1st T20I: Series opener between India and England called off after first innings due to rain
Chester-Le-Street, July 2
The first T20I between India and England was abandoned without a result on Wednesday night as heavy rain came pouring down before the home side could start its reply to the visitors' 189/7 in 20 overs at the Riverside Ground on Wednesday.
The ground staff brought out the covers and applied them across the square as rain started soon around the time the players walked off the ground at the end of the 20th over of the Indian innings.
The downpour became strong soon after and continued unabated as the players from both sides waited. They waited till 9 pm local time, the cut-off for a five-over game. The umpires finally decided that the match could not restart and called it off. The two captains walked out of their respective dressing rooms and shook hands before going back in.
Earlier, thanks to half‑centuries from skipper Shreyas Iyer and Abhishek Sharma, along with a late surge from Shivam Dube, India overcame slight drizzle and a gloomy evening to post 189/7 in 20 overs.
On a not-so-easy pitch, Iyer hit his first fifty as India's T20I captain - his knock of 68 came off 47 balls, laced with six fours and a six. Abhishek, meanwhile, hit 59 off 24 balls studded with six fours and four sixes. Dube applied the finishing touches by hitting 42 not out off just 21 balls, including two boundaries and three sixes.
Sent in to bat, India slipped to 6/2 inside two overs. Sanju Samson fell cheaply again, caught at backward point off Saqib Mahmood, before Ishan Kishan was run out after a mix‑up with Abhishek for a duck.
Abhishek then launched a blistering counterattack, racing to a 20‑ball fifty - the fastest by an Indian batter in England - with a flurry of pulls and lofted drives, before Sam Curran's slower ball trapped him lbw in the eighth over, which also ended his 82-run stand with Shreyas.
But by then, Abhishek had become the fastest batter to smash 100 sixes in T20Is (in 785 deliveries) and surpassed West Indies' batter Evin Lewis, who had smashed hundred sixes in 789 deliveries in his career. Shreyas then combined with Tilak Varma for a 36‑run stand, while striking cleanly against pace and spin.
Varma's dismissal, caught off a low full toss on Mahmood's bowling, brought Dube to the crease. Iyer reached his ninth T20I half‑century from 38 balls, his slowest in the format, but accelerated with a six over extra cover and inventive strokes against Luke Wood and Mahmood, who later trapped him lbw.
Dube then took charge, clearing mid‑wicket and square leg with powerful hitting, and finished unconquered. England's spinners Adil Rashid and Liam Dawson struggled for control in the drizzle, while Mahmood impressed with three wickets.
Curran accounted for Abhishek and ran out Axar Patel off the final ball as India closed on 189, which is above par at the venue. England may have a delayed start to the innings due to steady rain, after India blasted 54 runs in the last five overs.
— IANS
Reader Comments
Happy with Shreyas Iyer's captaincy innings - 68 off 47 balls, steadying the ship after early wickets. But honestly, Sanju Samson and Ishan Kishan need to sort out their consistency. Another failure for Samson, and that run-out was so avoidable 😤
Abhishek Sharma smashing 100 sixes in T20Is - fastest ever! Take a bow, young man 🇮🇳 That counterattack after being 6/2 was proper fearless cricket. And Shivam Dube's finishing with 42* off 21 balls - this batting lineup has serious depth. England would've been under pressure chasing 190.
Was at the ground! Such a shame the match got called off. Indian batting was electric after the early wobble - Shreyas and Abhishek really turned it around. The crowd was buzzing during Dube's sixes too. Chester-le-Street weather lived up to its reputation though 🌧️🙃
Respect to both captains - nice to see them shaking hands after the match. But honestly, we need to talk about Ishan Kishan. Running out your partner for a duck in a crucial series opener? Not ideal. Also, Saqib Mahmood bowled really well - those three wickets kept England in the hunt.
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