Gill century, and Kohli, Shreyas fifties power 3-0 rout of England

Cricket

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India 356 (Gill 112, Iyer 78, Kohli 52, Rashid 4-64) beat England 214 (Atkinson 38, Axar 2-22, Rana 2-31) by 142 runs

If India’s four-wicket wins against England in the first and second ODI didn’t reflect the gulf between the two sides, the 142-run victory in the third at the Narendra Modi Stadium made up for it. As does the final series score of 3-0.

The margin owed much to Shubman Gill‘s 112 on his 50th appearance in the format, a seventh century helping India to 356. But for Adil Rashid‘s 4 for 64, his career-best figures in India, it could have been a whole lot more.
Even the gulf would have been wider had Gus Atkinson not thrashed 38 at the end, having faced just 19 deliveries. But that only served to highlight England’s grim batting effort as the seamer finished as team’s joint-top scorer with Tom Banton, who arrived into the country on Monday as an injury replacement for Jacob Bethell.
The tourists were actually going steady in pursuit of their 357-run target, reaching 126 for 2 at the end of the 18th over. On cue, the middle order caved in on itself once more, collapsing to 175 for 8 midway through the 31st over. This time, with Varun Chakravarthy (suffering from a sore calf), Ravindra Jadeja and Mohammed Shami rested, the trio of Kuldeep Yadav, Washington Sundar and Arshdeep Singh had their share of the feast.

Both teams arrived in Ahmedabad looking to use this last ODI before the Champions Trophy to finetune; or in England’s case, tune outright. India’s trio of changes were as much about experimentation as Jos Buttler’s decision to bowl first after England had batted in the first innings in Nagpur and Cuttack.

Gill relished the opportunity to go first this time. After 87 and 60 in the first two matches, he was pristine throughout his jaunt to three figures, and broke a “slump” of 14 innings without a century.

He had handy allies during his stay, with Virat Kohli‘s 52 and Shreyas Iyer‘s breezy 78 off 64 balls contributing to stands of 116 and 104, respectively. A 29-ball 40 from KL Rahul, accompanied by cameos lower down the order, lifted India to their highest score at this venue, and joint third-highest against England.

There’s an argument to say the best it ever got for England on Wednesday was when Mark Wood pocketed Rohit Sharma with his first delivery of the match. Fresh from a devastating 32nd ODI century, Rohit lasted just two balls as Wood angled one into off stump that nipped off the surface, taking the edge through to a tumbling Phil Salt.

Gill and Kohli emerged from the powerplay with intent, which was only curbed when Rashid was introduced in the 15th over. The legspinner’s removal of Kohli, after the 36-year-old ticked off a 123rd fifty-plus ODI score in 50 deliveries, spoke of what was to come. Dip brought the right-hander forward, and grip and rip provided another nick for Salt.

Shreyas arrived and immediately settled into a quick groove, a century stand with Gill brought up in 85 deliveries, split evenly between the two. By then, Gill had crisply struck Wood through midwicket to bring up his century from 95 balls.

Gill freed himself up a little more after the milestone, lifting Rashid down the ground for six, but was bowled by the same bowler attempting an ungainly hack to a straight delivery. And Rashid was in the act again when Shreyas, looking to launch after reaching a half-century from 43 deliveries, lazily tickled down the leg side for another fine take from Salt.

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