England 227 for 3 (Bell 113*) beat India 226 (Raina 83, Bresnan 4-45) by seven wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Ian Bell's third one-day century guided England to a consolation victory
in the fifth and final ODI against India to bookend an ultimately
disappointing tour with a second success. Although the series was
already lost, a 3-2 defeat represents a marked improvement on recent
efforts in the country, but Alastair Cook's chief regret will be that
his side took so long to put in a second accomplished performance, after
they had taken a 1-0 lead in Rajkot a little more than two weeks ago.
The bowlers, lead by Tim Bresnan, Steven Finn and James Tredwell, had
made good use of Cook winning the toss to restrict India to 226, despite
a fighting 83 from Suresh Raina, and England looked to have a modest
hike ahead of them in order to secure only a third ODI win against India
at home in 23 attempts. At times, the target seemed to loom higher than
the Himalayas visible behind Dharamsala's multicoloured pavilion but
Bell is an experienced climber these days and Eoin Morgan brought along
his spare oxygen canister to ease the ascent at the end.
Like Raina, whose fourth half-century in as many innings helped drag
India from a potentially disastrous 79 for 5 earlier in the day, Bell
was not entirely secure at the crease, twice edging past his stumps
early on and struggling to time the ball as the surface got slower. But
he stuck around as England lost two wickets for 11 runs in 6.2 overs and
after a diligent, restorative partnership with Joe Root, he began to
look more imposing, stepping out of his crease to hit the disappointing R
Ashwin for six and striking timely boundaries whenever the asking rate
began to enquire a little more urgently.
Although Root was bowled by Ravindra Jadeja, slogging across the line in
ungainly fashion after another level-headed knock, Morgan buckled down
before adding a few flourishes of his own to ease England past their
target with 16 balls to spare. At 1317 metres above sea level, the
Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium is among the loftiest
international grounds in the world and Morgan seemed keen to see just
how far he could hit a six in the thin mountain air.
Despite being described as a match of "no consequence" in some local
papers, India chose not to experiment with their line-up, again leaving
Cheteshwar Pujara on the bench. They could perhaps have done with his
monkish self-discipline, as Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli departed to
consecutive deliveries via loose drives outside off to trigger a
top-order collapse. It was left to Raina, India's leading run-scorer in
the series, and Jadeja, who has also toyed regularly with England over
the last month, to pull things together with a spiky, 78-run
partnership, before some late hitting from the tail, combined with a
rash of dropped catches, helped the score towards respectability.
Before the match, Raina had expressed a desire
to usurp one of his colleagues up the order and he made good use of a
longer spell at the crease after coming in during the seventh over. A
harsher judge, however, may conclude that he failed to construct the
truly big innings that the situation provided an opportunity for.
England have been quiescent opponents in the past for Raina, who
improved his average against them to 47.47 with his 11th fifty, but he
was allowed let-offs on 5 and 61 before pulling idly to midwicket with a
hundred in sight. The first was a difficult, diving chance that would
have completed a hat-trick of slip catches for Tredwell but the latter
opportunity, grassed by Cook at backward square leg, was much more
straightforward.
Perhaps Raina was deserving of some benevolence after the fiery start
England's bowlers made in chilly, if bright, conditions. The Dalai Lama
is based in exile at nearby McLeodganj but the early exchanges were far
from peaceable on a hard, fast surface with enough juice in it to make a
Tibetan monk sit up and blink.
There was initial seam movement on offer for Finn but it was Bresnan who
made the first incursion, removing ersatz opener Rohit. Having timed
one exquisite square drive for four, Rohit attempted a reprise to a
slightly wider delivery that drifted further away from his crease-bound
push, the ball slicing off the outside edge to the right of Tredwell at
second slip, where he took a tumbling catch. The very next ball produced
a facsimile swish from Kohli, though Tredwell went in for a bit of
variety on this occasion, juggling the ball three times in front of the
kneeling Cook before grasping it for good with a giddy grin.
When Yuvraj got a thick edge to point trying to turn Finn through square
leg, the match was beginning to resemble an early season encounter in
England - at least in temperature and bowling conditions, if not the
setting. It could have been even better for England had Raina's edge off
Chris Woakes - replacing Jade Dernbach - stuck but he battled
pugnaciously after being hit on the shoulder by his first ball, from
Finn.
Tredwell has spent the one-day series doing a passable impression of
Graeme Swann, particularly to left-handers, and he had Gautam Gambhir
caught by the sprawling Bell at point. The wicket came from Tredwell's
second ball, an immediate, Swann-esque intervention, and England's
delight ratcheted up further when Finn won an lbw decision against MS
Dhoni. Only during the spells of the part-time bowlers, Root and Samit
Patel, did India's batsmen display any sense of comfort. Their combined
11 overs cost 80 runs as Raina gave India one last spin of the prayer
wheel in pursuit of 4-1 - but he could not turn a molehill into a
mountain.







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