Root, England pacers demolish West Indies in ICC World Cup game

England's Joe Root pulls en route to his 100 against the West Indies, Friday

 

 

Southampton: Joe Root (100 n o, 94b, 11×4) hit his second century of the tournament after England pace battery tormented the West Indies batsmen to set up a thumping eight-wicket win in their World Cup match here Friday.

West Indies got a taste of their own medicine – they had troubled the Pakistanis with bouncers in their only win thus far – as the England pace battery unleashed fiery spells to bundle them out for 212 in 44.4 overs.

England overhauled the target with remarkable ease, completing the win in 33.1 overs as Root dominated the batting show. It was Root’s 16th ODI hundred.

West Indies owed their total to Nicholas Pooran (63, 78b, 3×4, 1×6 ), who chose the biggest stage to strike his maiden ODI fifty, and Shimron Hetmyer’s (39) sensible batting on a pitch which had no demons.  They added 89 runs for the fourth wicket but West Indies’ big guns failed to fire.

Extravagance, when the situation demanded patience, resulted in Chris Gayle (36) and Andre Russell (21) throwing their wickets away. The T20 style batting in the longer format cost their side dear.

Young pacer Jofra Archer (3/30) had the West Indies batsmen hopping troubling them with the steep bounce. Archer, Mark Wood (3/18), Chris Woakes (1/16) and Liam Plunkket (1/30) delivered the goods for the home favourites after home skipper Eoin Morgan opted to field.

For defending 212, West Indies needed early wickets but openers Root and Jonny Bairstow (45, 46b, 7×4) punctured all their hopes with a commanding 91-run stand.

It seemed the two batsmen were competing to hit most the elegant shots one can hit. Their cover and straight drives were like unrestrained stream of a river. Left-arm pacer Sheldon Cottrell did ask a few tough questions to the English duo but Root and Bairstow were up for the task.

Bairstow departed when his square cut off Shannon Gabriel landed straight into the big hands of Carlos Brathwaite.  Root and Woakes (40, 54b, 4×4), promoted to No.3, then added 104 runs for the second wicket to push the side to the doorstep of a comfortable win.

The result catapulted England (6 points) to the second spot in the table behind New Zealand (7 points).

Earlier, the ball was hurrying on to the batsmen and whether it was a Shai Hope (11) or the big-hitting Gayle, the Caribbeans found the going tough as timing the ball was a challenge. They had already lost Evin Lewis (0), bowled by Woakes off a yorker.

Gayle, out of frustration, pulled one from Woakes, just managed an edge but escaped as Wood grassed a sitter. The marauding batter did hit a few big shots, including a massive straight six off Woakes, but did not last long, edging one straight to Jonny Bairstow off Plunkett.

Mark Wood (without cap) celebrates with his teammates after the dismissal of Shai Hope

Hope’s torturous stay was ended by Wood when he had him trapped after reviewing the umpire’s not out decision.

Pooran and Hetmyer then chose restrain over flamboyance, steadying the innings. The duo did all the hard work, working the ball around to keep the scoreboard going in their partnership, which got broken when Root had Hetmyer caught off his own bowling. The part-time off-spinner struck in his next over too, dismissing the rival captain Jason Holder (9) in similar fashion.

Brief scores: West Indies 212 all out in 44.4 overs (Nicholas Pooran 63, Shimron Hetmyer 39, Chris Gayle 36, Jofra Archer 3/30, Mark Wood 3/18) lost to England 213 for 2 in 33.1 overs (Joe Root 104 n o, Jonny Bairstow 45) by eight wickets.

Agencies

 

 

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