Captain Morgan is toast of Headingley as England cruise home

Eoin Morgan's tenth one-day hundred for England proved decisive as the hosts downed South Africa by an emphatic 72-run margin in the '¨Royal London Series opener at Headingley.
England captain Eoin Morgan acknowledges the crowd as he leaves the field after getting out for 107 in the ODI win over South Africa at Headingley. Picture: Martin Rickett/PA WireEngland captain Eoin Morgan acknowledges the crowd as he leaves the field after getting out for 107 in the ODI win over South Africa at Headingley. Picture: Martin Rickett/PA Wire
England captain Eoin Morgan acknowledges the crowd as he leaves the field after getting out for 107 in the ODI win over South Africa at Headingley. Picture: Martin Rickett/PA Wire

Morgan’s 107 was a real captain’s contribution, paced intelligently over 93 balls and punctuated with five sixes and seven fours.

The Dubliner had spoken excitedly about welcoming Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler back from the Indian Premier League and into the middle order. However, Morgan left their contributions in the shade as he steered the Champions Trophy favourites to 339 for six and comfortably past the format’s number one side.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Moeen Ali also shone with a vibrant 77 not out – his best in more than two years – as 102 runs in the last ten overs took England to their highest home total against the Proteas. Moeen also took two wickets but it was another IPL returnee, Chris Woakes, who finished things off to post four for 38.

South Africa were briefly in the hunt when Hashim Amla (73) and Faf du Plessis (67) combined but fell well short and were dismissed for 267 with five overs remaining.

The tourists won the toss and, after a minute’s silence dedicated to victims of the Manchester terror attack, had a compliant Jason Roy caught behind early.

The partisan Yorkshire crowd were hardly dismayed by Joe Root’s early arrival but he was the junior partner in a 98-run partnership with Alex Hales, who peppered the boundary en route to 61 before wafting at Andile Phehlukwayo’s first ball.

Root was positioned to anchor the innings but, by the time he hurriedly flapped Phehlukwayo’s bouncer to mid-wicket, his 37-run contribution had become 
pedestrian.

At 122 for three in the 22nd over, England had plenty of work to do. Neither of their returning danger men made much of an impression, Stokes (25) drilling Kagiso Rabada down David Miller’s throat and Buttler (seven) flicking Chris Morris obligingly to short fine-leg.

But it was a different matter when Morgan went after Phehlukwayo, off whom he struck 42 of his runs. Spinners Imran Tahir and JP Duminy had been a good bulwark but, after 46 balls without a boundary off their bowling, Morgan opened the floodgates with three in the space of six deliveries.

The loss of Stokes and Buttler threatened to hobble England but Morgan and Moeen shared a heady stand of 117 to shift the momentum.

Morgan reached his ton with a maximum, hoisting Rabada behind square.

And though he fell soon after, feeding Morris to cover, Moeen was on hand to keep the accelerator floored.