The target of 172 was always going to be an uphill task and it turned out exactly in the manner the Indian bowlers would have hoped for. After a good over from Arshdeep, Jasprit Bumrah didn't quite find his radar in his first over. Arshdeep went onto concede three boundaries in his second over off Jos Buttler which provided momentum to England in the powerplay. However the introduction of Axar Patel totally turned the tide towards India as wickets kept tumbling at regular intervals.
Jos Buttler was the first to as he gloved an attempted reverse sweep straight to Rishabh Pant. It was Bumrah who came back strongly in his second over, deceiving Phil Salt with an immaculate slower delivery. Things started going from bad to worse when Jonny Bairstow was castled by an arm ball from Axar Patel. Harry Brook and Moeen Ali tried to stitch a partnership together but Moeen departed soon after before Kuldeep trapped Sam Curran right in front of the stumps to reduce England to 48/5.
From there on, it was always for a lost cause as far as England were concerned. Harry Brook started taking some chances and found the boundary off Kuldeep Yadav before getting castled attempting another reverse sweep. It was then time for Chris Jordan to get bamboozled by a beautiful leg break from Kuldeep Yadav. Jofra Archer struck some mighty blows but a mishap with Liam Livingstone saw the latter head back to the pavilion without making a significant impact and that was the final nail in the coffin. It was Bumrah who fittingly finished the match off with the wicket of Jofra Archer as India registered a 68 run victory.
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