England's hard-length plan pays off at death as Chris Jordan hails bowling effort

Seamers banged ball into the pitch in the final five overs, defying conventional logic

Matt Roller05-Sep-2020Death-bowling plans in T20 cricket tend to be straightforward: bowl yorkers to stop batsmen getting any elevation, and vary your pace to mess with their timing. Execution is difficult, but the formula is generally simple.But England had different ideas on Friday night in Southampton. Rather than bowling at Australia’s toes, they continued to bang the ball in on a length. In the last five overs, their four seamers bowled a single yorker between them, with 24 out of 30 balls pitching on a length or shorter as Marcus Stoinis and Ashton Agar struggled to time the ball off the pitch.Eoin Morgan hailed his bowlers’ adaptability after the game, suggesting that “two years ago, we would have gone to bowling yorkers or slower balls which would have brought Australia back into the game” and expressing his delight that England “stuck to our guns” after working out that length balls were “hardest to hit” on that surface.