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Eng vs Ind, 3rd T20I – Capsey, Knight lay World Cup marker as England romp to series victory


England 184 for 4 (Capsey 82, Knight 70*) beat India 180 for 5 (Harmanpreet 56*, Bhatia 32, Deepti 32, Rodrigues 29) by six wickets

Two batters under pressure, a lofty run chase and much-needed half-centuries for Alice Capsey and Heather Knight led England to a confidence-boosting victory against India in the third and final T20I at Taunton.

In the last competitive outing for either side before the T20 World Cup starts in Birmingham on June 12, Capsey and Knight – both in need of a big score – lifted their side to a six-wicket victory with England’s joint second-highest successful run chase in T20Is.

Capsey reached 82 off 43 before she fell ramping Arundhati Reddy to short third in the 18th over, while Knight remained unbeaten on 70 off 42, striking Deepti Sharma through backward square for four to bring up the winning runs in timely style. From 38 for 3, Capsey and Knight constructed a 137-run stand for the fourth wicket off 76 balls to secure a 2-1 series win.

Harmanpreet Kaur’s unbeaten half-century underpinned India’s innings, which also had contributions from Yastika Bhatia, Deepti Sharma and Jemimah Rodrigues. She came in with her side struggling at 60 for 3 in the seventh over and helped raise them to 180 for 5 but it wasn’t enough.

Gaud returns, and how

Kranti Gaud returned to India’s starting XI after making way for offspinner Shreyanka Patil in Bristol and, after conceding two boundaries in three balls of her first over, responded supremely by bowling Danni Wyatt-Hodge with the perfect-length delivery which nipped off the seam across the batter and left her flummoxed. Fellow opener Sophia Dunkley’s woes deepened when she picked out Jemimah Rodrigues at deep midwicket off Reddy for 16. That mean’s Dunkley’s highest score for the international season so far remains 26 in the second T20 against New Zealand.

Gaud conceded just four runs off her second over and removed Amy Jones with the first ball of her third to a mistimed pull straight to midwicket. Gaud then came in for some punishment, however, as Capsey unleashed with a monstrous six over extra cover, followed by fours down the ground and through midwicket as the over went for 15 in all.

Capsey, Knight counter

It seemed harsh to question Capsey’s place in the XI given her seizing the opportunity to open with an unbeaten 74 against New Zealand in Derby but, since then her best score had been 28 dropping down to the middle order with the return of regular opener Wyatt-Hodge, albeit against sterner opposition in India. But with Jones favoured at No. 3 in this series and England still pinning their hopes on Nat Scvier-Brunt returning from injury for the T20 World Cup, it was becoming a matter of where Capsey fit. That said, Dunkley continues to struggle and, until tonight, so was Knight.

Capsey played like someone with all of that – or none of it – on her mind as she displayed exquisite timing, placement and power to reach fifty off just 27 balls. Pushing Reddy’s full ball towards mid-on, Capsey dipped her head in satisfaction as she ran a single and clenched her jaw in raising her bat for an understated celebration then set about the rest of the task at hand. She smashed 4, 6, 6 off N Shree Charani in the 16th over immdediately after Knight had raised her half-century off 31 balls to hit form at the right time. It was a satisfying knock for Knight, who had not passed 25 in five previous T20I innings this summer.

You wins some, you lose some

Openers Shafali Verma and Smriti Mandhana departed early but India were 57 for 2 at the end of the powerplay and building nicely through Yastika Bhatia and Jemimah Rodrigues, the architects of a 38-run victory at Chelmsford. Bhatia had struck three fours off one Charlie Dean over, tucked through fine leg, smashed over wide long-on and driven down the ground. Then Sophie Ecclestone produced a moment of magic in the field. Bhatia drove a Dani Gibson delivery towards the covers, where Ecclestone swooped, gathered and threw in one fluid motion to scatter the stumps at the non-striker’s end with Bhatia well short of her ground in what felt like a major breakthrough.

It was a different story on the final ball of the innings, Ecclestone’s ecstasy turning to embarrassment when Richa Ghosh hit the ball straight back to her, she gathered on the bounce, turned and threw underarm at the stumps right in front of her and missed. The batters ran two, Ecclestone dropped to her haunches with her head in her hands and only looked up as the players were walking off the field, probably wishing it would swallow her until a few team-mates gathered round to offer comforting slaps on the back.

Harmanpreet breaks new ground

Harmanpreet and Rodriges settled into a rhythm, their 40-run partnership coming off just 26 balls, Harmanpreet particularly dismissive as Smith struggled with her length on a couple of wide ones in the 10th over. Bell had been expensive, conceding 22 runs off her first two overs but she bowled Rodrigues with a slower ball that beat the inside edge to clatter into middle and off stumps. From there, Harmanpreet and Deepti settled into a 67-run partnership that would bolster the innings.

In an eventful 19th over, Harmanpreet would have been run out on 48 seeking a second run but sent back by Deepti had wicketkeeper Amy Jones not fumbled the throw in. Deepti bisected two leg-side fielders expertly for her third four before she was beaten on the top edge then sent Bell’s next ball straight up in the air to mid-on. Her dismissal stemmed the flow of runs. With an over to go, Harmanpreet was stranded on 49, but she brough up her fifty off 38 balls carving a full one from Ecclestone through point for four, her seventh boundary of the innings. It was Harmanpreet’s 17th half-century in T20Is but, remarkably, her first against England.

Valkerie Baynes is a general editor, women’s cricket, at ESPNcricinfo



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