England v New Zealand: Harry Brook and Gus Atkinson shine as hosts take 2-0 series lead
Second T20, Emirates Old Trafford |
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England 198-4 (20 overs): Bairstow 86* (60), Brook 67 (36); Sodhi 2-44 |
New Zealand 103 (13.5 overs): Seifert 39 (31); Atkinson 4-20 |
A chic batting show led England to a crushing 95-run win over New Zealand within the second T20 at Old Trafford.
Opener Jonny Bairstow hit an unbeaten 86 from 60 balls and Harry Brook struck an impressive 67 from 36 as England posted 198-4.
Fast bowler Gus Atkinson then took 4-20 on his worldwide debut as New Zealand crumbled to 103 all out.
The win offers England a 2-0 lead within the four-match series.
Brook and Bairstow added 131 for the third wicket after England misplaced Will Jacks for 19 and Dawid Malan for a duck.
New Zealand’s batters instantly felt the strain of the run-rate as Atkinson dismissed opener Devon Conway in his first over.
Leg-spinner Adil Rashid completed with 2-18 as he turned England’s main T20 wicket taker.
Tim Seifert top-scored with 39 however Glenn Phillips’ 22 was the one different contribution of greater than 20 as England backed up their complete victory at Chester-le-Street with one other dominant efficiency.
The series continues at Edgbaston on Sunday.
Brook’s majestic masterclass
It has been a whirlwind month for 24-year-old Brook, who was not chosen in England’s provisional 50-over World Cup squad however responded with a outstanding century in The Hundred.
He impressed with 43 in England’s comfy win within the first T20 however, in entrance of a vigorous Manchester crowd, he went even additional in a scintillating innings that left New Zealand’s bowlers in disbelief.
Two of his 5 sixes got here in his first 10 balls with superb drives over additional cowl off spinner Ish Sodhi, and he continued to mix finesse with energy in a blistering partnership alongside Bairstow that took the sport past the Black Caps.
Bairstow was considerably scratchy earlier than Brook’s arrival, making 26 from 27 balls as Jacks and Malan departed.
But Brook’s free-flowing method appeared to launch his fellow Yorkshireman as he reached his half-century from 40 balls earlier than launching his option to 77 within the house of his subsequent seven balls.
Brook’s omission from the 50-over squad continues to lift eyebrows, and with a efficiency of such breath-taking ability, the questions on that call usually are not going to finish any time quickly.
Atkinson’s eye-catching debut
England have been trying to construct a crop of formidable quick bowlers for a very long time, with Atkinson and Brydon Carse advancing their instances to affix that group on this series to date.
Carse impressed in one-day internationals in 2021 earlier than being hampered by accidents however took 3-23 on his T20 debut on Wednesday, whereas Atkinson right here lived as much as his popularity that has been rising over the previous 12 months.
Atkinson’s 4-20 are the very best figures by any England males’s bowler on T20 debut, and he repeatedly topped 90mph with an motion that appeared easy and deceived New Zealand’s bewildered batters.
Conway holed out to deep sq. leg earlier than Atkinson cleaned up the innings within the 14th over, having Seifert caught by Buttler, pinning Tim Southee lbw and splattering Lockie Ferguson’s stumps with a yorker.
It meant New Zealand misplaced their final 5 wickets within the house of simply 12 balls as their batting struggles mirrored their bowling.
With the likes of Mark Wood, Luke Wood and perhaps even Jofra Archer to additionally name on by England in white-ball cricket quickly, it’s unlikely New Zealand’s would be the final line-up to be blown away.
‘Anything can occur earlier than we get on that airplane’ – response
England quick bowler Gus Atkinson on BBC Two: “I did not know these have been the very best figures by an England bowler on T20 debut – that is beautiful to listen to.
“They simply advised me to do what I’ve been doing – and it went nice!”
New Zealand captain Tim Southee on BBC Two: “England performed brilliantly, the way in which Brook got here out actually took it to us.
“We were probably a bit off with the ball, which makes it hard for our batters to chase down on that wicket. It’s tough, chasing that score. You need something special.”
England captain Jos Buttler on BBC Two: “Having so many gamers to choose from is an efficient headache to have. You’re all the time leaving out good gamers, which is hard.
“Harry Brook is enjoying brilliantly. There’s plenty of noise across the World Cup and him not being in that squad for the time being, however for him to simply go and play the way in which he does – all credit score should go to him.
“There’s a long time between now and when we get on the plane – you never know what can happen.”
England batter Harry Brook on BBC Two: “I attempt to play on intuition as a lot as attainable and fortunately I hit just a few out of the center.
“A few years in the past I used to be getting too far head of myself, occupied with enjoying for England and not concentrating on enjoying for Yorkshire. I simply knuckled down and fortunately it is labored out.”