Predicting England’s ODI XI to take on Pakistan

By Arnab Bhattacharya / Roar Guru

With three players and four staff testing positive to COVID-19 in England’s ODI squad for their series against Pakistan two days before the first ODI, a completely new team has been named, with Ben Stokes to lead the nation.

A big surprise in England’s new squad is the absence of Sam Hain despite averaging under 60 in list A cricket and no Stuart Broad despite the lack of experience among the England seamers.

To open the batting I’ve chosen James Vince and Phil Salt, two names relatively known in Australia with their BBL exploits over the past few seasons.

With 16 ODI caps to his name, James Vince hasn’t done justice to his international ODI numbers. However, he has plenty of list A experience and should be expected to open in the first ODI. It could be argued that this may be Vince’s final gig in ODI cricket should he fail this series.

The best player available in this squad to complement Vince is Phil Salt. An aggressive batsman, Salt will be looking to take advantage of the field restrictions and go all guns blazing from ball one.

Sports opinion delivered daily 

   

To round off the top four is Dawid Malan and Ben Duckett. Malan brings plenty of white-ball experience through franchise leagues, list A cricket and T20 internationals. If he can replicate his T20 form into ODI cricket, then England will be in with a chance of causing a shock or two.

Ben Duckett will have been waiting nearly five years for another ODI cap, having last played an ODI against Bangladesh in 2016. Now 26, England fans will be hoping he’s matured as a batsman and understands his game enough to play international cricket again.

At No. 5 is captain Ben Stokes. No introduction is required for Stokes, who will be relishing leading a highly inexperienced ODI XI. Alongside his batting and captaincy, Stokes will be able to bowl a few overs if required.

At No. 6 is wicketkeeper John Simpson. The 32-year-old would’ve never seen this coming, but with a host of players out due to isolation and injury, Simpson finds himself as the likely candidate to be the keeper.

To finish off the top seven is Lewis Gregory. An all-rounder who can give it a whack with the bat and has a range of change-ups, Gregory will be tasked with the finishers role and bowl as many overs as possible.

To round off the XI with four frontline bowlers, I’ve gone ahead with Craig Overton, Brydon Carse, Saqib Mahmood and Matt Parkinson.

Overton made his ODI debut in 2018 and will have been waiting three years between drinks for another ODI game. Add in his batting abilities, which England like in their ODI line-ups, and he’s almost a shoo-in for the XI.

Carse will play the role that Mark Wood plays normally: blasting batsmen out with raw pace. Mahmood has been backed heavily by Eoin Morgan based on potential, and there’ll be pressure on him to perform in this series.

The spinner is none other than Parkinson, who I rate highly. One of the few leg spinners who are ready to play all forms of international cricket, Parkinson is a brilliant understudy for Adil Rashid. Watch out for Parkinson to slow it down to the low 70s in order to deceive the Pakistan batsmen through a lack of pace and flight.

The Crowd Says:

2021-07-09T23:09:24+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Yeah, saw that, thanks Carl. A great result for England but a really disheartening one for Pakistan. Hopefully the next couple of games are a lot closer

2021-07-09T10:48:59+00:00

Cari

Roar Rookie


The first 50x50 game has been played, result England won by 9 wickets.

2021-07-08T22:23:08+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I'm guessing there's far more to his off-field issues than meets the eye, at least from the perspective of the ECB and the England selectors.

2021-07-08T04:33:38+00:00

Arj

Roar Rookie


I feel bad for Alex Hales. Obviously he's had his problems off the field, but surely he warrants selection with his solid domestic and t20 league performances, especially in these circumstances.

2021-07-08T00:53:43+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I don't get a sense about what England want from this tournament, especially now that they're down so many players. I doubt greatly they'll be looking to play as they've done in recent years, going out blazing with the bat, mostly because they don't have the lineup to do it. Neither Lawrence nor Crawley were in good red ball form so I wouldn't be surprised if selectors used this series as a chance for them to bat at 3 and 4 and try to get some time in the middle. The bonuses, if either/both do strike form in this format, England will have another couple of ODI batting choices and these guys will have gained a lot of confidence heading into the Test series

AUTHOR

2021-07-07T23:40:20+00:00

Arnab Bhattacharya

Roar Guru


Duckett is a part time keeper and isn’t Notts first choice keeper even in white ball cricket so I don’t see him keeping for England later tonight. Lawrence seems more like a T20 player than a one day cricketer. Maybe if Duckett does end up keeping then Lawrence takes the finishers spot at six. Crawley won’t get ahead of Malan and Duckett unless he opens with Vince (which means England will be looking to be 0-50 after 10 instead of going all guns blazing in the power play like they prefer to do)

2021-07-07T23:09:59+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I don't follow England's second string ODI players that closely but there are a few calls you've made I don't understand. Why won't Dan Lawrence or Zac Crawley play? Why would England play two keepers in Duckett & Simpson? I'm very much looking forward to watching Parkinson bowl. He looks like a very talented prospect.

Read more at The Roar