Tag: Englands

  • Lauren James shines during England’s comfortable win against South Korea

    Lauren James shines during England’s comfortable win against South Korea

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    Lauren James’s electric form was rewarded with a first goal for England in a 4-0 defeat of South Korea in the Arnold Clark Cup to continue Sarina Wiegman’s unbeaten run as the Lionesses’ manager.

    “She has been a talent for a long time, she just needed to be available and needed some time at Chelsea,” said Wiegman of James. “She worked really hard at Chelsea. That’s what you have seen this season, then she can take the next step to the national team.

    “Now, when she starts playing at this level with Chelsea, and in the Champions League, and on this international level, and gets those minutes, she can improve. I hope now she gets consistency, she stays fit and keeps enjoying herself.”

    At Stadium MK, it took England 40 minutes to find a way past South Korea’s banks of red but Georgia Stanway’s penalty broke the deadlock shortly before half-time and goals from Chloe Kelly, Alessia Russo and James in the second half ensured a stylish win to kickstart the European champions’ year.

    The team news delivered a surprise, albeit a familiar one, with Leah Williamson shifted from centre-back into the midfield to compensate for the loss of the influential Keira Walsh, who was ruled out with a stomach bug. Wiegman has played the captain further forward before. In the run-up to the Euros last summer Williamson played alongside Walsh in a double pivot several times, but for the tournament itself the manager reverted to a centre-back pairing of Millie Bright and Williamson behind Walsh.

    Wiegman had said before that tournament that her captain had not felt totally comfortable in the middle, but if the team’s first outing at the Arnold Clark Cup is anything to go by, she clearly still views Williamson as one of the best options to act as a back-up for Walsh.

    The manager had promised rotation, but was equally keen to get off to a strong start in defence of the Arnold Clark Cup and restart their World Cup preparations on the front foot, so the starting XI was strong.

    England were dominant, with South Korea’s back three spending much of the game as part of a back five. It took three minutes for James to show why she is probably vying with Kelly and Lauren Hemp for one of the two places alongside Russo in the summer, the Chelsea forward lashing wide of the far post from the edge of the area.

    It was one-way traffic, with the Lionesses controlling 83% of possession and having 14 shots to one in the first half. In the 37th minute the crowd was roaring, but the ball that looked to be going in rattled back off the inside of the far post from Russo.

    The inevitable came three minutes later. The ever-dangerous James was tripped by Jang Sel-gi and the Brazilian referee Andreza Siqueira pointed to the spot. Stanway’s penalty was emphatic, sent powerfully beyond the reach of Kim.

    Georgia Stanway scores a penalty against South Korea
    Georgia Stanway’s penalty puts England ahead late in the first half. Photograph: Marc Atkins/Getty Images

    “She is very tight on the ball and can dribble well too,” said Wiegman of James. “That is a strength from herself and also our team. It was nice with her dribble that she got fouled and won that penalty.”

    At half-time the Williamson experiment was over. Jess Carter was substituted for the Manchester United midfielder Katie Zelem, with Williamson slotted in alongside Bright and more normal service was resumed.

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    England doubled the lead within a minute of the restart. Kelly, the scorer of the Euro 2022 final winner, collected the ball after a defensive muddle, drove forward and fired in a shot that took a deflection and looped into the back of the net.

    Breached so soon after the break, the South Korea defence crumbled and, four minutes later, Russo clipped Alex Greenwood’s wicked cross from the left over Kim at the near post.

    James would eventually be rewarded for her constantly threatening presence, starting a move from the halfway line that ended with her collecting the ball and smashing it past Kim. She was engulfed by her delighted teammates as the Chelsea manager, Emma Hayes, watched the player she has desperately tried to shield from the spotlight and pressures that come with it bask in the glow.

    “Lost for words really,” said James. “I just like to stay humble, continue giving to the team and continue improving.”

