• No.11 of the 20 Greatest ODIs - India vs England World Cup 2011 Match

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    With 2023 ODI World Cup just a couple of weeks away, time to visit some GREATEST ODI matches by Cricket Monthly.


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    https://www.thecricketmonthly.com/story/1371080/20-greatest-odis---no--11---the-battle-of-bangalore---india-vs-england--2011-world-cup


    20 Greatest ODIs: No. 11

    The battle of Bangalore

    Over a hundred overs and 676 runs, two teams slugged it out and
    collapsed to the carpet at the same time

    Sharda Ugra | September 12, 2023

    India vs England, World Cup, Bangalore, 2011

    It is like that six happened 15 minutes ago. That's how sharp it is in
    the memory. In a match that produced 676 runs, the bulk of them on
    either side from two batters of gleaming pedigree, to still remember a
    six by a No. 10? Who wasn't even a star, past, present or future. Who
    went on to face only four more balls in his international career after
    he hit that six - which could be called the shot that sealed the match.

    Well, almost. It didn't really seal it, but what it did was ensure
    that defeat wouldn't break down his team's door or victory come
    swaggering through for the hosts.

    The shot came with 11 required off four balls with two wickets left
    after England's tailenders launched an unexpected charge that left the
    crowd screaming - over what they had seen, over having emotional
    torrents poured onto them ball after ball, not knowing where the match
    would go.

    Watching that shot on a highlights video today, even with RJ Shastri commentating, does not recreate even a smidgen of what it felt like on
    the night. It doesn't show the emphatic arc of the ball in the air,
    sharp against Chinnaswamy's indigo sky, hundreds of Indian faces looking upwards in dismay and anguish because of where it was going to land and
    what that meant.

    From 11 off four to five off three.

    India's first match at home in the 2011 World Cup, following a pulping
    of Bangladesh in Mirpur, it was going to come down to this - defeat to
    England - after scoring 338?

    Ajmal Shahzad produced a bazooka strike off the first ball he faced.
    Front leg out of the way, stance open for havoc, he whacked Munaf Patel straight down the ground, over long-on, right of the press box, where we
    sat watching. That one stroke puts England within a shot of victory.

    Which three balls later was not victory for either side but only the
    fourth tied match across more than nine editions of the men's World Cup.

    Which shouldn't actually have been a tie. But for a desperate
    non-striker's teeny-margin error, it would have spelt victory for India instead.

    Which, however, would have not elevated this fixture to where it is
    today, on this fine list.

    Before Bangalore 2011, India and England had never tied an ODI. Months
    later in September, they tied a second time - on Duckworth-Lewis - but
    since 2011, never again.

    There was much that was karmic about this game for it to merely tick an early-fixture box in India's first home World Cup after 15 years. Its
    dead-heat finish after a lavish spread of quality with the bat and
    fightback by ball burnished the contest to a point of lustre that still
    lasts.

    Just over a week into the tournament, over the course of eight hours,
    the tie sounded a warning bell. Not least for hosts India, who received
    a shakedown after their confident decimation of Bangladesh. "It made us humble," the team's mental conditioning coach Paddy Upton was to say
    later. And for England, who had started weak against Ireland but left
    the Chinnaswamy baring teeth and muscle. And for every other team
    watching from out of the corner of their eye.

    There was an inevitability about Tendulkar's calibrated takedown of
    England's bowlers. And most alarmingly for the partisan home crowd, also
    in Strauss' nerveless, unhurried pursuit of the total

    It was the kind of match that six weeks later MS Dhoni talked about as
    the reason he was in love with the 50-over stoush - because it was Test
    match cricket compressed into 100 overs. The white-ball form that Geoff
    Boycott declared, "helps craftsmen play". The craftsmen that Boycott was referring to were, of course, batters, and Sachin Tendulkar and Andrew
    Strauss provided a two-for-one batting masterclass in how to construct
    ODI hundreds. But what balanced the contest and cranked up temperatures
    was how the bowlers on both sides responded to onslaughts with
    late-spell comebacks.

    India vs England, Bangalore, 2011 had everything for everyone - the classicists, the one-eyed fans, big-hit junkies and drama gourmands.

