Plenty Australia can learn from England in ODIs

By Michael Ramsey / Wire

Steve Smith says Australia could learn a thing or two from England’s freewheeling one-day international style after the visitors blazed their way to a series-opening victory.

England have taken a 1-0 lead in the five-match series after Jason Roy’s superb 180 propelled them to a five-wicket win at the MCG.

Set an imposing 305 to win on Sunday, the visitors chased down their target with seven balls to spare after Roy belted the highest ODI score by an England batsman.

He and Test skipper Joe Root (91 not out) combined for a 221-run third-wicket partnership to restore some English pride after their 4-0 Ashes series defeat.

It is the highest ODI run chase ever at the MCG, exceeding the 296 made by Australia against India in 2016.

And Smith believes it could be cause for a rethink of Australia’s strategies as they look ahead to their 2019 World Cup defence.

The Australian skipper noted that England had a wealth of attacking options with Roy, Jonny Bairstow, Alex Hales, Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler all inclined to bat aggressively.

“It just looks like the way that they play is everyone just goes really hard and Joe Root is sort of the rock in the middle,” Smith said.

“He just plays good cricket and guys bat around him.

“That works for them and that’s something that we might have to think about as well, having guys that are going really hard and having someone – it might be me – that just bats normally.”

Returning to the ODI summit is one of Smith’s key goals after Australia went winless in last year’s Champions Trophy and suffered series losses in New Zealand and India.

Describing England as one of the best ODI teams in the world, Smith said the rewards of their style may outweigh the risk.

“I guess if you do that, perhaps you’re going to have days where you get bowled out for not many but you back your players to come off maybe more often than not and get those big totals,” Smith said.

“That’s what the English players are doing at the moment. They’re just playing with such freedom and have pretty good game plans.”

Smith’s comments come less than a fortnight after Glenn Maxwell, who boasts an ODI strike rate of 123.93, was controversially omitted from Australia’s 14-man squad.

The dynamic allrounder has been in excellent touch in domestic cricket and his absence is likely to remain a talking point if England maintain the upper hand in the series.

The Crowd Says:

2018-01-15T22:05:30+00:00

Adam

Guest


They would get smashed sh@t team.

2018-01-15T11:41:41+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


James Faulkner has done very little to impress any selector over the past year or so. He is quite expensive, takes few wickets and hardly scores a run. I concede he still has plenty to say out on the field but, without performance to back it up, that becomes a parody. What do you see that impresses you?

2018-01-15T11:24:35+00:00

Saurebh Gandle

Roar Guru


Australia have plenty of ground to cover in ODI cricket. They need specialists at no.4 over a Travis Head and need to be consistent with team selection .Still do not understand why George Bailey and James Faulkner are not in squad?

2018-01-15T08:47:28+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Just play the West Aussies.

2018-01-15T01:56:12+00:00

Harbijan Can't Singh

Guest


Not really. Australia just played like England, and England played like Australia. If Australia play like Australia then they won't need to learn from England as England have shown they'd learnt from Australia, so really they just need to learn from themselves.. Simple?

Read more at The Roar