    Lucy Bronze praised the 21-year-old playing in front of her. “Everyone knows the quality that LJ’s got,” she said. “Technically on the ball she’s probably one of the best there is. It’s fun for me to play with her because I know she’s always going to get the ball in the right place.

    “It’s crazy that she’s so young because this is the player that everyone has been talking about for five years now. Everyone has been waiting for this superstar and it’s exciting to be here now at the start of her England career.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘It was in my head’: England’s Harry Brook vows to put records out of mind

    ‘It was in my head’: England’s Harry Brook vows to put records out of mind

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    Harry Brook has decided to put records to the back of his mind after admitting a couple crept into his thinking when falling 11 runs short of a fourth Test century. Had the 23-year-old got there on day one of the first Test in New Zealand, he would have become the second Englishman to do so in four successive matches – a feat Ken Barrington managed twice in the 1960s.

    But despite saying he was aware of this possible slice of history during his seventh Test innings, and also seeing his latest tilt at beating England’s fastest Test century (76 balls) thwarted, Brook was still satisfied at stumps.

    He said: “[Brendon McCullum] has mentioned the fastest century and I went for it a couple of times in Pakistan. It was in my head a bit today, but I need to get that out of the back of my mind and concentrate on getting a hundred. It’s disappointing, but I’m not that bothered now because I would have bitten your hand off before the game to get 89.”

    Brook was not the only England batter to roll over his form from the 3-0 clean sweep in Pakistan in December, with Ben Duckett’s 68-ball 84 furthering his hopes of opening in this summer’s Ashes series.

    The left-hander was viewed as a possible horses-for-courses selection for the Pakistan tour, his array of sweeps ideal for subcontinental conditions. But he played a largely orthodox innings against a four-pronged seam attack once England were inserted at the toss and he said the pace of his knock was not deliberate. “I just see ball, hit ball.

    “I didn’t have any intention to try and score quickly – it just happened. They bowled full to me early on and I got off to a good start. I batted normally. I pride myself on hundreds, though, I was very disappointed with how I got out.”

    Both men expanded on the decision by Stokes to declare nine down on the opening day of this day-night series opener, a move repaid in the final session as Jimmy Anderson and Ollie Robinson shared three precious wickets.

    Brook said: “The best time to bowl is under these lights. You can extract the most amount of swing and seam, so why not try and expose their top order to that? There was no plan at dinner to declare though, me and Ben Foakes were still batting together at that stage and if I hadn’t got out the plan would’ve been the same. But because I got out, the plan changed.”

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    Duckett said: “We might have batted into [day two]. It was more of a tactical thing. But if anyone was going to do it, we were.”

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    #Englands #Harry #Brook #vows #put #records #mind
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Anderson makes inroads after England’s bold declaration in New Zealand

    Anderson makes inroads after England’s bold declaration in New Zealand

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    There is more than one way to climb Mount Maunganui. For glorious views of Tauranga and the Bay of Plenty, take either the slow and steady base track or, for a quicker ascent, albeit with more puff required, charge up the steep stairs of the summit track.

    Cyclone Gabrielle’s recent rains meant both paths were shut off from the public until the first morning of this day-night series opener against New Zealand. Even so, it’s not hard to imagine the route this England team would have chosen had the opportunity presented itself this week.

    Marching up the more ambitious track means more stumbles along the way, however, and on a rollicking opening day at Bay Oval – one with supporters lining its inviting grass banks and enjoying a festival atmosphere – this proved the case out in the middle.

    England scored at five-and-a-half an over, a rate in keeping with their past nine months, once Ben Stokes lost a toss he was in two minds about. Leading the yomp was Harry Brook, who muscled an 81-ball 89 after Ben Duckett’s equally punchy 84 from 68.

    But wickets fell regularly and come the final session, with storm clouds rumbling away in the distance, it prompted a swerve in tactics from the ever-instinctive Stokes. At 325 for nine from 57.3 overs, and with 90 minutes to go under lights, the England captain declared and asked his seamers to get the pink Kookaburra talking.

