BRISTOL: England opener Jonny Bairstow plays a shot during the second ODI against Pakistan at the Bristol County Ground.—Reuters
BRISTOL: England opener Jonny Bairstow plays a shot during the second ODI against Pakistan at the Bristol County Ground.—Reuters

BRISTOL: Jonny Bairstow said playing alongside the likes of Australia’s David Warner in the Indian Premier League had helped take his game to new heights after his match-winning hundred against Pakistan in Bristol.

Opening batsman Bairstow’s blistering 128 off 93 balls helped World Cup hosts England to a six-wicket win in the third One-day International on Tuesday night as the hosts went 2-0 up in a five-match series with two to play.

The 29-year-old Yorkshireman carried on his recent form from the lucrative Twenty20 IPL where he scored 445 runs in 10 games at an average of 55.62 for the Sunrisers Hyderabad.

“You’re able to learn different things from different coaches and different players,” said Bairstow, who opened the batting for the Sunrisers with Warner — set to be an opponent during the World Cup and subsequent Ashes series in England.

“It’s just little things like game plans,” Bairstow added. “He [Warner] hits in completely different areas to potentially myself. I guess it’s method more than anything else. But learning from them, as well as the guys here, that can only be a good thing playing under pressure with expectation.”

Bairstow was furious after his seventh ODI hundred ended when he played on to Junaid Khan, with the batsman hitting out at his stumps.

“I was cross because you want to see that through,” Bairstow explained after England had made light of a target of 359 with their second-highest successful ODI run chase to win with 31 balls to spare. “You want to be going on and getting 160 or 170, and potentially 200 and seeing your team through.

“That’s where we’re at as a group of players at the moment, having competition to go and get the 150s and 160s and beyond. We are backing ourselves and competition is healthy all the way through. That’s a good place to be and I was cross about it.”

Pakistan’s defeat showed how once impregnable ODI totals can now be overhauled in modern limited-overs cricket.

It was especially tough on Imam-ul-Haq, whose career-best 151 was Pakistan’s highest individual score against England at this level.

Imam felt Pakistan had a total they could defend although their cause was not helped by some naive bowling from an inexperienced attack and slipshod fielding.

“The score was enough, 360 was a really good total,” Imam said.

“We just lost a couple of catches that cost us and our bowlers did not stick to the plan,” the 23-year-old left-handed opener added Pakistan have made several recent tours of England and in 2017 they beat arch-rivals India in the final of the 50-over Champions Trophy at The Oval.

“We came here in the Champions Trophy so we know what these wickets are like,” said Imam ahead of Friday’s fourth ODI at Trent Bridge, where the teams can expect another ideal batting pitch. “We know England are going to come hard at us, and we have to bowl better and play better cricket to win.”

Meanwhile Pakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed took some consolation from his side’s batting display.

“The way we put runs on the board, I was very confident,” he said. “But the bowling wasn’t quite up to the mark.”

Scoreboard

PAKISTAN:

Imam-ul-Haq b Curran 151
Fakhar Zaman c Root b Woakes 2
Babar Azam b Woakes 15
Haris Sohail run out 41
Sarfraz Ahmed c sub b Plunkett 27
Asif Ali c Roy b Woakes 52
Imad Wasim c and b Woakes 22
Faheem Ashraf lbw b Curran 13
Hasan Ali not out 18
Shaheen Shah Afridi c and b Willey 7
Junaid Khan not out 0

EXTRAS (LB-1, W-9) 10

TOTAL (for nine wkts, 50 overs) 358

FALL OF WKTS: 1-7, 2-27, 3-95, 4-162, 5-287, 6-310, 7-322, 8-335, 9-348.

BOWLING: Woakes 10-0-67-4; Willey 10-0-86-1 (4w); Moeen Ali 6-0-32-0; Plunkett 9-0-55-1 (3w); Curran 10-0-74-2 (1w); Stokes 4-0-34-0 (1w); Denly 1-0-9-0.

ENGLAND:

J.J. Roy c Asif b Faheem 76
J.M. Bairstow b Junaid 128
J.E. Root c Babar b Imad 43
B.A. Stokes run out 37
Moeen Ali not out 46
E.J.G. Morgan not out 17

EXTRAS (LB-3, W-8, NB-1) 12

TOTAL (for four wkts 44.5 overs) 359

FALL OF WKTS: 1-159, 2-234, 3-278, 4-324.

DID NOT BAT: J.L. Denly, C.R. Woakes, D.J. Willey, T.K. Curran, L.E. Plunkett

BOWLING: Junaid Khan 8-0-57-1 (2w); Shaheen Shah Afridi 10-0-83-0; Hasan Ali 8-0-55-0 (1w); Imad Wasim 7-0-58-1 (3w); Faheem Ashraf 9-0-75-1 (1nb, 2w); Haris Sohail 2-0-19-0; Asif Ali 0.5-0-9-0

RESULT: England won by six wickets to lead five-match series 2-0.

UMPIRES: M.A. Gough (England) and P.R. Reiffel (Australia).

TV UMPIRE: C.B. Gaffaney (New Zealand)

MATCH REFEREE: R.B. Richardson (West Indies).

MAN-OF-THE-MATCH: Jonny Bairstow.

FOURTH MATCH: Trent Bridge (D/N), Friday.

FIFTH MATCH: Headingley, Sunday.

Published in Dawn, May 16th, 2019

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