Jason Roy scored his second hundred of the series as England beat Australia by six wickets at Chester-le-Street on Thursday to move within one win of their first-ever 5-0 one-day international clean sweep of their arch-rivals.
England, fresh from their 481 for six -- the highest men's ODI total of all time -- in a crushing 242-run win at Trent Bridge on Tuesday, 'only' needed 311 at the Riverside.
Jos Buttler's rampage after Jason Roy's ton seals victory (yet again)
— ESPNcricinfo (@ESPNcricinfo) June 21, 2018
England 4 - 0 Australiahttps://t.co/SK1J55ADHu #ENGvAUS pic.twitter.com/oFnuuVJWYl
But what was still England's second highest total batting second to win a match at this level, behind their 350 for three against New Zealand at Trent Bridge three years ago, was made to look insignificant as in-form openers Roy (101) and Jonny Bairstow (79) put on 174.
"I'm trying to control my innings, pace it so I can set some good foundations for the end," Roy told Sky Sports. "Unfortunately I couldn't kick on today."
England finished on 314 for four, with Jos Buttler 54 not out, as they won with 32 balls to spare.
England beat Australia by 6️⃣ wickets in the fourth ODI in Durham
— ICC (@ICC) June 21, 2018
Eoin Morgan's men made it look like light work, with Roy the star man, hitting 101 off 83 balls 🙌#ENGvAUS scorecard: https://t.co/j816td2KB2 pic.twitter.com/Mnvji2hCpl
"We played pretty solid cricket," said England captain Eoin Morgan.
England, the world's top-ranked side in this format, will now look to surpass their previous best ODI series result against world champions Australia -- 4-0, including a washout, in a five-match home campaign in 2012 -- at Old Trafford on Sunday.
This was Australia's 15th defeat in 17 completed ODIs as once again a side missing six first-choice players in banned star batsmen Steve Smith and David Warner, as well as injured quicks Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood and sidelined all-rounder Mitchell Marsh, failed to truly extend 2019 World Cup hosts England.
Australia have work to do to avoid a 5-0 sweep.
— ICC (@ICC) June 22, 2018
But Aaron Finch is clear about one thing they shouldn't do: Copy England.
➡️ https://t.co/unAnIcIJ7A pic.twitter.com/2KNI25JoVu
"We were 30 or 40 short in the end," said Tim Paine, the Australia captain.
"We came here with an inexperienced side. It's not an excuse but they (England) are the best side in the world and they are really hard to beat."
Roy, who ran himself out for 82 on Tuesday, was quickly into his stride with two fours off successive Billy Stanlake deliveries.
"It's a shock. That was England at its best."
— ICC (@ICC) June 21, 2018
After England's record-breaking total, Justin Langer has suggestions about how Australia can fight back. #ENGvsAUS ➡️ https://t.co/C52pez1JSQ pic.twitter.com/2gDHeY4Ikd
Roy, following a 120 in the first ODI at The Oval, his Surrey home ground, completed another hundred when he hoisted recalled off-spinner Nathan Lyon for a huge six that saw him to the landmark in 83 balls.
But two balls later his sliced drive off Lyon found Shaun Marsh at backward point.
And 174 for one became 183 for two when Bairstow, trying to run Stanlake to third man, guided a catch to wicket-keeper Paine.
But Australia's series was summed up when Alex Hales, on 17, edged medium-pacer Michael Neser only for Paine to drop a regulation two-handed catch.
England say the prospect of their first 5-0 series whitewash over a major nation is not a motivating factor heading into Sunday's final ODI against Australia https://t.co/Zgt1wGpUrj #ENGvAUS pic.twitter.com/PPolkhgKCm
— cricket.com.au (@CricketAus) June 22, 2018
"I'm trying to enjoy it but when it rains, it pours," said Paine. "You have to catch those but it just popped out."
Earlier, Aaron Finch (100) and Marsh (101) both hit hundreds in Australia's 310 for eight, with Marsh's following his 131 against England in Cardiff last weekend.
But their failure to press on cost Australia a truly imposing total.
Their score was still a Riverside ODI record, surpassing England's 307 for five against New Zealand in 2008.
Roy launches a monster six to bring up his sixth ODI hundred and his third against Australia this year. England are cruising: https://t.co/rRZWhH2w7t #ENGvAUS pic.twitter.com/fZ5Lnk2XTk
— cricket.com.au (@CricketAus) June 21, 2018
Leave a Comment