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England tour of Netherlands (2022)

Some records in this game:

- Fastest ODI fifty for England (Livingstone).

- Fastest ODI team score ever.

- 2nd fastest ODI century for England (Butler).

- Fastest 150 in ODI for England (Butler).
 
Although the score is massive, Nethelands should use this as a learning experience, their world cup champions and top elite cricketers, in regards to the chase, the goal should be to bat the full 50 overs, and try to get a good score, I think if netherlands can get passed 320 score, it can be used as momentum for them for the on-coming games.

England will win all the games easily, but Netherlands should look to improve each with game. We want more nations playing this beautiful game regularly, so we have to encourage and hope they improve as well.
 
Hope that Netherlands can get 350+, that would be a good response from them.
 
This is interesting.

So England are playing a white ball series in Netherlands while their test team is in the middle of a series back home? This might set a precedent.
 
This is interesting.

So England are playing a white ball series in Netherlands while their test team is in the middle of a series back home? This might set a precedent.

Not every team can do this.

However, England have good bench strength.
 
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England - 498/4 (50 overs).
Netherlands - 119/3 (22.2 overs).

Good batting from the Dutch so far.
 
ENG 498/4 (50)
NED 182/6 (37) CRR: 4.92 REQ: 24.38
Netherlands need 317 runs in 78 balls

Will this be a defeat by the highest margin?

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England in LOIs is a team any neutral can easily get behind solely because of the way they play it.
 
Netherlands doing ok here, could have easily folded for under 100 with the scoreboard pressure. 260+ and batting out the overs til the 50th is a decent effort.
 
ENG 498/4 (50)
NED 182/6 (37) CRR: 4.92 REQ: 24.38
Netherlands need 317 runs in 78 balls

Will this be a defeat by the highest margin?

XYoVSi7.png

Netherlands have avoided even a close shave with this dubious honour. They’ve done quite well against such a huge score. Quite a few sides have struggled to score >250 against England.
 
ENG 498/4 (50)

NED 266 (49.4)

England won by 232 runs

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Netherlands have avoided even a close shave with this dubious honour. They’ve done quite well against such a huge score. Quite a few sides have struggled to score >250 against England.

2 more games to go though!
 
Jos Buttler's incredible 162 saw England smash their own highest score in a one-day international with a mammoth 498-4 as they thrashed Netherlands by 232 runs.

In a particularly eye-catching start to Matthew Mott's tenure as their new white-ball coach, Buttler pummelled 14 sixes and seven fours as the feel-good factor from England's Test side spilled over to continental Europe on a day of team and individual milestones.

Dawid Malan (125) and Phil Salt (122) also both made maiden ODI centuries, off 90 and 82 balls respectively, as the Netherlands bowlers were smashed to all parts of the ground before England dismissed them for 266.

England's total eclipsed the 481-6 they made against Australia at Trent Bridge in 2018, and surpassed the List A record of 496-4, scored by Surrey in 2007.

A total of 26 sixes rained down on the uncovered stands in Amstelveen, and fans assisted the Dutch players in searching for the ball every time it disappeared into the forest which surrounds the ground.

Not all of them were found with nine balls, at a cost to the Dutch federation of 130 euros a go, left unaccounted for during Buttler's brutal assault.

Fittingly Buttler hit the runs for England to reach the record ODI total, with a six launched over deep mid-wicket off Shane Snater on a miserable day for the Dutch bowlers, with leg-spinner Philippe Boissevain's 10 wicketless overs costing 108 runs.

Liam Livingstone's cameo at the end of the innings was just two balls short of the fastest ODI half-century as he blasted a half-century off just 17 balls, finishing with 66 off 22 balls.

"Boring boring England" sang the travelling fans in jest as Livingstone managed only a four off the penultimate ball of their innings which meant the tourists missed out on 500, but they were soon cheering again when he dispatched the last one for yet another six.

Netherlands' response was decidedly more low key as wicketkeeper Scott Edwards made a defiant unbeaten 72 while Moeen Ali finished the pick of the attack with 3-57.

Highest team one-day international totals

498-4 - England v Netherlands, Amstelveen, 2022
481-6 - England v Australia, Trent Bridge, 2018
444-3 - England v Pakistan, Trent Bridge 2016
443-9 - Sri Lanka v Netherlands, Amstelveen, 2006
439-2 - South Africa v West Indies, Johannesburg, 2015

History-makers

This was the first occasion an ODI between the two sides had been played on Dutch soil, and it was an altogether-different experience than the very first time an England XI took to the field here.

