India vs England 1. ODI LIVE SCORE: IYER, GILL STEADY IND CHASE AFTER OPERS FALL Early

India vs England 1. ODI LIVE SCORE: England’s Captain Jos Buttler and Jacob Bethell both scored half a century, but couldn’t go much further when India rejected visitors in 248 races in 47.4 Overs. Debutant Harshit Rana and Ravindra Jadeja took three wickets each. Buttler held the shaking England laps together and brought his half -century into 58 balls. However, he soon died with a clinical India starving England for running in the first Odi in Nagpur. Visitors were left winging with Jadeja, who landed a big blow in the form of wicket by Joe Root in the 19th. England was in the process of a rocket start, only for it all to be undone when they lost three wickets in eight balls. It all started with Phil Salt walking down the field in a third race without looking at what his partner Ben Duckett did and was wiped out, thus bringing an opening stand of 75 races that came on only 53 balls.… Read more

Harshit Rana then chose two wickets in the next one over after admitting 26 races in his previous one. Duckett fell third ball thanks to a brilliant catch from Yashasvi Jaiswal. Harry Brooks forgetful form continued on this tour as he was strangled down the leg last ball on it. It was then down to Captain Jos Buttler and Joe Root to perform a reconstruction job.

India VS England series will tell fans a lot about what to expect in terms of plans ahead of the ICC Champions Trophy, and India made the first big decision when Yashasvi Jaiswal and Harshit Rana received their debut caps in the Indian team Huddle in front of throws Nagpur. Meanwhile, Virat Kohli missed out because of a knee problem.

India plays XI: Rohit Sharma (C), Yashasvi Jaiswal, Shubman Gill, Shreyas Iyer, Kl Rahul (WK), Hardik Pandya, Axar Patel, Ravindra Jadeja, Harshit Rana, KoldeTeAg Yadav, Mohammed Shami

England plays XI: Phil Salt (WK), Ben Duckett, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jos Buttler (C), Liam Livingstone, Jacob Bethell, Brydon Carse, Adil Rashid, Jofra Archer, Saqib Mahmood

For a team proud of the consistency and quality of ODI-cricket, a twelve-year trophy drought in the format is definitely something of an adhesive point for Indian cricket. Although the ICC Champions Trophy remains two weeks away from beginning, this three-match series against England, where the momentum will start building for a team that is hungry to get their hands back on a trophy by getting into the winning habit -But in their way is a dangerous, powerful team with lots of weapons, led by a coach who has revolutionized the attack cricket and also hopes to make his mark on 50-over cricket.

India is fresh from a 4-1 series victory against England in the T20i series, with a massive 150-run victory at Wankhede Stadium, putting the exclamation mark on a dominant performance. But this is a reset button as a different Indian team arrives in Nagpur and tries to get into the groove in the first of this crucial five-match series.

The focus of this match is likely to be the shape of Captain Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli. After withdrawing from T20is and fought to an extreme degree against the red ball in recent months, there is a lot of concern about whether age has caught this pair of Indian batting stories. The double series losses against New Zealand and Australia in the test cricket and a few errors in their return to Ranji Trophy have put their shape under the microscope more than ever before.

However, ODIs have always been the best format for these two blows, with the couple, which especially click into gears in the World Cup in 2023, when they put together a historic campaign at home. For many, it may feel like failure is simply not an opportunity for rohit and virate: they simply have to find form in this ICC tournament, otherwise the Indian management’s hand could be forced to look for long-term successors.

Around those in the batting group there is plenty to be sure of. Shubman Gill loves to hit Asian conditions and will begin to take more responsibility within the Indian setup as he grows from a promising young to one of the team’s staples across formats. Shreyas Iyer is the most dangerous dough in the team at number four, which is capable of keeping the scoring ticking in the middle overs and also giving the attacking driving force that made India so dangerous at the World Cup.

After them, two of Kl Rahul, Rishabh Pant and Hardik Pandya will occupy the middle order slots: Hardik’s resurrected bowling capacity makes him definitely a shoo-in, which means Pant and Rahul could fight for the gloves. It is a decision that Gautam Gambhir wants to get to the right heading into the Champions Trophy, with a right-hand-top top six potentially fluctuating things in favor of mortgage to start with.

In the bowling department, Jasprit Bumrah is rested, while Mohammed Siraj has been dropped, but optimism will remain with Mohammed Shami, who is likely to return and Arshdeep Singh shows plenty of quality in the T20i series in front of a probable ODD -Backer. Spin will continue to dominate with only two pacers named, but with as many as five different options the three that will be used are difficult to call.

Axar Patel seems to be a player entrusted with much by Rohit and Gambhir in White-Ball Cricket, and his light edge on Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar could see him occupying number seven role as an all-rounder. KoldeP Yadav is similarly entrusted and will do his comeback from an injury to this series: He offers something completely different from the host of finger spinners, and India wants him to find his rhythm before the tournament. The last place could be taken by Varun Chakravarthy, a late addition to the ODD troop, which could barely be played in the T20i series. This combination leaves batting a little light with cold ep of 8 years, but Gambhir doesn’t have too many games to think with his combinations, especially as a coach who prefers his team to have batting depth.

For the English team, currently in a state of transition, more are expected than the relatively mitigated performances they put in the T20i series. Although they pack plenty of firepower, their failure to fight India’s spin combinations will be worrying, although the presence of Joe Root in the ODI team is likely to relieve some of these concerns. Can Jos Buttler’s men figure out how to crack the ODD crick in India and the subcontinent better than they have managed the T20i? It could come down to their powerplay bowling, where Jofra Archer especially struggled with leaking races, and the spin-bowling department, where Liam Livingstone as a front-line turner was not an answer to their problems.

India starts as favorites in Nagpur, but there are still plenty of wrinkles for these two teams to iron out in this series. Only time and performances tell how optimistic or worried either should be entering the Champions Trophy.

Highlights from India vs England 1. ODDI:

– India lost openers Yashasvi Jaiswal and Rohit Sharma in the first six Overs

– England were all out in 248 in 47.4 overs

– Jacob Bethell scored his half -century in 62 balls

– Jos Buttler brought his half -century up in 58 balls

– Ravindra Jadeja got the big wicket by Joe Root in the 19th. Over

– England collapsed from 75/0 in the ninth to 77/3 in 10.

– England openers Phil Salt and Ben Duck Kett put a partnership of 75 races on only 53 balls

– Virat Kohli sits out with a tender right knee

– England won the thrown and chose to beat first