England skipper Morgan experiments with an eye on the Twenty20 World Cup

Dubai: When Pakistan fans learnt England’s hard-hitting Jos Buttler, who trashed a century in 46 balls in a One-dayer, was being rested for the first Twenty20 match, they heaved a sigh of relief. After all, they never expected Sam Billings, who replaced Buttler as the wicketkeeper-batsman, to be as aggressive and destructive.
They were proved spectacularly wrong in the first of back-to-back T20 games at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium on Thursday night as Billings shocked everyone with a half-century that came off just 24 balls as England scored a 14-run win.
Just 24 years of age, the same as the number of balls he played to reach his half century, Billings personified the changing trend in England’s approach towards Twenty20 cricket. Even debutant James Vince, who also is as young as Billings, missed his half-century by only nine runs.
Speaking after the match, Billings said: “It’s nice to make a contribution in a winning side. We all saw how well Jos [Buttler] played the other day — it was a ridiculous innings. If you get an opportunity, you’ve got to take it.”
Billings played some breathtakingly innovative shots — be it scoop shots or the slog sweep, revealing that he has been working hard on mastering those shots. “It’s just a case of using your options wisely, and thankfully it came off tonight,” he said.
Run outs continued to haunt Pakistan cricket even in Twenty20s after the spate of run-outs in the One-day series. Coach Waqar Younis speaking about the run-out of Umar Akmal in a terrible mix up with Shan Masood, with both batsmen sprinting towards the bowler’s end, said jokingly “The way they ran, they both should have been run-out. They need to get their heads together and ask themselves what is happening, because there is no answer for that.”
Younis admitted that his team’s batting was poor even though England’s target was an achievable one. “‘It was very poor batting. If you lose three wickets like that in the middle overs, you will lose — in any format,” he said.
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