    Only Pakistan’s Intikhab Alam, at Lord’s in 1974, had pulled out sooner in a Test first innings – that was after 44.5 overs – and the upshot here was a position of strength. The hosts closed on 37 for three, Ollie Robinson winkling out Tom Latham to short-leg before Jimmy Anderson made it a 21 successive years of Test wickets by pinning Kane Williamson lbw and persuading Henry Nicholls to edge to slip.

    Vindication for Stokes then, even if the outcomes from his side’s desire to entertain and innovate had not always matched their intent. Take Joe Root, who after a low-key Pakistan tour attempted a second reverse scoop off Neil Wagner on 14, only to fluff the contact and fall to a smart piece of anticipation from Daryl Mitchell at slip.

    Stokes also skewed a front-foot pull to short midwicket on 19 to gift Scott Kuggeleijn the first of two wickets on debut, while Ben Foakes, the understated half of an 89-run sixth-wicket stand with Brook, flapped at a short ball from Wagner on 38 as England lost four wickets for 27 after the second interval.

    All this despite a New Zealand attack that, beyond Wagner, who finished with four for 82, and his captain, Tim Southee, had two newcomers in Blair Tickner and Kuggeleijn. All four seamers leaked runs in blustery winds that were drying an initially green-tinged pitch, as first Duckett and then Brook gave it a nudge.

    Ben Duckett on his way to a rapid-fire half-century on the opening morning at the Bay Oval
    Ben Duckett on his way to a rapid-fire half-century in the opening session at the Bay Oval. Photograph: Phil Walter/Getty Images

    Brook was eyeing his fourth century in his first seven Test innings, arriving at the crease at 153 for threeafter Ollie Pope was nicked off by Southee for an impish 42. Brooks crackled in whites as lightning flashed away to the south. The Yorkshireman was toying with his opponents at times, cutting Tickner either side of deep point in successive deliveries like a young Robin Smith in a 43-ball half-century. There was no doubt about the pick of his 16 boundaries, a lofted straight six off Southee that was borderline perfection.

    Not for the first time in his nascent England career, it looked like Brook might break Gilbert Jessop’s 120-year-old record for the fastest Test century by an Englishman – 76 balls – such was his control. But having reached the second break on 79 from 64 balls, and England 279 for five, he lost his way a touch.

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    The floodlights taking over possibly played a role, Brook struck on the jaw by a short-ball from Wagner that he did not pick up. In the left-armer’s following over he was undone by another bumper, taking it on, under-edging on the ground and then seeing the ball deflect on to the stumps via his backside.

    Jessop had also been namechecked earlier when it looked for all money like Duckett would beat him. That was until 15 minutes before the first break when he chipped the mulleted Tickner to cover. A coffee shop owner from Hawke’s Bay, the debutant had given one of the regions most badly affected by the recent cyclone some cheer.

    It was a galling end to a gem of an innings, Duckett having punched and pulled both sides of the wicket to further cement his place at the top of the order. His 36-ball half-century was the joint-fastest by an England opener, the others being Stokes against West Indies in the bubble summer of 2020 – a third-innings thrash up the order – and Zak Crawley against South Africa at the Oval last year.

    The latter was not nearly so fluent here. His 14-ball stay was tortured before he walked down the pitch and edged Southee to slip with a hard-handed push and a degree of inevitability. He had been dropped off the second ball of the match and bowled by a beauty from Wagner that was scrubbed for a front-foot no-ball.

    Crawley’s day appeared to get worse, putting down Devon Conway on nine during the late push for wickets. It might have prompted a good few stares from England teams of the old, but this bunch are at peace with the odd stumble along the path. When the ageless Anderson teased an edge from Nicholls to Crawley, a degree of redemption followed.

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    #Anderson #inroads #Englands #bold #declaration #Zealand
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )