Sports

England v South Africa: Jonny Bairstow and Tristan Stubbs star as hosts win in Bristol


First Vitality Twenty20 international, Seat Unique Stadium, Bristol:
England 234-6 (20 overs): Bairstow 90 (53 balls), Moeen 51 (18); Ngidi 5-39
South Africa 193-8 (20 overs): Stubbs 72 (28), R Hendricks 57 (33); Gleeson 3-51
England won by 41 runs; lead series 1-0
Scorecard

Jonny Bairstow’s devastating 90 helped England beat South Africa by 41 runs in a breathless, high-scoring first Twenty20 international in Bristol.

Continuing his stunning Test form, Bairstow bullied the Proteas bowlers throughout his 53-ball assault as England racked up 234-6 – their second highest T20 score.

Bairstow added 106 with Moeen Ali, who smacked 52 from 18 balls, in a riotous fourth-wicket stand lasting just 37 balls, as one over went for 33 runs.

England hit 20 sixes, the most they have ever hit in a T20 game, while Moeen’s 16-ball fifty was the fastest by an England player.

The pair heaped misery on a ragged South Africa side, who dropped Bairstow four times in a fielding performance that bordered on comical.

Despite losing both Quinton de Kock and Rilee Rossouw in the second over, the visitors threatened to pull off what would have been their record chase as 21-year-old Tristan Stubbs smashed an astonishing 72 from 28 balls.

But Chris Jordan bowled a nerveless 18th over and, with 51 needed from the final two, Stubbs was caught at long-off from the bowling of Richard Gleeson.

The Lancashire seamer took two further wickets in the over and South Africa ended on 193-8.

The second T20 of the three-match series takes place on Thursday in Cardiff as both sides build towards the T20 World Cup in the autumn.

The summer of Bairstow continues

Bairstow’s brutality was reminiscent of his 77-ball century against New Zealand, the highlight of his four centuries in three Tests earlier this summer.

He flogged the spinners and hammered anything short as he targeted the leg side. One of his eight sixes, hit over square leg off medium pacer Andile Phehlukwayo, cleared the stands.

Bairstow, dropped on 12, 57, 72 and 77, benefitted hugely from South Africa’s shambolic fielding while Moeen cleared the ropes six times with typical elegance.

At one stage England threatened to pass their highest T20 score of 241-3, hit against New Zealand in 2019.

Bairstow began the final over unbeaten on 90 but lost the strike to a leg-bye, saw Liam Livingstone depart caught behind for five and then holed out himself to deep mid-wicket from the penultimate ball.

Still, after Bairstow sat out England’s T20 series defeat to India earlier this month, it was a welcome return for the Yorkshireman and a batting line-up in need of a boost as they look to return to form before the World Cup in Australia.

Jordan holds nerve as Stubbs threatens

When left-arm seamer Reece Topley’s fine run continued by having De Kock and Rossouw caught, the result looked a formality.

Despite opener Reeza Hendricks hitting 57 from 33 balls, England’s grip tightened further when Adil Rashid had Heinrich Klaasen caught long-on in his first over and Hendricks swept Moeen to deep mid-wicket.

But, with the run-rate spiralling, what started as a impressive consolation knock from Stubbs turned into a thrilling attack to keep the game alive.

Playing his third match but batting for his country for the first time, he showed incredible power to repeatedly clear the leg-side boundary by a distance.

After 16 overs South Africa were 171-5 and ahead of England at the equivalent stage but, after Sam Curran conceded 10, Jordan produced a clinic in death bowling.

He conceded just three singles followed by three dot balls to Phehlukwayo to effectively seal victory.

Drops cost ragged South Africa

England caught expertly. South Africa did not and it was that indiscipline which cost the Proteas.

They started England’s innings well, removing Jos Buttler for 22 and Jason Roy, who showed little sign of regaining his rhythm, for eight from 15 balls, but things quickly unravelled.

Klaasen was at fault for the first miss of Bairstow, which came while the right-hander was putting on 71 with Dawid Malan, who made 43.

At deep mid-wicket Hendricks did not pick the ball up and it went narrowly over his head for six. He later put another tough chance down at deep square leg after Rossouw and Hendricks spilled straightforward catches in the deep.

The 17th over, bowled by Phehlukwayo, included five sixes, a single and two wides. It was the most England have ever scored in one over of an international match.

One bright spot for the tourists was fast bowler Lungi Ngidi finishing the innings strongly to claim a remarkable 5-39, but they will need to improve quickly to level the series on Thursday.

‘We have been itching for that kind of performance’ – reaction

England captain Jos Buttler to BBC Sport: “The way the guys stood up and took responsibility throughout that innings – Malan, Bairstow and Moeen Ali – was fantastic. It was great to watch.

“We have been itching for that kind of performance. We scored over 200 against India at Trent Bridge and again here so really impressive.

“We knew it would be a tight game. It is a small ground and a great wicket. To pick up early wickets again was crucial and I thought the 18th over Chris Jordan bowled was brilliant and shifted the momentum.”

England batter Jonny Bairstow to BBC Sport: “I’m feeling pretty good. The format changes are coming thick and fast so it’s nice to start the series well. We’re building towards the World Cup and need to keep putting our best foot forward.”

South Africa batter Tristan Stubbs to BBC Sport: “I was hitting it nicely but it was carrying on quite well too so I just got on with it.

“At the 10-over mark the comparisons came on the screen and we were the same and I thought we could do it, but we lost a few wickets in the middle. My innings was pretty good, but we didn’t win.”



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