Alex Carey and Glenn Maxwell were Australia's match-winners. Reuters
Alex Carey and Glenn Maxwell were Australia's match-winners. Reuters
Alex Carey and Glenn Maxwell were Australia's match-winners. Reuters
Alex Carey and Glenn Maxwell were Australia's match-winners. Reuters

Australia beat England by three wickets to claim series victory


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England ended a summer of thrilling cricket on the wrong side of a series defeat as centuries from Alex Carey and Glenn Maxwell carried Australia to a nail-biting win at Emirates Old Trafford.

The momentum shifted back and forth in a fiercely contested third one-day international with the tourists languishing on 73/5 in pursuit of 303 – a score built around Jonny Bairstow's punchy 112.

Then the sixth-wicket pair came together.

They proceeded to pile on a monster stand of 212, with Carey scoring 106 and Maxwell bludgeoning seven sixes in his 108 to build towards an eventual three-wicket win.

That condemned the hosts to a first series defeat of six across all formats this season, and ended a proud, five-year undefeated streak in home ODIs.

The decision to bowl Adil Rashid in the last over proved fateful as Mitchell Starc thwacked his first ball for a maximum. Getty
The decision to bowl Adil Rashid in the last over proved fateful as Mitchell Starc thwacked his first ball for a maximum. Getty

England gave reprieves to both centurions.

Carey was caught off a Jofra Archer no-ball on nine and Maxwell was dropped by Jos Buttler on 44.

But the pair still needed to call on deep reserves of determination, self-belief and prowess to turn the tables on a side that has made a habit of edging tight finishes.

Eoin Morgan's men looked like they might be about to do so again at the death knell.

They whipped out both match-winners late on but with 10 runs needed off the final over, Mitchell Starc belted Adil Rashid for six and then hit the leg-spinner for four with two deliveries left.

Starc shines with the new ball

Starc started the day superbly in his primary role as a strike bowler, in a bold and brilliant double breakthrough with the first two balls of the day.

His first was full, fast and flew to point after Jason Roy accepted the invitation to drive.

Joe Root was beaten even more comprehensively as Starc greeted him with a big inswinger that would have knocked over leg stump had it not thumped into the front pad.

It was the kind of dismal start that can lead to spooked dressing rooms, hurried collapses and early finishes, but England found a way back.

Bairstow was admirably unruffled, trusting the pitch and his hands as he hammered seven boundaries and a flat six as he scored 41 runs of England's 10-over 67/1.

Jonny Bairstow hits out on his way to a pugnacious century. Getty
Jonny Bairstow hits out on his way to a pugnacious century. Getty

Australia halted the charge by introducing Adam Zampa, who tossed persuaded Morgan (23) and Buttler (8) to pick out catchers.

Bairstow needed someone to stay with him and Sam Billings obliged, with a stand of 114 in just under 20 overs.

The Kent man survived a tough return chance off Starc on 25 and made the paceman pay with two sweet sixes.

Bairstow struck an equally eye-catching blow to reach his 10th one-day century, turning Pat Cummins hard and flat over long leg.

Australia removed both before it got any worse.

Billings mishit a reverse-sweep off Zampa, and Bairstow was cleaned up by well-hidden Cummins lower ball.

A fine 53 not out from Chris Woakes ensured they reached 302 for seven.

Joe Root has day to remember with the ball

What needed to be a record chase in Manchester looked virtually impossible when Australia slumped to 73/5 in the 17th over, seemingly poised to crumble under pressure.

Woakes, fresh from his batting exploits, struck twice with new ball as Aaron Finch was plumb lbw and Marcus Stoinis misread a slower ball.

David Warner has been troubled by the pace of Jofra Archer this series but it was the part-time off breaks of Joe Root which undid him in the third ODI. Getty
David Warner has been troubled by the pace of Jofra Archer this series but it was the part-time off breaks of Joe Root which undid him in the third ODI. Getty

That gave Morgan the freedom to gamble on Root's part-time spin, a risk that paid off when his fifth ball gripped and splayed David Warner's stumps as the left-hander stepped away.

Root also dismissed Mitch Marsh, caught behind off bat and pad, and took a bowling credit for Billings's run out of Marnus Labuschagne.

Australia would have been 87/6 had Carey fallen to Archer's bumper in the 20th over, but celebrations were cut shot when the paceman was called for overstepping.

The innings pivoted on that moment, with Maxwell and Carey taking control of the middle stages.

The pair piled on a century stand in 99 deliveries, with Maxwell repeatedly swiping powerfully up and over the short boundary.

His assault on Rashid was the crucial match-up, as England's X-factor wicket-taker was belted out of the attack.

Maxwell's crucial moment of luck came on 44, with 140 still required.

He heaved hard at a leg break, nicking behind only for Buttler to grass the chance.

That was as good as it got for Rashid, who was unable to attack or contain and at one stage found himself launched into Old Trafford's vacant hospitality building, "The Point".

Australia were favourites with 81 needed from the final 10. Both batsmen reaching three figures as they ploughed towards their target.

They needed just 21 off three when Rashid returned, finally snaring Maxwell off the top edge to guarantee late nerves.

Glenn Maxwell's late dismissal wasn't enough to derail Australia's victory charge. Getty Images
Glenn Maxwell's late dismissal wasn't enough to derail Australia's victory charge. Getty Images

Archer had Carey excellently caught by Mark Wood but Starc hit two decisive blows off the spinner to wrap up the 2020 programme.

MATCH INFO

Tottenham Hotspur 0 Everton 1 (Calvert-Lewin 55')

Man of the Match Allan (Everton)

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