A side featuring future stars Alec Stewart, Nasser Hussain and Derek Pringle suffered a humiliating loss to the Netherlands at the same ground in 1989 - struggling to bowl in the drizzle on a slippery coconut matting wicket in their pimple-soled training shoes.

The straw-coloured grass pitch carefully prepared by Benno van Nierop at the VRA Cricket Ground over three decades later was hard, true and perfect for run-scoring on a day when the mercury touched 30 degrees Celsius.

Dutch skipper Pieter Seelar's decision to bowl may have been made to look dubious in hindsight but England counterpart Eoin Morgan admitted he too would have bowled first and the early wicket of Jason Roy for one did provide early vindication.

After Roy departed - bowled by his cousin Snater from the ninth ball of the innings - the Netherlands had further chances too. Snater spilled Salt at deep point off Bas de Leede on 40, then three balls later Malan overturned a marginal lbw decision on review after he was struck on the pad by Seelaar reverse sweeping.

Seelaar, at least, was able to account for opposite number Morgan who, perhaps smelling some easy runs to ease himself back into form, promoted himself up the order only to fall lbw for a first-ball duck.

Brilliant Buttler explodes

Even by his own dizzying standards this was quite breathtaking hitting from Buttler, as he struck the ball so cleanly he seemed to be playing a different game to everyone else.

Fresh from a productive stint in the Indian Premier League the 31-year-old is currently the best white-ball batter in world cricket, operating at the peak of his powers.

A caveat to this knock must be placed in the context of the strength of bowling, given England were playing an Associate nation. Indeed, the Dutch did not even have a frontline attack for arguably their blue riband series of the summer.

Fred Klaassen and Roelof van der Merwe were among those who remained with their county sides and will play in the T20 Blast on Friday night. The Dutch federation can demand their mandatory release, but with a small pool of players there is a little appetite from either side to rattle cages.

Nevertheless, Buttler's knock was stunning. His century came off 47 balls, 150 off 65, as his fast hands and strong wrists proved destructive. The Dutch bowlers simply did not know where to bowl to him, as their brains became scrambled in the carnage.

He offered two chances on 17 and 37 as Vikramjit Singh got finger tips on a high one while Musa Nadeem Ahmad shelled a more straightforward opportunity 20 runs later. It would prove costly.

England's huge batting depth

Without multi-format players Jonny Bairstow, Joe Root and Ben Stokes this was a chance for some of England's other white-ball players to shine, and reflected the depth of options new coach Mott has in the batting department.

Malan became the third England batter, after Buttler and Heather Knight, to make a ton across all three formats as he and Salt played with great tempo mixing finesse with aggressive strokeplay to lay the platform for such a monumental total.

Equally so, Livingstone's stand-and-deliver style - his fifty featuring five fours and sixes - will doubtless have impressed Mott, albeit with the realisation sterner opponents than the team ranked 14th in the ICC ODI rankings lie ahead.

Almost inevitably, England's bowlers were left in the shade but they largely kept their discipline - Sam Curran's 2-46 relatively encouraging on his return.

Mott has been dubbed a "legacy coach" charged with turning England's limited-overs team from a good side to a great one. On a frenzied, dizzying day of batting in a sleepy town on the outskirts of Amsterdam, this was not a bad start.

'Feels like I'm in the form of my life'

Player of the match Jos Buttler: "It certainly feels like I'm in the form of my life! The IPL couldn't have gone much better for me so I was feeling in good touch coming here.

"It was a really good wicket, we got off to a good start and that gave me the licence to really attack.

"The Ashes made it a tough winter and I had two months off after that which was really refreshing for me. I turned up to the IPL fresh without many expectations and that was key to getting me back to enjoying my cricket.

"It's been a good start [for Matthew Mott], hasn't it? We've been a solid team for a number of years now and we know our style of play. He doesn't want to change that, there will be some sharpening up in some areas but it is a really exciting time for us."

BBC
 
Delayed start at Amstelveen today. Heavy rain overnight and the covers around the square leaked. Pitch inspection at 10.45am but okay not expected for at least 2 hours
 
Netherlands have won the toss and have opted to bat

England (Playing XI): Jason Roy, Philip Salt, Dawid Malan, Eoin Morgan(c), Jos Buttler(w), Liam Livingstone, Moeen Ali, David Willey, Brydon Carse, Adil Rashid, Reece Topley

Netherlands (Playing XI): Vikramjit Singh, Max ODowd, Teja Nidamanuru, Tom Cooper, Bas de Leede, Scott Edwards(w/c), Logan van Beek, Tim Pringle, Shane Snater, Aryan Dutt, Vivian Kingma
 
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Brydon Carse replaces Sam Curran for England, while Netherlands make three changes. Scott Edwards will captain in Pieter Seelar's absence.

41 overs per-side. 13:45 start local time.
 
NED 94/3 (20.1) CRR: 4.66
Match reduced to 41 overs per side due to wet outfield

Bit disappointing for England supporters who wanted to see 500!
 
Netherlands - 235/7 from 41 overs.

Innings break (41-over game).

England need 236 runs to win from 41 overs.
 
Netherland's batting is quite good.

Their bowling is average though. I remember they lost against Namibia (during the World T20) due to ineffective bowling.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">1️⃣5️⃣0️⃣ ODI Caps for <a href="https://twitter.com/josbuttler?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@josbuttler</a><br>1️⃣0️⃣0️⃣ ODI Caps for <a href="https://twitter.com/JasonRoy20?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@JasonRoy20</a><br><br>Two of the best.<br><br>Watch LIVE: <a href="https://t.co/AvaHEbj8RB">https://t.co/AvaHEbj8RB</a><br><br>&#55356;&#56819;&#55356;&#56817; <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NEDvENG?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#NEDvENG</a> &#55356;&#57332;&#56128;&#56423;&#56128;&#56418;&#56128;&#56421;&#56128;&#56430;&#56128;&#56423;&#56128;&#56447; <a href="https://t.co/b5iKuA8gnZ">pic.twitter.com/b5iKuA8gnZ</a></p>— England Cricket (@englandcricket) <a href="https://twitter.com/englandcricket/status/1538487266179534850?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 19, 2022</a></blockquote>
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England won by 6 wkts - Match reduced to 41 overs per side due to wet outfield

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Player of the Match, Jason Roy (73 off 60 balls)

"To receive my 100th cap is a huge honour. To be playing with this team for 100 games is incredible. It was nice to get a few runs as well.

"We had a slight stutter maybe - Netherlands bowled and fielded well at the end and put some pressure on us but we managed to get over the line so I'm happy. English cricket is in a good state"
 
<b>England in Netherlands: Eoin Morgan fails but tourists complete series win</b>

<I>Second one-day international, Amstelveen</I>

Netherlands 236-7 (41 overs): Edwards 78, Willey 2-46, Rashid 2-50

England 239-4 (36 overs): Salt 77, Roy 73, Dutt 2-55

<b>England won by six wickets; go 2-0 up in three-match series</b>


England completed a series victory over the Netherlands but under-pressure captain Eoin Morgan once again failed with the bat.

Phil Salt's 77 helped England to a six-wicket win in the second of three one-day internationals in Amstelveen.

David Willey took 2-46 as the Dutch were restricted to 235-7 after they had won the toss on a worn pitch used for England's record-breaking ODI total on Friday.

Scott Edwards' brisk 78 and 34 from Bas de Leede gave the Dutch something to bowl at, but Salt and Jason Roy (73) laid the platform before Dawid Malan (36*) and Moeen Ali (42*) finished the job.

England skipper Morgan endured a miserable day, though, with a second duck of the series.

Inevitably this match was a more low-key affair, reduced to 41 overs a side after overnight rain delayed the start, than England's dazzling 498-4 in the scorching sunshine two days ago.

The Netherlands middle order brought respectability to their total under grey skies at the VRA Cricket Ground thanks to a 73-run stand from Edwards and Teja Nidamanuru.

But from a circumspect 93-3 after 20 overs at drinks they never kicked on despite a late flurry of sixes from Logan van Beek and Shane Snater.

Salt and Roy then adroitly pierced the in-field during the first powerplay, rather than taking the aerial route, in a clinical 139-run first-wicket stand.

England suffered a few jitters when Morgan and Liam Livingstone (4) departed cheaply but Malan's cool head and Moeen's fearlessness got the tourists home with 30 balls to spare.

The victory gave England another 10 points in the ICC Cricket World Cup Super League - used to determine qualification for next year's tournament in India.

