England will never change style despite collapse
- England is still dedicated to their aggressive style of play despite their recent failure, believing that their method will be resilient and successful in the long run.
Despite a top-order collapse in the first match of the T20 series, England is determined to maintain its aggressive tactics against Pakistan.
After a wild first quarter, Heather Knight’s team fell to 11-4, but they rallied to win 163-6.
The team, however, according to 23-year-old fast bowler Lauren Bell, will not alter their approach with the bat or the ball when the series resumes at Northampton on Friday.
“Our approach will never change, and neither will the messaging,” Bell added.
We talked about how we approach our game and how important it is that we maintain our approach and mentality.
“We aimed to advance and challenge the game. Head coach Jon Lewis has always said that, and I don’t think he will stray from that.”
Bell, who has assumed leadership of England’s seam attack for the last twelve months, got her summer off to a great start by taking 3-22 in England’s convincing 53-run victory at Edgbaston last week.
After missing the first game to recuperate from a medical procedure, Nat Sciver-Brunt is anticipated to join her for the remainder of the series.
England will take a commanding lead in the three-match T20 series with a victory in Northampton.
Recovered the team’s “character.”
Following Lewis’ hiring in November 2022, England has made attacking cricket its primary focus and is willing to face the occasional setbacks that come with it.
Bell emphasized the team’s optimism, saying they weren’t focusing on the collapse per se but rather were inspired by how they bounced back after losing four early wickets.
“We didn’t start either innings the way we wanted to but still ended up winning by a large amount in T20 cricket, and that just shows the character and the depth of this team,” she said.
England’s careless batting let Pakistan dominate both powerplays, even though they lost by a narrow margin after reaching 57-2 after six overs.
However, Bell and Lewis’ mindset was bolstered by assistant coach Gareth Breese, who said that although the team will learn from its mistakes, Bell and Lewis were a little “rusty” in their maiden summer international match.
“It’s not about changing things too much, we just didn’t execute what we wanted to do,” Breese added.
We are attempting to play in a certain fashion where we really try to put the opposition under pressure, but it didn’t work that way in that particular situation.
“One blip won’t see us making a U-turn on our approach, they have our full support in that.”
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