(Reuters) – A combination of brutal batting and aggressive bowling ensured England beat Sri Lanka by 81 runs under the Duckworth-Lewis method in a rain interrupted first one-day international at the Oval yesterday.
All rounder Chris Jordan bludgeoned 38 runs with the bat before claiming three wickets as he staked his claim for a place in the England test squad, while their were promising performances from relative newcomers Gary Ballance and Harry Gurney.
“I came in to try to score with a flurry and I’m glad it came off,” man-of-the-match Jordan told the BBC. “We wanted as many runs as we could because Sri Lanka bat really deep and we were wary of that.
“I want to keep improving my game and want to capitalise on any chances I get to score runs. We know they had to go some guns and luckily it came off.”
The hosts lost the toss and were put in to bat by Sri Lanka and having lost captain Alastair Cook (11) early in the innings, England progressed nicely with Ian Bell registering his 31st ODI fifty before being dismissed four balls later. Torrential rain halted proceedings for 2-1/2 hours with the game being limited to 39 overs per side. Upon resumption Ballance top-scored with 64 and Joe Root added 45 before a swashbuckling cameo by Jordan who struck five fours and two sixes in a breathless knock of 38 from 13 balls as England scored 60 runs in the final four overs of their innings.