming two sides in transition.” This means we’re in relatively unknown territory and, given the heavy emphasis on 20 and 50 over ICC competitions, this next month could give us an idea of the future world order of the game. A few standout performances from some newbies could become launchpads for greater heights.
Geoff also concedes that this is a money spinner. But that’s not said with dripping cynicism. Money means interest and cricket in general needs an interested public. As a fan of the game with no skin in this one, I’m just hoping for some decent action.
England have (cheekily, I feel) named their XI already. But I’ll stick with OBO convention and list that later. I’ll also be bringing you the Aussie line-up with some other bits and bobs as we approach the first ball which is scheduled at 6:30 pm BST/3:30 am AEST (good morning to you early birds).