    The two centuries - Tendulkar's 47th in ODIs, Strauss' sixth - formed
    the core of each innings. There was an inevitability about Tendulkar's calibrated takedown of England's bowlers, particularly leading lights
    James Anderson and Graeme Swann. And most alarmingly for the partisan
    home crowd, also in Strauss' nerveless, unhurried pursuit of the total.
    On a night that featured noise and a "shout meter" on the scoreboard,
    these two centurions were artisans at work.

    Tendulkar the relentless creator of a sizeable target, picked up pace
    without risk, his first boundary scored in only the ninth over, his
    first six in the 18th, letting Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir set
    about the fireworks. There was nothing flash about Strauss' innings
    either - very English and precise for the most part, as he chipped away, matching deeds to the words he had uttered to his team-mates at the
    break: "Lads, that's an unbelievably flat wicket, we can chase this."

    Tendulkar's shots brought the house down, Strauss' sent them into sombre silence as England inched ahead. Yet what turned this match from a
    routine story of a big innings creating a giant total and an even bigger innings chasing it down into an epic was the mayhem after Tendulkar and
    Strauss left the scene.

    Tendulkar departed in the 39th over and by the end of the 45th, India
    were 292 for 3, set for a wild push in the last 30 balls. Except, the
    innings teetered an over later, with Yuvraj Singh and Dhoni falling off successive balls. Three more Indian batters were dispatched by Tim
    Bresnan in four balls in the 49th. India's big bang send-off ended in a
    clatter of wickets.

    The eventual total, though, still looked good or as ESPNcricinfo's
    commentary memorably read: "England need 339 to win. Otherwise known as
    a miracle." Which Strauss went about making to his job to manifest for
    more than 40 overs, as if he were Charlton "Moses" Heston parting the
    Red Sea. Three of the four Indian spinners went for more than a run a
    ball against him. Yusuf Pathan was reverse-swept, to widespread
    astonishment. Strauss' 170-run partnership with Ian Bell put the miracle
    within reach.

    For over 25 overs, the scoreboard moved smoothly, the Indians failing to
    shake or rattle. With eight overs left, England needed 59, eight wickets
    in hand. Naturally, they called for their batting powerplay. Remember
    those? Basically code for "now the batting side is going to lose its
    marbles".

    Then came Zaheer Khan, he of the darkened brow, for a reversing second
    spell that laid waste to England's plans. He cleaned out Bell, who was
    looking to go hard and fast at the target, and Strauss in successive
    balls. When a vicious late-swinging yorker ended Strauss' innings, I was
    told men tore off their shirts and flung chairs around in riotous,
    celebratory relief in the H Stand, lower level, always packed with
    Bangalore's cricketing cognoscenti. Zaheer and the crowd worked in
    tandem. Paul Collingwood was bowled on the charge out in his next over,
    and England's asking rate started flashing code red again.

    Just like India, England were imploding after coasting towards the
    target. Their top six were lopped off halfway through over No. 46, four
    wickets gone in 18 balls.

    Just when it looked as if the game was going to end the way it was
    expected to, came a savage 15-run attack by Bresnan and Swann on Piyush
    Chawla in the 49th over. Still, when Chawla got Bresnan off his final
    ball, getting 14 off the last over seemed too far-fetched even in an
    English imagination.

    The H Stand and the rest of Chinnaswamy exhaled. It was going to be
    India's night, after all. The No. 10 was walking in, 25, yes, but a new,
    raw international. Well played, England, and all that, but that's enough
    now.

    Except, it wasn't. Except, the match wasn't over.

    First ball, Shahzad hit that six whose memory reverberates to this day.
    He then clambered across as Swann called the bye to get strike.

    With four to win, they take three. The game ends, we are spent. That six
    has left us.

    One more thing: the tie was almost not a tie. On the very last ball of
    the Indian innings, with four wickets having fallen in 11 balls - an
    absolute mudslide of a collapse of 7 for 33 in all - Zaheer was run-out, desperately trying to complete a scrambled second. Turns out his
    partner, the equally athletic Munaf, had not grounded his bat inside the
    line when sprinting for the first. The total was recalculated - one
    fewer for England to chase.

    Who bowled that last over for India when England tied? Of course, Munaf.

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