First Twenty20 international, Chester-le-Street |
India 132-7 (20 overs): Sharma 29; Glenn 4-23 |
England 134-1 (13 overs): Dunkley 61*, Capsey 32* |
England won by nine wickets |
Scorecard |
England raced to an emphatic nine-wicket victory with 42 balls to spare in the first T20 international against India.
Leg-spinner Sarah Glenn produced career-best figures of 4-23 at a damp Chester-le-Street after stand-in captain Amy Jones chose to bowl on a pitch that looked good for seam bowling.
But it was slow bowler Bryony Smith who dismissed Smriti Mandhana lbw before Glenn’s wickets restricted India to 132-7.
England then raced to their target in just 13 overs as Sophia Dunkley and Alice Capsey put on an unbroken partnership of 74 runs in just 40 balls.
It was the bowling of Glenn that set the tone for the match, as she trapped Dayalan Hemalatha lbw in between both Shafali Verma and Richa Ghosh holing out to Bryony Smith in the deep off the leg-spinner.
Glenn then bowled captain Harmanpreet Kaur in the middle overs and while Deepti Sharma staged a mini-revival towards the close, the India total would prove chaseable.
It was a shaky start from Dunkley, who only survived an opening-over lbw dismissal after Renuka Singh Thakur was judged to have over-stepped the crease.
But the 24-year-old grew into her innings, punishing the touring bowlers as she reached her first Twenty20 international 50 from 36 balls.
Partnered first by Danni Wyatt – who fell to an impressive stumping by Ghosh – then Capsey, Dunkley’s pulled four off Thakur sealed a comfortable England victory in the 13th over.
The series continues with the second Twenty20 international at Derby on Tuesday.
Inexperienced England impress
As England plot their route to the Twenty20 World Cup next February, they may have initially felt some concern at the number of senior players absent from the series.
Seamer Katherine Brunt – England’s leading wicket-taker in this format – was rested, while captain Heather Knight is still nursing a hip injury sustained earlier this summer.
Nat Sciver had been set to replace Knight, but withdrew herself on Thursday as she focuses on her mental health.
So new captain Amy Jones led an inexperienced England XI onto the field, with a debut handed to seamer Lauren Bell and two teenagers – Capsey and Freya Kemp – also included in the line-up.
Coach Lisa Keightley, in her last series overseeing the side, may have feared for her charges, who lost to India in the Commonwealth Games semi-finals last month with both Brunt and Sciver in the side.
But Glenn and Dunkley, relative veterans at 23 and 24 respectively, marshalled an England display that easily outshone that of their more experienced opponents.