England v India: second women’s T20 cricket international – live

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"England Aims for Redemption Against India in Second Women's T20 International"

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In the second women’s T20 international between England and India, the match commenced with England showcasing heightened intensity in the field, particularly in contrast to their lackluster performance in the previous game. After losing their captain, Harmanpreet Kaur, to a catch at short fine leg early in the innings, India struggled to establish a solid foundation. England's bowlers, particularly Lauren Filer, delivered impressive performances, with Filer striking early to dismiss Verma and contributing to India's shaky start at 35-3 by the sixth over. The sharpness of England's catching was evident, especially with Bell's remarkable catch off Mandhana's bat, which further emphasized the team's commitment to rectifying their previous mistakes. The aggressive bowling and fielding from England set the tone for the match, as they aimed to bounce back after their heavy defeat in the first T20 international.

As the match progressed, Smriti Mandhana, who had shone brightly in the previous encounter with a stellar 112 runs, opened the innings for India alongside Shafali Verma. The pair made history by becoming the most productive opening partnership in Women’s T20I history. Despite a promising start, India quickly faced challenges as wickets fell at crucial moments. The return of captain Harmanpreet Kaur, who had missed the last match due to a head injury, added experience to the Indian side, but her early dismissal raised questions about the team's ability to recover. England, unchanged from their last outing, sought to capitalize on their home advantage and rectify their previous performance, setting the stage for a competitive series as they aimed to reclaim their form against a formidable Indian side. The atmosphere in Bristol was conducive for cricket, providing a cooler backdrop for a match that would test both teams' resilience and adaptability in this five-match series.

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6th over: India 35-3 (Rodrigues 14, Amanjot 1)The new batter Amanjot Kaur tries to pull a short ball from Bell that zips past the top edge. England’s intensity in the field has been impressive, especially after such a flat performance on Saturday.

The captain Harmanpreet is now the old batter. She has gone second ball, caught at short fine leg by Lauren Filer. It wasn’t the greatest piece of cricket: a poor ball from Lauren Bell, who celebrated sheepishly, a pull round the corner from Harmanpreet and an untidy catch from Filer. Untidy but clean: Harmanpreet has gone and England have taken three big wickets in the Powerplay.

5th over: India 31-2 (Rodrigues 12, Harmanpreet 1)The captain Harmanpreet is the new batter.

Never mind the ground fielding, England’s catching is much sharper as well! Mandhana clothed the new bowler Arlott towards mid-on, where Bell leapt backwards to take a brilliant two-handed catch.

4th over: India 24-1 (Mandhana 13, Rodrigues 7)Rodrigues square-drives Filer with a flourish to score her first boundary. That was a rare full delivery in another aggressive over from Filer, who twice beat Rodrigues with short balls outside off stump.

This has been a good start from England, whose ground fielding has also looked much sharper than it did on Saturday.

3rd over: India 19-1 (Mandhana 13, Rodrigues 2)Lauren Bell, England’s best bowler by a distance at Trent Bridge, replaces Capsey. There’s some gentle inswing to the left-handed Mandhana, who punches a couple of drives without beating the infield. A good start from Bell, just two from the over.

2nd over: India 17-1 (Mandhana 12, Rodrigues 1)Jemima Rodridgues gets off the mark with a mistimed shot that lands safely on the leg side. Terrific start from Filer, who gave both Verma and Rodrigues the hurry-up.

This is seriously good fast bowling from Lauren Filer. She beat the edge with a beauty, then rammed in a superb short ball that followed Verma, took the glove and was comfortably caught by Amy Jones.

Verma was on the walk, which only made life difficult as the ball roared towards her, but it would have been very tough to deal even if she’d stayed in her crease.

1st over: India 11-0 (Mandhana 10, Verma 1)Smriti Mandhana picks up where she left off at Trent Bridge, hitting two elegant boundaries – one through the covers, one through point – in Alice Capsey’s first over. Eleven from the over, which makes Mandhana and Shafali Verma the most productive opening partnership in Women’s T20I history.

Time for the action. It’s a gorgeous evening in Bristol, warm without being oppressive. The TV commentators are discussing their surprise at England’s decision to bowl first.

England are unchanged, which gives their XI the chance to right Saturday’s wrongs.

India do change a winning side, but only to bring back their captainHarmanpreet Kaurin place of Harleen Deol.

EnglandDunkley, Wyatt-Hodge, Sciver-Brunt (c), Beaumont, Jones (wk), Capsey, Arlott, Ecclestone, Filer, Smith, Bell.

IndiaMandhana, Verma, Harmanpreet (c), Rodrigues, Amanjot, Ghosh (wk), Deepti, Yadav, Reddy, Rana, Charani.

Bristol is cooler than much of the country, around 25 degrees, so England are happy to field first. The pitch looks very dry so there was a decent case for batting first, but most teams prefer to chase these days.

Harmanpreet back for India

The word is that Indian captain Harmanpreet Kaur, who missed Saturday’s game because of a head injury, has been passed fit to return tonight.

The road to success is never a straight line, but nobody expected England to veer so dramatically off course at the start of their T20 series against India. Nat Sciver-Brunt’s side werepulverised by 97 runsat Trent Bridge on Saturday, their heaviest T20 defeat, with the peerless Smriti Mandhana striking a glorious 112.

Adversity is usually a window into the soul of a person or a team. How England respond tonight, and for the rest of this five-match series, will increase our understanding of the journey that faces them: how far they have to travel, and how long it might take them.

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Source: The Guardian