England defeat Pakistan by 5 wickets in second T20

By
AFP
England's Eoin Morgan plays a shot as Pakistan's Mohammad Rizwan keeps wicket during the international Twenty20 cricket match between England and Pakistan at Old Trafford cricket ground in Manchester, north-west England, on August 30, 2020. — AFP

MANCHESTER: England captain Eoin Morgan led from the front as the hosts beat Pakistan by five wickets to win the second Twenty20 international at Old Trafford on Sunday.

Morgan came in on a hat-trick after leg-spinner Shadab Khan had reduced the home side, who were chasing a stiff victory target of 196, to 66-2.

But the Irishman and fellow left-hander Dawid Malan (54 not out) took the game away from tourists with a third-wicket stand of 112.

Victory, achieved with five balls to spare, saw the 50-over world champions go 1-0 up in a three-match series following Friday´s rain-marred no result in Manchester.

The travelling side's cause was not helped when experienced left-arm quick Mohammad Amir limped off after bowling just two overs with what appeared to be a hamstring injury.

Jonny Bairstow and Tom Banton made a sound start to England's chase.

But a partnership of 66 ended when Bairstow, on 44, miscued a sweep off leg-spinner Shadab Khan to short fine leg.

Next ball, with the batsmen having crossed, Banton — fresh from making 71, his maiden fifty at this level, was lbw for 20 after missing a sweep.

Morgan survived the hat-trick delivery but could have been lbw for a second-ball duck to Shadab, who finished with fine figures of 3-34 from his maximum four overs.

But a tight umpire's call verdict following Martin Saggers' original not out decision, went in the batsman's favour.

Morgan cut Iftikhar Ahmed over long-off for an audacious six before late-cutting the spinner for four.

His fourth six, off left-arm fast bowler Shaheen Afridi, saw Morgan to a 27-ball fifty that also included three fours.

By the time he holed out off paceman Haris Rauf, England needed under a run-a-ball to win.

Malan might have missed this match had not England been fielding separate red and white-ball squads in a coronavirus-affected season, with batsmen such as Test captain Joe Root and Jos Buttler omitted from this series.

But his 35-ball half-century was his seventh score of fifty or more in just 12 Twenty20 internationals and Malan finished the match when he cut Afridi for four.

Earlier, Pakistan made 195-4 featuring fine fifties from veteran batsman Mohammad Hafeez (69) and skipper Babar Azam (56).

Leg-spinner Adil Rashid took 2-32 from his maximum four overs but the rest of England's attack lacked penetration, with seamer Tom Curran conceding 46 runs — including 23 off one over.

Babar, the world's top-ranked Twenty20 batsman, pulled the first ball of the match, from fast bowler Saqib Mahmood, for four.

He went to fifty with a superb extra-cover drive off Rashid — his seventh four in 37 balls.

But Rashid had his revenge when Babar miscued a pull to deep midwicket.

Hafeez kept the runs coming, with a scooped four off Mahmood seeing him to a 26-ball fifty before the 39-year-old was dismissed off the penultimate ball of the innings.

This series, which in common with all international cricket in England this season is being played behind closed doors due to COVID-19, concludes at Old Trafford on Tuesday.

Squads

Both teams were unchanged from the sides that played out a no result in Friday's first of a three-match series in Manchester, where rain ended the match with England 131-6 off 16.1 overs and Pakistan yet to bat.

England

Jonny Bairstow (wkt), Tom Banton, Dawid Malan, Eoin Morgan (capt), Sam Billings, Moeen Ali, Lewis Gregory, Tom Curran, Adil Rashid, Chris Jordan, Saqib Mahmood

Pakistan

Babar Azam (capt), Fakhar Zaman, Mohammad Hafeez, Shoaib Malik, Mohammad Rizwan (wkt), Iftikhar Ahmed, Shadab Khan, Imad Wasim, Mohammad Amir, Shaheen Afridi, Haris Rauf

Umpires

Martin Saggers (ENG), David Millns (ENG); TV umpire: Mike Burns (ENG)

Match referee

Wayne Noon (ENG)