In the build-up to this series, Morgan had again fielded enquiries about his role in the team with question marks over both his form and fitness.

He is currently managing a groin/thigh problem in Amstelveen, and has previously struggled with long-standing back and knee issues.

In his last 26 white-ball innings he has just one half-century at a time when competition for places in England's top order has never felt so intense.

He lasted one ball on Friday, trapped lbw, but this was worse. Morgan faced seven balls and, in truth, looked excruciatingly out of touch - his timing off and shot selection wrapped in a whirlpool of self-doubt.

England's World Cup-winning skipper was dismissed swiping across the line at one tossed up by Tom Cooper - playing in this series after a six-year break - and caught at backward point by Shane Snater.

It was in stark contrast to the fluidity with which Roy and Salt played. Roy took five fours off the first nine balls, hitting both sides of the wicket, showing his intent with brutish crunches through the covers then stepping across his stumps and flicking anything behind square.

Although Jonny Bairstow is Roy's established opening partner he dovetailed nicely with the more orthodox Salt, who used the pace of the ball to open the face and punch down the ground before skilfully slog sweeping.

England's bowlers were in cruise control.

The score from 'Mission Impossible' blared out over the public address system moments before the toss, and neatly summed what the Dutch faced when they began their innings in the first ODI.

With Jos Buttler proclaiming in the wake of that victory that England would keep trying to blast 500 it was understandable, then, that the Netherlands' stand-in skipper Edwards gave his bowlers some respite when Morgan called incorrectly.

The Dutch have twice beaten England in T20Is - chasing 162 at Lord's in 2009 and defending 135 in 2014 in Chittagong - but Morgan's side play a different calibre of cricket to those days, and the loss of 18 overs made little difference.

England's attack did well, yet there was the sense they never had to really exert themselves as batter error accounted for four of the Dutch wickets.

Brydon Carse (1-36) showed some zip and nipped one back to trap Cooper lbw as Willey, who also ran out Edwards with a flat throw from mid-wicket, was aggressive. Adil Rashid (2-50) bowled well in patches although Moeen was a touch expensive.

Morgan's role and influence on the field of play remains undiminished - his tactics and bowling changes here were pretty much spot on.

But on a day when his opposite number Pieter Seelaar retired because of a persistent back problem, similar thoughts must be passing through the 35-year-old England captain's mind.


<b>England captain Eoin Morgan:</b>
"I'm delighted. With the ball, Brydon Carse came into the game and hit the series with plenty of pace and with something we haven't seen before. And with the bat again Phil Salt contributed for the second time, doing what he does. Jason Roy did well in his 100th cap."

<b>Netherlands captain Scott Edwards:</b>
"Maybe we were 30 runs short. I was feeling good out there. Today was a missed opportunity to really get that score up to 260. We could have been braver but we weren't that far off to be fair, there were a couple of wickets in the middle overs that cost us. We need to improve on our powerplay. That's where the game got away from us."


https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/61857842
 
Netherlands (Playing XI): Vikramjit Singh, Max ODowd, Tom Cooper, Bas de Leede, Scott Edwards(w/c), Teja Nidamanuru, Logan van Beek, Tim Pringle, Aryan Dutt, Paul van Meekeren, Fred Klaassen

England (Playing XI): Jason Roy, Philip Salt, Dawid Malan, Jos Buttler(w/c), Liam Livingstone, Moeen Ali, Sam Curran, David Willey, Adil Rashid, Brydon Carse, David Payne

England have won the toss and have opted to field
 
NED 244 (49.2)
ENG 134/2 (17) CRR: 7.88 REQ: 3.36

England need 111 runs
 
Netherlands - 244-all out.
England - 248/2 (30.1 overs).

England win by 8 wickets and take the series 3-0.
 
Over 31 - England (248-2) beat Netherlands by eight wickets!
Buttler ends the match and the series in style!

Pringle floats a spinner up to England's captain and he knocks the ball for a huge six with what looked like a simple chip.

England wrap up this game with a whopping 119 balls remaining!


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Jason Roy hammered 101 off 86 balls and stand-in skipper Jos Buttler blasted 86 off 64 to help England clinch a comfortable eight-wicket victory over the Netherlands and seal an emphatic 3-0 one-day international series win.

Buttler deputised for injured captain Eoin Morgan, who was suffering with a groin injury, and saw the Dutch dismissed for 244 as Scott Edwards (64) top scored.

David Willey finished the pick of the attack with 4-36 before England made light work of the total in 30.1 overs as Buttler and Roy guided them home with unbeaten knocks.

This was the ninth time Buttler has skippered England in ODIs and his record reads won six, lost three.

Morgan's enforced absence meant he was denied the chance to atone for two consecutive ducks in the first and second matches in Amstelveen because of injury.

It will inevitably raise question marks about whether, at 35 and with his form and fitness seemingly deserting him, he will continue as England captain.

His future in the side may be in doubt but the team Morgan built in his image continued their buccaneering approach to comfortably dispose of a Dutch side ranked 14th in the world.

Buttler's innings was not quite as breathtaking as his incredible 162 off 70 balls in the first ODI, but it was chanceless as he and Roy took England home relatively serenely.

The win gave England 10 points in the ICC Cricket World Cup Super League and saw them leapfrog Bangladesh into top spot in the competition, which determines qualification for the tournament in India in 16 months' time.

Buttler's grey matter was not particularly challenged by the Netherlands who, in truth, surrendered their wickets with poor shot selection as opposed to giving the stand-in skipper many tactical posers.

On a pitch with a touch more grass than the first two ODIs there was bounce and carry for England's attack and the softly spoken Buttler calmly and efficiently directed proceedings from behind the stumps as he got his bowling changes spot on.

David Payne, another from England's battery of left-arm seamers, was unfortunate not to capture a debut wicket early on. A vicious short one climbed into Tom Cooper and spooned up only for Liam Livingstone to be dazzled by the sun and miss a skier at mid-wicket.

Brydon Carse (2-49) was clocked at 90mph by the speed gun and, despite his occasional waywardness, was menacing as he accounted for both Bas de Leede (56) and Cooper (33) to put the brakes on as the Dutch looked to accelerate.

England occasionally lost their discipline in the field - Dawid Malan shelling a catch, Adil Rashid letting the ball through his legs and Buttler fumbling - but they turned the screw at the death.

The final 9.2 overs went for just 41 runs as Payne (1-38) and especially the impressive Willey - who bowled 29 dot balls all told - targeted the stumps to close out the innings against an inexperienced Dutch tail.

England made a blistering start to the chase as Phil Salt (49) and Roy stamped their authority on the Dutch attack with a stand of 85 for the first wicket.

However, they wobbled when Paul van Meekeren (2-59) nipped one back to knock over Salt's leg stump, then two balls later bowled Malan for nought behind his legs after a misjudgment.

That brought Buttler into the fray and he quickly settled any nerves with a composed innings of two halves. He brought up his half-century off, by his standards at least, a pedestrian 44 balls.

The wicketkeeper then effortlessly went through the gears, thrilling the England fans in the afternoon sunshine with the kind of destructive six-hitting seen in the side's record-breaking 498-4 in the first ODI.

In stark contrast to regular skipper Morgan, who has had looked so dreadfully out of touch here, Buttler oozed form, finesse and firepower with the bat.

All the while Roy edged closer to back-to-back ODI hundreds, although he offered a caught-and-bowled chance to Fred Klaassen on 75, the Dutchman spilling a dolly.

Roy regrouped and, with Buttler fast catching him, brought up his 10th ODI century off 86 balls with a confident drive down the ground.

A ball later Buttler, who was never troubled by the Dutch attack, whacked left-arm spinner Tim Pringle back over his head as well as the sightscreen and into the forest behind to put the gloss on the victory.

It was England's 34th six of the series as they sealed the win with 19.5 overs to spare.

In this kind of form they will take some stopping in the rest of the summer, with or without Morgan.

'Another great victory'

England captain and player of the series Jos Buttler: "Another great victory. I thought we played really well with the ball to restrict them, picked up wickets at crucial times and it was a brilliant batting display again.

"There's a lot of cricket coming up in a short space of time which is very exciting. We've got great depth in the squad with more guys standing up on this trip and pushing up the competition in the squad which is just what we want to see.

"I thought David Payne bowled brilliantly on debut, Brydon Carse looks exciting, I was impressed with Phil Salt. There is this deep pool of players that are pushing the game forward for us in English cricket."

Netherlands captain Scott Edwards: "We took some good learnings from the series, the boys will be better for it and we'll come back harder in our next series.

"I thought today was a harder wicket and they made it look pretty easy."

BBC
 
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